A
Kashmiri man convicted in the 2001 attack on India's Parliament has been hanged
in an Indian prison after a final mercy plea was rejected, a senior Indian Home
Ministry official said Saturday.
Home
Secretary R.K. Singh told reporters that Mohammed Afzal Guru was executed early
Saturday morning in New Delhi's Tihar prison.
"It
was the law taking its course," Singh said.
Afzal
Guru has been on death row since first being convicted in 2002. Subsequent
appeals in higher courts were also rejected and India's Supreme Court set an
execution date for October 2006. However, his execution was delayed after his
wife filed a mercy petition with India's president. That petition, the last
step in the judicial process, was turned down earlier this week.
Several
rights groups including political groups in Indian Kashmir have said that Guru
did not get a fair trial.
Guru
confessed in TV interviews that he helped plot the attack that killed 14,
including all five attackers. He later denied any involvement and said he was
tortured into confessing.
Government
prosecutors have said that Guru was a member of the militant group
Jaish-e-Mohammed, a charge Guru denied.
On
Saturday, thousands of police and paramilitary troops fanned out across Indian
Kashmir preparing for any protests and violence that might break out following
the announcement of the execution. A curfew was also imposed in the Himalayan
state.
When
Guru's death sentence was handed down by India's Supreme Court it sparked
protests in Kashmir and the state government has warned that his execution
could destabilize the volatile Himalayan region.
Muslim-majority
Kashmir is divided between Hindu-dominated India and Muslim-majority Pakistan
but is claimed by both nations.
Since
1989, an armed uprising in Indian-controlled Kashmir and an ensuing crackdown
have killed an estimated 68,000 people, mostly civilians.
Guru's
execution was carried out in secrecy similar to the execution in November of
Mohammed Ajmal Kasab, the lone surviving gunman of the 2008 Mumbai attacks.
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