Malegaon: The
Special Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime
Act (MCOCA) court in Mumbai March 10 deferred its ruling on the
bail application of the Muslim accused arrested in the 2006
Malegaon blast case once again.
The Court is now likely to deliver
its ruling on the bail application on March 15, 2011.
"The Special Maharashtra Control of
Organised Crime Act (MCOCA) court today deferred the judgment on
the bail plea application of the Muslim youths implicated in the
2006 Malegaon blast case till March 15", Advocate Nehal Ansari,
the defence counsel, who appeared on behalf of the Muslim youths
informed ummid.com on phone.
Earlier on March 07, the court had
scheduled its ruling for today, however, citing technical
difficulties, the judge postponed it once again, according to
Advocate Nehal Ansri.
This is the sixth time in a row
since January 17, 2011 that the court has deferred its ruling
after the Muslim youths arrested in the 2006 Malegaon blast case
applied for bail following the Swami Aseemanand's confessional
statement that appeared in the media.
The nine Muslim accused had moved to
the special court January 17 seeking bail on the basis of the
confessional statement of Swami Aseemanand, who is allegedly
associated with Hindu terrorist groups and has confessed about his
role in the 2006 Malegaon and other blasts.
A series of blasts struck
Malegaon on September 08 in 2006 ahead of Shab-e-Barat, a
Muslim festival when thousands of people were busy offering Friday
prayers at the Hamidia Masjid. Another blast occurred at nearby
Mushawerat chowk few minutes later. 32 people had been killed and
more than 300 were injured in the blasts, most of them being
children.
The Anti Terrorist Squad (ATS)
investigation of the 2006 Malegaon blast is receiving flak ever
since it arrested the Muslim youths in the attack on a mosque in
which the victims were all Muslims. Doubts were raised over the
investigation also by the families of the victims.
After much of
an outcry the state government had decided to hand over the
investigation to the CBI. But it was done only after the ATS filed
its chargesheet accusing the Muslim youths of masterminding the
terror attack.
The case took an interesting turn when Swami Aseemanand,
one of the accused arrested in Mecca Masjid and other blast
cases, admitted in his confession made before a magistrate that the
Muslim youths arrested in 2006 blast case were not guilty.
|