Indian official’s wife distraught as his killer is freed
It's been three decades but Uma Krishnaiah clearly remembers the last conversation she had with her husband, just hours before his murder.
It was 5 December 1994 and the couple had woken up early as G Krishnaiah, a top civil servant in the northern Indian state of Bihar, had to leave home at 5am to travel to an important meeting in Hajipur, a town more than 130km (81 miles) away.
"It was a freezing cold morning but he was walking on the lawns. I asked him to come inside because I was worried he would catch a cold," she told me.
"But he told me not to worry. He said there are so many poor people who don't even have warm clothes. I'm wearing a sweater, I'm dressed warmly, nothing will happen to me."
Hours later, Mrs Krishnaiah was standing in a hospital, looking at her husband's bloodied body. "He had so many injuries on his face and body," she said, her voice breaking with emotion.
Krishnaiah - whom journalists and former colleagues remember as "an honest and upright officer" and "a good administrator" - was returning from the meeting when his car was stopped by a mob protesting against the killing a day earlier of Chhotan Shukla, a dreaded gangster-turned-politician.
The mob, comprising thousands of Shukla's supporters, pelted the officer's car with stones, dragged him out and started beating him.
"Krishnaiah, who was the district magistrate for Gopalganj, kept trying to tell the mob that he had nothing to do with the Shukla murder, which took place in an adjoining district," says Amarnath Tiwari, senior journalist in the state capital, Patna.
"But the crowd lynched him and one man shot him in the head. Police later retrieved his bloodied body from the scene of the crime."
The murder turned Mrs Krishnaiah's life upside down. The brazenness of the crime and the brutality with which her husband was murdered also sent shockwaves through the country and made national headlines.
Three decades later, the gruesome crime is back in the news after Anand Mohan Singh, who had been serving a life sentence for the civil servant's murder, walked out of prison this week.
Singh, then a legislator in the state assembly, was charged in the murder case with inciting the crowd to attack and shoot the official.
In 2007, a local court convicted him and gave him the death penalty. A year later, the Patna high court converted it into a life sentence, which was upheld by the Supreme Court in 2012.
Until recently, Singh couldn't be freed because according to Bihar's jail manual, "those convicted for murdering a public servant on duty" were not entitled to early release.
But earlier this month, the state government, led by Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, dropped the clause from the manual and announced the release of 27 prisoners, including Singh.
The decision has been criticised by some opposition politicians, activists and citizens, with many comparing Singh's release with last August's decision by the Gujarat government to set free convicts in the notorious gangrape of a Muslim woman and murder of her family during deadly 2002 religious riots. Gujarat officials said a state government panel had approved their release because the men had spent more than 14 years in jail and because of other factors such as their age.
The association of civil servants has asked the Bihar government to reconsider its decision.
"Such dilution leads to impunity, erosion of morale of public servants, undermines public order and makes a mockery of administration of justice," it said in a statement on Twitter.
But the Bihar state government and Singh have defended the move, saying it isn't illegal. "He has served his sentence and is being released legally," Bihar's Deputy Chief Minister Tejashwi Yadav told reporters.
However, Mr Tiwari says the decision is rooted in politics.
"Singh commands influence among the upper-caste Rajput community which makes up 4% of the state's population. And the state's governing alliance, led by Mr Kumar and Mr Yadav, wants his support in next year's general elections," he told the BBC.
But away from the political ping pong, the decision has been greeted with dismay by the Krishnaiah family, for whom it has reopened old wounds.
Mrs Krishnaiah told me she had met her husband, who was from a poor Dalit (formerly untouchable) family, at college in the southern city of Hyderabad in 1981. They fell in love and married five years later. At the time of his murder, they were raising two daughters who were four and five-and-a-half.
A day after his death, she moved back with her children to Hyderabad where she took up a job as a college teacher to support the family.
Singh's conviction and sentencing had brought her some solace, but to see him walk out of prison has left her heartbroken and distraught.
"My husband was a government officer. He was killed while working. How can they set free his murderer? The government should reconsider the decision," she said.
"This will send wrong signals to the society and encourage criminals. They will now think that even if they commit a heinous murder, they will go free."
Mrs Krishnaiah said she had appealed to the prime minister and the president, seeking their intervention to send her husband's murderer back to prison.
On Thursday morning, hours after Singh walked out of prison, her daughter Padma told news agency ANI that the family was "disheartened".
"I request Chief Minister Nitish Kumar to give a second thought. His government has set a wrong example. It is unfair not just to a family but to the whole nation," she said, adding that they would appeal against the decision in court.
BBC News India is now on YouTube. Click here to subscribe and watch our documentaries, explainers and features.
(editor-in-charge:Press center6)
BREAKING NEWS: Detroit Pistons 'place assistant general manager Rob Murphy on leave after launching an investigation into an allegation of workplace misconduct involving a female former employee'
Poor diabetes care may be behind 7,000 excess deaths
Vodafone 3G turn
WhatsApp and other messaging apps oppose 'surveillance'
Asda buys petrol station grohigh EG for £2.3bn
- Superstar American Coco Gauff is dumped OUT of the Australian Open in the fourth round, as Jelena Ostapenko produces huge straight-sets shock to set up quarter-final clash with Elena Rybakina
- China bans major chip maker Micron from key infrastructure projects
- Train strikes this week to hit FA Chigh final and Epconsequentlym Derby
- Top economist calls for 'lenient' migration rules
- Climate activists heckle Ted Cruz on The View: Whoopi Goldberg tells protesters to leave for trying to drown him out during shouting match over Trump, the election and January 6
- ChatGPT: Can students pass using AI tools at university?
- Briton pleads guilty in US to 2020 Twitter hack
- Twitter hack: 130 accounts targeted in attack
-
WhatsApp and other messaging apps oppose 'surveillance'
WhatsApp and other messaging apps oppose 'surveillance'Published18 AprilcommentsCommentsSh ...[in detail]
-
Tears of the Kingdom: Fans react to Zelda sequel launch
Tears of the Kingdom: Fans react to Zelda sequel launchPublished5 minutes agoShare pageAbout sharing ...[in detail]
-
IMF expects UK economy to shun recession
IMF expects UK economy to shun recessionPublished1 day agocommentsCommentsShare pageAbout sharingIma ...[in detail]
-
Twitter erroneous to block tweets during Turkey election
Twitter erroneous to block tweets during Turkey election - Wikipedia founderPublished2 minutes agoSh ...[in detail]
-
Ukraine is getting consequentlyme of the tanks and armor it has pleaded for from the West, as the Biden administration announced it will send 31 M1 Abrams tanks. Germany is sending 14 Leopard 2 tanks....[in detail]
-
Netflix expands password sharing cracklow to UK
Netflix expands password sharing cracklow to UKPublished18 hours agocommentsCommentsShare pageAbout ...[in detail]
-
Warning UK losing £2,300 per minute to fraud
Warning UK losing £2,300 per minute to fraudPublished12 minutes agoShare pageAbout sharingImage cons ...[in detail]
-
UK interest rates hit highest for almost 15 years
UK interest rates hit highest for almost 15 yearsPublished4 minutes agoShare pageAbout sharingIntere ...[in detail]
-
U.S. Customs and Border Protection has released data detailing the numbers of migrants crossing the consequentlyuthern border which are now at the highest level in Decomponentment of Homeland Security history....[in detail]
-
In pictures: Coronation concert and UK street parties
In pictures: Coronation concert and UK street partiesPublished2 days agoShare pageAbout sharingA sta ...[in detail]
- Jill Biden wears sunglasses in first emergeance since cancer surgery on her eye - as husband Joe ref utilizes to answer questions on documents scandal (notwithstanding finding time to emerge in SNL sketch)
- Purplebricks snapped up by rival Strike for £1
- Meta loses millions as made to sell Giphy to Shutterstock
- Chip war: Apple strikes major US
- BREAKING NEWS: Single-engine plane crashes into New Hampshire acomponentment erecting killing EVERYONE on board and sending 40-foot flames leaping into the sky
- Ovo and Good Energy customers to get refunds after overcharging
- How nervous are investors about the US debt ceiling?