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Man found guilty of model murder Guilty verdict over model murder
(about 2 hours later)
A court in India has found the son of a governing Congress party politician guilty of murdering a model in 1999.A court in India has found the son of a governing Congress party politician guilty of murdering a model in 1999.
Manu Sharma, son of former federal minister, Venod Sharma, was convicted of shooting model Jessica Lal dead at a fashionable restaurant in the capital. Manu Sharma, son of former federal minister Venod Sharma, was convicted of shooting Jessica Lal dead at a fashionable restaurant in the capital.
In February, a lower court acquitted nine people, including Sharma, of the murder. Police filed an appeal and the case was reopened amid a public outcry. The case was reopened after he and eight others were acquitted in February, prompting a public outcry.
Prosecutors said Sharma fired at Ms Lal after she refused to serve him a drink. Campaigners say media pressure mounted over the case has encouraged the courts to take on India's rich and powerful.
'Conspiracy'
Prosecutors said Manu Sharma fired at Jessica Lal after she refused to serve him a drink at the restaurant where she was working as a waitress.
We have no hesitation in holding Sidharth Vashisht, alias Manu Sharma, guilty of the offence of murder Delhi high court judgesWe have no hesitation in holding Sidharth Vashisht, alias Manu Sharma, guilty of the offence of murder Delhi high court judges
It is the second time in as many months that a conviction has been secured in a retrial of a high-profile Indian murder case involving India's elite. Several eyewitnesses came forward to the police, but by the time the case came to trial seven years later key eyewitnesses had retracted their statements.
In October, the son of a former senior policeman was convicted of raping and murdering Delhi student Priyardishini Mattoo in 1996. The trial finally collapsed in February 2006 when the lower court judge said the prosecution's case contained loopholes and there was insufficient evidence to convict.
Sustained public campaigns were mounted in both cases to highlight what critics said were examples of the rich and powerful using their influence to evade justice. The acquittals sparked public outrage, with protest rallies and a sustained media campaign launched to demand justice for Jessica Lal, who was 34 when she was killed.
Campaign Police appealed against the acquittals and opened an investigation into allegations that there had been a conspiracy to pervert justice.
Manu Sharma and his eight co-accused were acquitted in the first trial after key eyewitnesses retracted their statements. Several witnesses and police officials involved in the case were questioned.
The judge said the case presented by the prosecution had several loopholes and there was insufficient evidence to convict.
The acquittals, in February, sparked public outrage, with protest rallies and a sustained media campaign launched to demand justice for Jessica Lal, who was 34 when she was killed.
Police in Delhi appealed against the acquittals, saying the accused had been freed on "mere conjectures and surmises".
They also opened an investigation into allegations that there had been a conspiracy to pervert justice in the case. Some witnesses and police officials who were involved in the case were questioned.
Delivering their verdict on Monday, two high court judges in the capital said: "We have no hesitation in holding Sidharth Vashisht, alias Manu Sharma, guilty of the offence of murder."Delivering their verdict on Monday, two high court judges in the capital said: "We have no hesitation in holding Sidharth Vashisht, alias Manu Sharma, guilty of the offence of murder."
Sharma will be sentenced later this week.
Landmark campaign
Campaigners say this was the latest in a long line of cases where members of India's elite had been able to manipulate the law and get away with murder.
But the pressure mounted over the Jessica Lal case is seen as a turning point in efforts to bring the rich to justice.
After the February acquittals there was a huge outcry in the Indian media and students led candlelight vigils in Delhi to demand justice for the murdered model.
Observers say the case encouraged sustained media campaigns and public protests which have resulted in other cases being reopened and convictions secured.
In October, the son of a former senior policeman was convicted of raping and murdering Delhi student Priyardishini Mattoo in 1996.
Earlier this month, former Indian cricketer Navjot Sidhu was sentenced to three years in prison for manslaughter after beating a man in a dispute over a parking space.
His acquittal, too, was overturned on appeal.