Supreme Court of India (File Photo | ANI)
Delhi

Nitish Katara murder case: SC grants furlough to Vikas Yadav till March 7

The court passed the decision after noting in its order that he has undergone 23 years of incarceration and granted him furlough till March 7 to spend time with his family during Holi.

Suchitra Kalyan Mohanty

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Friday granted furlough till March 7 to convicted Vikas Yadav to spend time with his family during Holi. The court allowed a plea from Yadav seeking release from the jail.

He is serving a 25-year jail term without remission for the murder of business executive Nitish Katara in 2002.

“Furlough is now sought on the ground that he wishes to spend time during Holi. Without going into the merits, we permit the petitioner to be released on furlough till March 7,” said a two-judge bench of the apex court, headed by Justice MM Sundresh and Justice Vipul M Pancholi.

The court passed the decision after noting in its order that he has undergone 23 years of incarceration and granted him furlough till March 7 to spend time with his family during Holi. A trial court in May 2008—finding enough evidence—held Vikas Yadav guilty of murdering Nitish Katara for being in a relationship with his sister.

On October 3, 2016, the apex court awarded a 25-year jail term without any benefit of remission to Vikas Yadav, son of controversial Uttar Pradesh politician DP Yadav, and his cousin Vishal Yadav for their role in the kidnapping and killing of business executive Katara. Bharti was the daughter of politician D P Yadav.

Mamata claims central forces tried to search her car day after TMC alleged 'selective targeting' of its leaders by ECI

Opposition leaders meet at Kharge's residence to discuss women's quota law, delimitation

CBSE Class 10 exam results announced; pass percentage stands at 93.70 per cent

'Punishment for progress?': Stalin sharpens attack on delimitation plan, calls for state-wide black flag stir

Fuel shock lifts inflation to 3-year high as IMF pegs India growth at 6.5 percent

SCROLL FOR NEXT