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Expelled BJP MLA Kuldeep Singh Sengar, sentenced to life imprisonment for raping a minor girl in Unnao in 2017, failed to get any interim relief on Friday, 17 January, from the Delhi High Court which refused to suspend his sentence and sought CBI's response on his appeal challenging the conviction.
The court also sought the victim's reply on Sengar's appeal challenging his conviction and imprisonment till remainder of his natural life.
A bench of justices Manmohan and Sangeeta Dhingra Sehgal allowed Sengar to deposit, in 60 days, the fine amount of Rs 25 lakh, out of which Rs 10 lakh will be released to the rape survivor without any condition.
During the hearing, the court said it was not inclined to suspend the sentence or fine amount of Sengar as he is an undertrial in other cases also, after which his counsel withdrew the application for suspension of the sentence.
"You cannot be released because you are an undertrial in other cases also, in which trial is going on. You have a judgment of trial court against you, you are a convict today, you have to be in custody. The presumption of innocence does not lie to you today. You have been in jail only for one and a half years. We are not suspending the sentence," it said.
Sengar's advocate claimed he does not have money to deposit the fine amount.
He said he was facing difficulty in arranging Rs 25 lakh, and the trial court had only given him time till 20 January to deposit the amount, as he urged the court that the time be extended.
The counsel for CBI said Sengar's wife was also a public servant, and that he should first pay Rs 10 lakh as directed by the trial court to the rape survivor and the rest of Rs 15 lakh is to be deposited with the court.
The bench has now posted the appeal for 4 May in the category of 'regular matters'.
Sengar has sought quashing of the 16 December 2019 judgment of the trial court which convicted him. He has also sought setting aside of the 20 December order sentencing him to imprisonment till remainder of his life.
The trial court had convicted the 54-year-old Sengar under various provisions, including Section 376 (2) of IPC that deals with the offence of rape committed by a public servant who "takes advantage of his official position and commits rape on a woman in his custody as such public servant or in the custody of a public servant subordinate to him".
The trial court had awarded him the maximum punishment of life term with the rider that the convict will remain in jail for "remainder of his natural biological life", and also imposed an exemplary fine of Rs 25 lakh on him to be paid within a month.
The woman was kidnapped and raped by Sengar in 2017 when she was a minor.
The trial, which started on 5 August last year, after it was transferred from Unnao to Delhi on the Supreme Court's directions, was carried on a day-to-day basis.
The apex court, taking cognisance of the rape survivor's letter written to the then Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi, had on 1 August transferred all five cases registered in connection with the Unnao rape incident from a Lucknow court in Uttar Pradesh to the court in Delhi with directions to hold trial on a daily basis and completing it within 45 days.
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