logo
top nav left img
  • About Us
  • Send Us News
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Info
  • Feedback
top nav right img

-
Jilted teen commits suicide
Govt collects revenue of Rs 97.33 billion in five months
President should understand his responsibility: Sushil
Bastola flown to New Delhi's super-specialty hospital
APF squad deployed in Chitwan to fend off rouge elephant
Apex court stays Jha's appointment as NTA chief
Two die of asphyxiation in Lalitpur
'Tainted Pak oil regulator may have fled to Nepal'
Prez Yadav urges Khanal to facilitate inter-party talks
NC cadre found dead in Rukum

eXTReMe Tracker
Govinda Mainali, victim of Japan’s faulty criminal justice system, arrives home
Saturday, 16 June 2012 13:14 Read this : 888 times
  • Share this
    • Twitter
    • Myspace
    • Mister Wong
    • Digg
    • Del.icio.us
    • Jumptags
    • StumbleUpon
    • Slashdot
    • Furl
    • Yahoo
    • Technorati
    • Newsvine
    • Blinkbits
    • Ma.Gnolia
    • Smarking
    • Googlize this
    • Blinklist
    • Facebook
    • Wikio
  • Export PDF
  • Print
  • E-mail
smaller text tool iconmedium text tool iconlarger text tool icon

Govinda Prasad Mainali, who served 15 years in Japanese jail after being wrongly accused of choking to death a 39-year-old Japanese woman in March 1997, arrived home Saturday noon.

Mainali, 45, of Jhapa, who was released by the Tokyo High Court to open retrial recently, arrived Kathmandu via Bangkok with his wife Radha and two daughters- Mithila, 20, and Alisha, 18. Mainali's mother and relatives had reached Tribhuvan International Airport to welcome him.

He was released with the Japanese court granting new trial on June 7. Ruling for retrial was based on a new analysis that showed the DNA of semen found in the victim's body did not match with Mainali's, but did match with the DNA of body hair collected at the vacant apartment where the woman, an employee of Tokyo Electric Power Co., was murdered, indicating another man was the killer. The victim's name has been withheld for privacy reasons.

The case grabbed headlines, particularly in Japan's tabloid press which said the victim, a Tokyo Electric Power employee, was leading a double life as a businesswoman by day and a prostitute at night.

Prosecutors had maintained the victim engaged in sexual relations with an unknown number of men while Mainali had the apartment key.

Mainali was acquitted of murder by the Tokyo District Court in April 2000, but remained in prison pending an appeal by prosecutors.

In December of the same year, the High Court overturned the district court's ruling, saying Mainali had choked the woman to death and robbed her of 40,000 yen ($500) in cash. nepalnews.com

 

Related Article

  • Tourist arrivals see slight growth
  • MoLTM to make efforts to expedite JITCO process
  • NFC serious to ward off food insecurity
  • CIAA bars KMC officials from visiting Japan
  • Japan pledges US $ 73,588 for disabled

Latest News Headlines

  • Jilted teen commits suicide
  • Protests against gangrape continue in Indian capital
  • Govt collects revenue of Rs 97.33 billion in five months
  • President should understand his responsibility: Sushil
  • Bastola flown to New Delhi's super-specialty hospital
  • APF squad deployed in Chitwan to fend off rouge elephant
  • Apex court stays Jha's appointment as NTA chief
  • Two die of asphyxiation in Lalitpur
  • 'Tainted Pak oil regulator may have fled to Nepal'
  • Prez Yadav urges Khanal to facilitate inter-party talks
  • NC cadre found dead in Rukum
  • Devkota prize to five litterateurs
  • Dahal Bangkok-bound, unity govt talks likely to be hit
  • Business body demands permission to invest abroad
  • UCPN (Maoist) demands action against perpetrators of violence against women
  • Leather Goods & Footwear Expo concludes
  • Pakistan car bomb explosion leaves 19 dead
  • Clinton hospitalised
  • Obama vows to push new gun-control legislation in 2013
  • Two workers crushed to death in hydel project


2012 © Mercantile Communications Pvt. Ltd.