New Delhi: Bilkis Bano says she smiled for the first time in a year and a half today, she said in a letter thanking the Supreme Court for its judgement undoing the remission given to those who raped her and murdered her family members during the 2002 Gujarat riots.
“Today is truly the New Year for me. I have wept tears of relief. I have smiled for the first time in over a year and half. I have hugged my children,” Bano said in a letter issued through her lawyer Shobha Gupta.
A two-judge division bench of the apex court, headed by Justice BV Nagarathna, said on Monday (January 8) that the Gujarat government did not have the power to grant premature release to the 11 convicts who gang-raped a pregnant Bano and her family members, and also murdered 14 of her relatives.
The convicts had been, in 2008, sentenced to life in prison. The conviction orders had been confirmed even enhanced by the Bombay High Court and then the Supreme Court.
“It feels like a stone the size of a mountain has been lifted from my chest, and I can breathe again. This is what justice feels like,” Bano’s letter continued to state.
” I thank the honourable Supreme Court of India for giving me, my children and women everywhere, this vindication and hope in the promise of equal justice for all.”
She also thanked her husband for children for staying by her side and her friends for “[holding] her hand at each difficult turn”.
Bilkis Bano had special word of thanks for her lawyer, Shobha Gupta, saying she “never allowed me to lose faith in the idea of justice”.
“A year and half ago, on August 15, 2022, when those who had destroyed my family and terrorised my very existence, were given an early release, I simply collapsed,” she said.
“I felt I had exhausted my reservoir of courage. Until a million solidarities came my way.”
Also, thousands of ordinary people moved the Supreme Court, wrote appeals and open letters in solidarity with her, Bano said, saying they had given every woman in India the will to “rescue the idea of justice”.
In a brazen defence of it’s actions, the Gujarat government said the decision to remit the convicts’ sentence was arrived at by a panel it had set up, comprising officials and ‘social workers’, all of whom were either members of the ruling BJP or were connected with it.
On Monday, January 8, a division bench comprising Justices B.V. Nagarathna and Ujjal Bhuyan said the Gujarat government “acted in complicity with the convicts” and noted that if the convicts can “circumvent the consequences of their conviction, peace and tranquillity in the society will be reduced to a chimaera.”
Bano said the apex court’s decision affirmed her belief in the rule of law.
“Even as I absorb the full meaning of this verdict for my own life, and for my children’s lives, the dua that emerges from my heart today is simple – the rule of law, above all else and equality before law, for all,” she said.
Her full statement, which was also issued in Gujarat and Hindi, may be read here: