Best Bakery Case
Best Bakery Case
Best Bakery Case
The Best Bakery case (also called Tulsi Bakery case) was a legal case involving the
burning down of the Best Bakery on March 1, 2002, in Vadodara, India. The incident,
which resulted in the deaths of 14[1] (including 12 Muslims[2]), has come to symbolize
the carnage, and the alleged complicity of the state government during the 2002
Gujarat violence.[3]
Background
On March 1, 2002, communal frenzy enveloped Vadodara, India.[4] The Best Bakery, a
small outlet in the Hanuman Tekri area of Vadodara,[3] was allegedly attacked by a
mob, which burned down the bakery, along with 14 people, 12 of them Muslims.
[5] This attack was part of the 2002 Gujarat violence, sparked by the Godhra train
burning, in which the certain community was targeted by Muslims.[6]
Amnesty International reports that in many cases of the Gujarat violence, police
recorded complaints in a defective manner, and failed to collect witnesses’ statements
as well as corroborative evidence and did not investigate responsibilities of eminent
suspects have not been investigated by police. The Best Bakery case was seen by
human rights organizations in India as a test case given where, what Amnesty calls,
"strong evidence" against the accused existed,[6] but the victims gained little justice.[5]
Re-trial
The Gujarat government filed an amended appeal in the Gujarat High Court seeking
retrial of the case. The appeal was admitted by the Gujarat High Court. After being
indicted by theSupreme Court of India, the police registered a case against Bharatiya
Janata Party legislator for intimidating the witnesses of the incident. The Government
of Gujarat admitted there were lapses on the part of the police in registering and
recording the FIR in the case and on the part of the prosecution in recording the
evidence of witnesses. It said the police had attempted to help the accused by not
submitting names of the accused.
Zaheera Sheikh retracted her statement again. She stated that the judgment passed by
the Gujarat court was correct. She also stated that she had never met the above
mentioned legislator. She claims that she made all the statements under the pressure
of NGO activist Teesta Setalvad.
Thus 17 charged with murdering 14 people, were retried in a case beginning in 2004.
[11]
Perjury
The prosecution declared Zaheera Sheikh to be a hostile witness. A tape
by Tehelka claimed that Zaheera had been bribed by a MLA Masjlis-e-Shura, an apex
decision-making bodies of Muslims, consequently declared Zaheera Sheikh, as a
'dissembler', effectively ousting her from the Muslim community. The organization
stated its reason that Zaheera was "tarnishing its [community's] image by making false
statements." [12]
Zaheera was sentenced by the Indian Supreme Court to one year in prison for perjury in
the murder, after being found guilty by the court of lying. She was also fined 50,000
rupees (US$1,000), which, if unpaid, would increase her time in prison by another year.
[13]
Life sentences
In February 2006, a court in India convicted nine of the 21 people of murder, sentencing
them to life imprisonment. It acquitted 8 others, while issuing warrants for the arrest of
four missing persons.[14]
The judgement, called "landmark" by BBC journalist Sanjoy Majumder, brought the case
to an end. The case has the legacy of being "one of the country's most controversial
and high profile trials."[15]