Mumbai train blasts: Correct punishment, say victims' families after court sentence

However, the family members said the trial should have been expedited

Update: 2015-09-30 16:45 GMT
Policemen investigate near a train coach destroyed by a bomb blast at Matunga railway station in Mumbai (Photo: AP/File)

Mumbai: Families of the victims of the 2006 serial train blasts here that killed 189 people on Wednesday hailed as a "correct punishment" the death penalty awarded to five of the 12 convicts and life sentence to the remaining, observing that justice has been delayed but not denied.

For the family of Parag Sawant, who had become one of the enduring images of the carnage and who died recently after battling for life in a hospital for nine years, justice though will be served only after the convicts awarded capital punishment are hanged.

The family members of the 189 people who lost their lives and the 829 injured in seven powerful blasts that ripped local suburban trains between Matunga and Mira Road on the Western line on July 11, 2006, while welcoming the decision of the special court said the trial should have been expedited.

The trial was concluded by a special MCOCA court nine years after the blasts.

"Justice will be done only after the convicts are hanged to death. We have lost our son. What happened to us should not happen to anyone else in future. A strong message has to be sent by our judicial system that such acts will not be dealt with lightly," Parag's father Jayprakash said.

Parag died in July this year becoming the 189th victim. He is survived by his parents, wife, a minor daughter and a brother. Parag, then 27 and newly married, had bought a first-class train pass for the first time on July 1, 2006, after getting promoted as assistant manager at a private firm. Ten days later, the blast took place in the first-class compartment of a Virar-bound train near Borivali, severely injuring several commuters, including Parag.

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Dahisar resident Ashok Waghela, a chartered accountant, rarely travelled by local train once he started his consultancy firm in Borivali. But on July 11, 2006, he went to meet a client in South Mumbai and fell victim to one of the blasts.

His wife Yogita was left to fend for herself and her two school-going children. "The court has given a correct punishment. They (convicts) took so many lives in a matter of a few minutes, but it took nine years to prove them guilty," she said.

Her son and daughter are pursuing CA, while she takes up projects like selling garments and decorations during festivals like Navratri to support her family.

Anita Shrivastava, who lost her husband Abhinav in the blast between Mira Road and Bhayandar, said, "Finally after nine years justice has been served. But this is not going to bring back my husband. I only hope such incidents do not happen ever and no person has to die such a death."

Anita took up a job as a train indicator peon at Malad station that was offered to her by way of compensation by the railways. After Abhinav's death, she moved out of her matrimonial house with her then three-year-old daughter and found solace in her job. She had recently got married.

Dinesh Singh and his wife Meena, who lost their 22-year-old son Amit, have stopped discussing the tragedy. "It only brought back tears and anger. My son is dead and gone leaving us in pain. But my heart goes out to the those injured persons who are still struggling. Now with the court verdict families can get some closure," he said.

For Sweta Futane, a peon at Andheri station, life was equally hard. Not only did she lose her child, but in a span of 15 days, she lost her husband in the train blasts.

She had been married for a year in 2006, when she lost her child and then on July 11, her husband Yogesh Futane died in the train blast between Mahim and Matunga. With no support from her in-laws, Sweta took up a job in the railway. Two years ago, she married Shrimat Khanore, a BEST employee.

Mahendra Pitale, a sculptor, lost his left arm in one of the blast and thus his livelihood. "I got a prosthetic arm which suffices for most of my chores but I could not get back to sculpting. I am glad that the convicts have been given punishment," he said.

A regular commuter from Dadar to Borivali, Roysten D'mello, 38, was among the scores of injured people who had sustained grievous injuries. He lost sensation in the left hand and now lives with an iron rod inserted in it.

D'mello said he has undergone three surgeries till date and his life, since 2006, has completely changed.

On the verdict, he hoped that it will at least offer some relief to families who lost their loved ones.

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