The Supreme Court on Friday adjourned to April 4 the
hearing on a plea filed by the CBI to transfer trial against jailed JKLF chief
Yasin Malik and other co-accused in two cases from Jammu and Kashmir to Delhi.
A bench of Justices Abhay S Oka and Ujjal Bhuyan
deferred the matter as Solicitor General Tushar Mehta was not available.
During the hearing, Malik appeared before the court
through video-conferencing.
He requested the court to post the matter after
Ramzan to which the bench agreed.
The top court had earlier directed Malik to appear
before it through video-conferencing on March 7 It was informed that the
Jammu sessions court was "well-equipped" with the video-conferencing
system enabling the virtual examination.
The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) sought the
transfer of the trials in the 1989 case of the kidnapping of Rubaiya Sayeed,
daughter of former union minister Mufti Mohammed Sayeed, and the 1990 Srinagar
shootout case, from Jammu to New Delhi.
The top court previously directed the registrar
general of the Jammu and Kashmir High Court to ensure proper video-conferencing
facilities at the Jammu special court while hearing two cases against Malik and
others.
The top court on December 18, last year, gave six
accused two weeks to respond to the CBI's plea to transfer the trial of the
cases.
The plea is over the two cases in which four Indian
Air Force personnel were killed on January 25, 1990 in Srinagar and the
abduction which took place on December 8, 1989.
Malik, chief of the proscribed JKLF, is facing trial
in both cases.
The top court was hearing a CBI plea against the
September 20, 2022 order of a Jammu trial court directing Malik, serving a life
term in Tihar jail, to be produced before it physically to cross-examine
prosecution witnesses in the abduction case.
The CBI said Malik was a threat to national security
and couldn't be allowed to be taken outside the Tihar jail premises.
Rubaiya, who was freed five days after her abduction
when the then BJP-backed V P Singh government at the Centre released five
terrorists in exchange, now lives in Tamil Nadu. She is a prosecution witness
for the CBI, which took over the case in the early 1990s.
Malik has been lodged in Tihar jail after he was
sentenced by a special NIA court in May 2023 in a terror-funding case.