Ram Rahim Singh: India guru jailed for life over journalist's murder

  • Published
Gurmeet Ram Rahim SinghImage source, AFP
Image caption,

Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh is already serving a 20-year prison sentence for rape

An Indian guru has been sentenced to life in prison for murdering a journalist who exposed sexual abuse of women at his sect.

Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh, the 51-year-old Dera Sacha Sauda leader, is already serving a 20-year prison sentence for raping two female followers.

Newspaper editor Ram Chander Chhatrapati was killed after revealing the cases at Dera's headquarters in the north-western city of Sirsa.

Three other men were also sentenced.

The self-styled holy man appeared at the court in Panchkula in Haryana state through a video link from his prison.

Close aides Kuldeep Singh, Nirmal Singh and Krishan Lal were also given life sentences.

The court, which had convicted them last week, also imposed a fine of 50,000 rupees (£545; $703) on each one of them.

Image source, AFP
Image caption,

Police set up a barricade near the prison in Haryana state where Ram Rahim Singh is jailed

Ram Rahim Singh had long painted himself as a pious spiritual leader, encouraging followers all over the world to take vows of abstinence and celibacy.

But this facade started to slip in 2002 after Mr Chhatrapati published a letter in his Hindi-language newspaper Poora Sach - The Complete Truth.

Written by an anonymous follower of Ram Rahim Singh, it described instances of sexual abuse at the sect.

Anshul Chhatrapati, the late editor's son, told The Print in 2007 that his colleagues had warned his father at the time to be careful, external, because "someone will shoot you one day".

This Twitter post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on Twitter
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
Skip twitter post by Deepika Bhardwaj

Allow Twitter content?

This article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read Twitter’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
End of twitter post by Deepika Bhardwaj

To this, he reportedly replied: "A real reporter takes the bullet, not a shoe."

Five days after he published the article, on 24 October 2002, Dera Sacha Sauda followers shot Mr Chhatrapati outside his home.

When he died, less than a month later, the letter had already sparked a major investigation into abuse at the sect.

Anshul, who was 21 when his father died, took over the running of the newspaper, and pushed for rape and murder charges to be brought against Ram Rahim Singh.

"My father sacrificed his life for truth," he said in the 2017 interview. "I could not have let his sacrifice go waste."