Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) national spokesperson and former Delhi MLA RP Singh has met Chief Minister Rekha Gupta and raised an important issue. He has written a letter to the Chief Minister demanding a re-review of the case of 1993 Delhi bomb blasts convict Davinder Pal Singh Bhullar.
RP Singh has said in his letter that Bhullar’s mental condition is now very bad. He neither recognizes anyone nor talks to anyone. For the last several years, he has been suffering from the mental disease ‘schizophrenia’ and is undergoing treatment in the psychiatry department of Amritsar Medical College, Punjab.
Court order- Bhullar’s case should be placed before the Sentence Review Board.
RP Singh says that the Delhi High Court has recently ordered on 15 October 2025 that Bhullar’s case should be placed again before the Sentence Review Board (SRB) and after considering it, the report should be presented in the court. RP Singh has appealed to Chief Minister Rekha Gupta to follow this order and put Bhullar’s case in the next SRB meeting as soon as possible.
Demand for mercy and condolences towards Bhullar
RP Singh also reminded in his letter that the Supreme Court has already commuted Bhullar’s death sentence to life imprisonment on humanitarian grounds. He said that his condition had deteriorated after being in jail and hospital for such a long time, hence now pity and sympathy should be shown towards him.
Death sentence commuted to life imprisonment after 13 years
It is noteworthy that Davinder Pal Singh Bhullar was convicted for the 1993 bomb blasts in Delhi, in which nine people died and many were injured. He was associated with Khalistan Liberation Force at that time. In 2001, the special court of Delhi sentenced him to death, which was changed to life imprisonment by the Supreme Court in 2014.
BJP spokesperson RP Singh said that this is the time to show human compassion more than justice. He expressed hope that Chief Minister Rekha Gupta will take immediate steps in this direction so that the order of Delhi High Court is followed and a seriously ill prisoner can get relief.

