Published On : Mon, May 8th, 2017

Wanted justice, not revenge: Bilkis Bano

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Mumbai:
Fifteen years after she was gangraped and most of her family killed in the 2002 riots in Gujarat, Bilkis Bano is ready for a new beginning and is hoping to see her elder daughter become a lawyer.

All I wanted was “justice, not revenge”, she said at a press conference in New Delhi, four days after a landmark Bombay high court judgment upheld the life imprisonment of 12 people involved in gangraping her and set aside the acquittal of seven people, including policemen and doctors.

Bilkis, who was pregnant at the time and lost her three-and-a-half-year-old daughter in the riots, is hoping that the judgment will help her lead a “good life”.

As she sat flanked by her husband and youngest daughter, all of two years old, Bilkis seemed to have found a sense of closure.

“The Bombay high court judgment was very good and I am very happy, so is my family. I am all the more happy as the policemen and doctors involved in covering up the incident have also been convicted,” she said.

“My elder daughter wants to be a lawyer. I will make sure all my children study and chart a new path,” Bilkis added.

Her husband, Yakub, who is a milk trader, broke down when asked about the family’s ordeal and threats from the convicts who were frequently out on parole.

“I want women across the board to get justice like Bilkis,” he said.

“Cow protection laws and vigilante groups also threaten my family cattle business. I will have to find new avenues of income,” Yakub said.

The family had to change their home 25 times in 15 years as the convicts on parole would threaten Bilkis, said rights activist Farah Naqvi amongst those who helped organise the press conference.