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HomeIndiaMurder victim Sister Abhaya gets justice 28 years later; Priest, Nun convicted

Murder victim Sister Abhaya gets justice 28 years later; Priest, Nun convicted

“Justice delayed is justice denied”, is the sentence being chanted by people across the country as the murder case of Sister Abhaya of Kerala finally reached a conclusion, almost 3 decades after the brutal murder of the young nun.

Killed and dumped inside a well in a convent of Kottayam in Kerala, the 21-year-old’s only surviving activist of the panel finally saw the perpetrators getting convicted as a priest and another sister was deemed guilty by a CBI court in Thiruvananthapuram.

The punishment hasn’t been awarded yet and will be delivered tomorrow.

In the 1992 case, Father Thomas Kottoor, previously a Vicar who taught psychology to Sister Abhaya in Kottayam’s BCM College rose to become a Secretary and then a Bishop despite all the charges on him. The convict was further promoted to the post of the Chancellor of the Catholic Diocese in Kottayam.

Sister Sephy, the second convict, lived in the hostel where Sister Abhaya resided. She was the de factor in-charge of the residential center.

After a long and thorough investigation, the CBI gathered enough evidence and the court announced them both as guilty of murder and destruction of evidence with the Father also getting convicted of house-trespassing.

Jomon Puthenpurackal, the only member who remains alive in the panel of activists fighting to attain justice for Sister Abhaya seemed overjoyed with the verdict. He said, “Sister Abhaya’s case has finally got justice. She will rest in peace. This is a classic example of how no one should think that just because they have power – money and muscle power – they can de-rail justice.”

According to the CBI, the murder took place at around 4.30 am on the night of 27th March 1992 after Sister Abhaya walked onto intimate contact taking place between Kottoor, Sephy and another Father Jose Poothrikkayil, in the kitchen where she came from her hostel room at 4.15 am.

In order to stop her from publicizing her deeds, the convicts hit Sister Abhaya with a blunt-ended object and later dumped her body inside a well of the convent’s premises to destroy proof.

The other father involved was, however, released by the special CBI court 2 years back while the petitions for Kottoor and Sephy were dismissed.

The police and Crime Branch officers initially termed the incident as “death by suicide”. Nevertheless, tons of protests and petitions later, the CBI was handed over the case.

The court rejected the agency’s previous 3 reports stating the need for a more detailed probe.

The 3 accused were arrested by the CBI in 2008, 16 years after the crime.

The court denied accepting the incident as a suicide highlighting various events that did not direct to it. The dogs did not bark on that night, the kitchen door was closed from outside and none of the convent residents heard Sister Abhaya “falling” into the well, the court said.