(January 21, 2011) India's top court has confirmed the life sentence given to a Hindu
who burned to death an Australian missionary and his two young in eastern India’s
Orissa state nearly 12 years ago. A trial court had sentenced Dara Singh to death
but it was reduced to life in prison on appeal. Two judges of India’s Supreme Court
on Friday rejected a plea by state prosecutors to raise Dara Singh's punishment back
to the death penalty, Singh's attorney, S.S. Mishra, said. The judges said Singh's
offense was highly condemnable, but it did not fall in the category of rarest of rare
to warrant the death sentence, Mishra said. Fr. Babu Joseph, the spokesman for the
Catholic Bishops' Conference of India (CBCI) said, “We accept the judicial verdict.”
However, he said it was a grim reminder of the Jan. 22nd, 1999 killings
of Graham Staines and his sons, Philip and Timothy, aged 10 and 8 respectively.
Staines, an Evangelical Christian, had been looking after leprosy patients in Orissa
state. A mob led by Singh set fire to a jeep in which the family had been sleeping
outside a church in the tribal village of Manoharpur. A series of attacks against
missionaries and Christian institutions at the time were blamed on right-wing Hindus,
who claimed missionaries tricked impoverished Hindus by force, money and superstition
into converting faiths, a charge the Christian missionaries denied.