"Our anxiety is that the matter commenced in 1987 and all the victims of the offence have not yet received compensation amount entitled under the Victim Compensation Scheme of the State Legal Services Authority," a bench of justices Gita Mittal and P S Teji said.
"It cannot be denied that the matter of disbursement of compensation requires to be undertaken with expedition," the bench added.
The court said it would be the responsibility of the Secretary, Meerut Legal Services Authority, to undertake the exercise of identifying the persons entitled for relief and ensure that ex-gratia under the Victim Compensation Scheme is actually released to the family of victims entitled to such relief.
It said the exercise of identifying the victims and their families should be completed within six weeks from today and the amount of compensation be positively disbursed within a period of 15 days thereafter.
"The respondent shall file an affidavit before November 24 explaining the entire matter in terms of dates and steps taken with regard to the maintenance, preservation as well as weeding out of the records," the court said.
The direction came during the hearing of a plea by Zulfiqar Nasir, a survivor of the massacre that had claimed 42 lives, against a trial court's order. Nasir had also sought direction to authorities to disbursement of the compensation to the victims.
(Reopens LGD30)
In its plea, NHRC had sought further probe into the massacre in the Hashimpura locality of Meerut.
Swamy has also challenged the trial court's March 8, 2013 decision dismissing his plea to ascertain the alleged role of P Chidambaram, who was Minister of State for Home between 1986 and 1989.
The trial court had then dismissed Swamy's plea, saying he had no locus standi and it was only the police which can move an application for further probe.
Nineteen people were named as accused and charged for offences of murder, attempt to murder, tampering with evidence and conspiracy were framed against 17 of them by the court here in 2006, after the case was transferred to Delhi on a Supreme Court direction in September 2002 following a petition by the families of the massacre victims and survivors.
The 16 accused acquitted in the case are the ones still alive. Three other accused died during the trial.
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