Lakhimpur Kheri case | Supreme Court grants interim bail to Ashish Mishra for eight weeks
The Hindu
Ashish Mishra has been charged with murder and criminal conspiracy in connection with the alleged mowing down of four people in Lakhimpur Kheri in 2021
The Supreme Court on January 25 granted interim bail of eight weeks to Ashish Mishra, the prime accused in the Lakhimpur Kheri killings and son of Union Minister of State for Home Affairs Ajay Kumar Mishra.
A bench of Justices Surya Kant and J.K. Maheshwari pronounced the order directed Mr. Mishra to leave Uttar Pradesh within a week. He is not to enter the State during the eight-week period of his interim bail. He should not stay in Delhi or Uttar Pradesh.
Mr. Mishra will have to inform court of his location, mark his presence in the local police station and surrender his passport. He will appear in every trial hearing. Any attempt by him to delay the trial would be a ground for cancellation of the interim bail.
The court also extended the benefit of interim bail to the other four farmers incarcerated in the counter case. Their bail petitions were pending in the Allahabad High Court.
J. Surya Kant, who pronounced the order in court, said this was an attempt to balance the right of the accused and the State’s right to conduct a fair trial and victims’ right to justice.
Mr. Mishra has been charged with murder and criminal conspiracy in connection with the alleged mowing down of four people protesting the government’s controversial agricultural laws and a journalist covering the farmers’ rally in Lakhimpur Kheri in 2021. The Allahabad High Court had refused him bail.
Opposing the bail plea, Additional Advocate General for Uttar Pradesh Garima Prashad had said it was a grave and heinous crime and granting bail will send a wrong signal to society.
Almaya Munnettam (Lay People to the Fore), group in the Ernakulam-Angamaly Archdiocese of the Syro-Malabar Church opposed to the synod-recommended Mass, rejected a circular issued by Major Archbishop Raphael Thattil and apostolic administrator Bosco Puthur on June 9 to implement the unified Mass in the archdiocese from July 3.
Pakistan coach Gary Kirsten stated that “not so great decision making” contributed to his side’s defeat to India in the Group-A T20 World Cup clash here on Sunday. The batting unit came apart in the chase, after being well placed at 72 for two. With 48 runs needed from eight overs, Pakistan found a way to panic and lose. “Maybe not so great decision making,” Kirsten said at the post-match press conference, when asked to explain the loss.