Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Dhananjoy Chatterjee

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Dhananjoy Chatterjee


Died
  
August 14, 2004, Alipore

Dhananjoy Chatterjee wwwtelegraphindiacomlegacy1040812images12zzd

Similar
  
Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh, Santosh Madhavan, Bitti Mohanty

THE RIGHT TO LIVE


Dhananjoy Chatterjee (14 August 1965 – 14 August 2004) was the first person who was judicially executed in India in the 21st century for a crime not related to terrorism. The execution by hanging took place in Alipore Central Correctional Home, Kolkata, on 14 August 2004. He was charged with the crimes of rape and murder of Hetal Parekh, a 14-year-old school-girl.

Contents

Dhananjoy Chatterjee DhananjoyChatt3846jpg

The execution stirred up public debates and attracted immense attention from media. Dhananjoy was convicted on the basis of circumstantial evidence, maintaining innocence throughout his trial and imprisonment, which lasted for more than 14 years.

Dhananjoy Chatterjee The Telegraph Calcutta At Leisure

This was the first hanging in West Bengal since 21 August 1991, when murder convicts, Kartick Sil and Sukumar Burman, were hanged at Alipore Jail.

Dhananjoy Chatterjee Meet five dreaded offenders executed before Yakub Memon Nation

Dhananjoyer fansi


Personal life

Dhananjoy Chatterjee dhananjoy chatterjee was hanged in 2004 rape case west bengal

Dhananjoy was born in Kuludihi, Bankura West Bengal, India and worked as a security guard in Kolkata.

Case details

Hetal Parekh was a student of Welland Gouldsmith School at Bowbazar, Kolkata. She used to live with her parents and elder brother in a third floor flat of Anand Apartments in Bhawanipore. The Parekhs moved into this flat in 1987. Dhananjoy was a security guard of this agency. He had worked in that building for about three years.

On 5 March 1990, Dhananjoy performed security duty during the morning shift (6 am to 2 pm). Hetal left for her ICSE examination at about 7:30 am. After the examination, she returned home. In the afternoon, only Hetal and her mother were there in the flat.

Hetal's mother went to visit a temple in the vicinities in the afternoon. After returning from the temple, she being unable to enter her home, despite repeated knocking, asked some servants of other flats to break the door open. Hetal was found lying dead near the door connecting the living room with the Parekh couple's bedroom with blood stains on her face and on the floor. Two local doctors examined Hetal and declared her dead.

Dhananjoy was not seen in the area after the murder had been discovered. He became the focal point of police investigations. He was eventually arrested by the police from his village home at Kuludihi near Chhatna, Bankura, in the early hours of 12 May 1990.

The case was investigated by the Detective Department of Kolkata Police. The chargesheet prepared by the police included the charges of rape, murder and the theft of a wrist watch. The trial took place in the second court of the Additional Sessions Judge at Alipore. Since there was no direct witness to the murder, the case hinged on circumstantial evidence only. After the sessions court convicted Dhananjoy of all the offenses and sentenced him to death, the High Court at Calcutta and the Supreme Court of India upheld the conviction and the death sentence.The Supreme Court convicted Dhananjoy and regarded the crime as a heinous combination of offenses, aggravated by the fact that as a security guard Dhananjoy had been in charge of the victim’s safety--enough to make it belong to the rarest of rare category of crimes-warranting a death sentence.

Claims of innocence

Dhananjoy had claimed repeatedly during his trial that he was completely innocent and that he had nothing to do with the murder, rape or theft. He maintained his stance till the day of his execution.

Controversies

Some academics and lawyers have questioned the validity of the death sentence and the proceedings of the trial. Professors from ISI Kolkata -- Debasish Sengupta, Probal Chaudhuri and Paramesh Goswami have conducted investigative journalism on the issue; publishing the findings in a book titled Adalat-Media-Samaj Ebong Dhananjayer Fashi (Court-Media-Society and The Hanging of Dhananjoy).It criticized the handling of the case, the media-trial and faulted the delivered judgement.The film Dhananjay is primarily based on the book.

Execution

Dhananjoy's execution was scheduled on 25 June 2004.It was stayed after his family petitioned the Supreme Court of India, and filed a mercy plea with the then President Late Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam. On 26 June 2004 a campaign to ensure Dhananjoy's hanging was initiated. Mrs. Meera Bhattacharjee, wife of Mr. Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee the then Chief Minister of West Bengal, led the campaign. Several individuals and human rights groups came forward to oppose the execution. The mercy plea was finally rejected by the president on 4 August 2004.

The date of Dhananjoy's execution was fixed at a high-level meeting at the office of Jail Minister Biswanath Chowdhury. He was executed on 14 August, 2004.

The family refused to claim his body and it was later cremated.

References

Dhananjoy Chatterjee Wikipedia