AMRI fire: HC asks prosecutors to reduce number of witnesses
The Calcutta High Court has asked prosecutors in the AMRI Hospital fire case to bring down the number of witnesses from a staggering 455 to a practical figure to conclude the trial within a time frame.
By : migrator
Update: 2017-05-14 06:22 GMT
Kolkata
The fire had claimed lives of 92 persons on December nine, 2011.
Hearing a petition by cardiac specialist Dr Mani Chhetri for quashing of proceedings against him, Justice Joymalyo Bagchi observed that examining 455 witnesses could make the trial go on for many years.
Justice Bagchi said the prosecution would have to scale it down to a practical number so that the trial could be completed within around two years.
Public prosecutor Saswata Gopal Mukherjee submitted before the court that he would come back with a plausible plan for scaling down the number of witnesses and inform the court about it on the next date of hearing on May 18.
Mukherjee submitted during the proceedings earlier this week that the prosecution was ready to hold day-to-day trial if the high court passed directions asking the trial court to make such arrangement.
Opposing the prayer of nonagenarian Chhetri, who was one of the directors of AMRI Hospital at the time of the fire incident, Mukherjee submitted that the trial in the case had already began.
At this, Justice Bagchi said that only one witness had been examined by the prosecution in the trial court.
The cardiac specialist has claimed that though the license of the hospital had been in his name, he was not involved in the day-to-day operations of the hospital located in south Kolkata.
Chhetri, 11 other directors and four officials of the hospital have been charged with culpable homicide not amounting to murder which entails a punishment of 10 years in jail if found guilty.
They were also charged under various sections of the West Bengal Fire Services Act pertaining to violations of fire safety rules.
Charges were framed against all 16 accused persons, all of whom are out on bail, by the Alipore court on June 30, 2016.
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