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New hope lifts Mainali household
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Posted on 09-07-11 3:07
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New hope lifts Mainali household |
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KATHMANDU, July 23: Seventeen years ago, Radha Mainali bade emotional farewell to her husband Govinda Prasad Mainali who flew to Japan promising to return soon after “seeing the world”.
The parting took place just three years after their mid-1991 marriage in Ilam district. The couple´s eldest daughter was little over a year old and the youngest daughter four-months-old back then.
“I personally didn´t want him to leave,” said Radha, 38, who moved from Ilam to Kathmandu with her daughters in 2003.
“We hadn´t spent enough time together to build a lot of good memories. And ours was a well-heeled family. No one needed to take up some back-breaking job in a foreign land for supporting the family,” she said.
Radha herself is from a relatively well-to-do Dahal family of Shantipur VDC, Ilam. Her husband, who is from Golakharka VDC of the district, also had holdings sufficient for a comfortable life.
But Govinda, a 27-year-old back then, was filled to the brim with curiosity about the outside world that an uneventful rural existence couldn´t settle. And his elder sister Urmila was working in Japan. Therefore for Govinda, leaving for Japan seemed the most natural thing to do.
For three years since Govinda landed in Tokyo in April 1994, things were looking just fine. Govinda worked as a waiter in Tokyo, corresponded with his family regularly, and also shared his income and experiences with his wife.
But the calm of the Mainali household was shattered in March 1997 when word arrived that Tokyo police had arrested Govinda. Form that day, things turned from bad to worse in what seemed to Radha like a nightmare.
Govinda was first investigated for overstaying his visa, found guilty and served a suspended prison sentence. He was then charged for the murder of a 39-year-old Japanese woman, acquitted first, then found guilty upon appeal, and finally sentenced for life in prison.
Help from kind Japanese
Radha, who couldn´t study after the tenth grade as she was married at the age of 18, was hardly prepared to deal with this.
“I never doubted my husband´s innocence. He was not that type of man,” said Radha.
She was fortunate to get the support of kind Japanese citizens and non-resident Nepalis in Japan right since the time Govinda was charged for murder.
The kind people cobbled together a defense counsel for her husband while the case was fought in court. The Justice for Govinda-Innocence Advocacy Group set up mostly by Japanese citizens who continue to believe in Govinda´s innocence piled pressure for a fair trial, and pointed at weaknesses in the investigation that led to the conviction.
The group has continued to support her even after the trial was over. It paid for Radha´s so-far eight trips to Japan to see her husband who is now in a prison in Yokohama, and has continued to pay for the education of her kids.
“The advocacy group has done everything that my husband would have done for the family,” she said, each of her words pregnant with gratitude.
The last time Radha saw Govinda, now 44, was in March this year when she made her eighth trip to Japan. She landed in Japan on March 11 when a devastating earthquake struck the country.
“I found him healthy and full of hope for some breakthrough in his favor. He told me not to worry and told me he would return home as he was innocent,” she said.
Consoling daughters
Perhaps the hardest thing for Radha was explaining things to her two daughters who don´t have any memory of their father pampering them.
“They would come home from school weeping after someone in the class said something nasty about their father,” said Radha. “As they grew up, I explained to them that their father was in prison, that he was innocent and a good man, and would return home.”
The first time the two girls saw their father as grown-ups was in 2007 when Radha took them to Japan.
“It was only after seeing and talking to their father that they calmed down and came to believing that their father was not a monster,” she said.
One of Radha´s biggest regrets is that she doesn´t have enough pictures of Govinda. And she has no picture of the two together.
“When the murder case was being fought at Japanese courts over a decade ago, many Japanese journalists arrived at our house in Ilam and took the photographs of the two of us promising to return them. None did. The pictures are gone,” she said. “I only have single pictures of Govinda, and they are very old pictures.”
During her meetings with Govinda in prison, Radha has never been allowed to take a camera along.
Hope after 14 years
The Mainali household got a reason to cheer on Thursday when Radha received phone calls from the advocacy group in Japan and from a former chairman of Non-Resident Nepali Association Japan informing her about the emergence of new DNA evidence that suggests a third person´s involvement in the murder of the woman named Yasuko Watanabe, who was an employee of Tokyo Electric Co, and who moonlighted at night as a prostitute.
The DNA analysis showed that semen found inside the woman´s body was not Govinda´s, indicating that the woman might have had contact with another man at the time of the crime. During past investigations, Japanese authorities had conducted DNA tests of body fluid found in the apartment where the murder took place, but not of the body fluid left inside the woman´s body.
“With the emergence of this new evidence, there must be a way to set him free. I am sure he will return to Nepal in the near future,” she said, adding, “God has heard my prayers.”
Since 2005, Govinda has been appealing for a retrial.
After Thursday´s developments, Japanese media have run reports highlighting the need for a retrial.
“The question now is this: why hadn´t the DNA test been conducted during the murder investigation, and will the new discoveries affect the court´s decision on reopening the case?” said a report carried Friday by the online site of The Mainichi Daily News.
Similarly, a perspectives piece posted on the same news site said, “The results of the new DNA test point to the possibility that someone other than Mainali was at the murder scene, and have cast serious doubts over the confirmed ruling´s fact-finding. Therefore, Mainali should be retried.”
Radha is least interested in these gory details. “Things are looking up. The new evidence must have emerged for a reason,” said the theist with hope. |
Last edited: 07-Sep-11 03:08 PM
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pandora
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Posted on 09-07-11 3:16
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Felt bad for Mainali Family, Wish them a very best of luck and hope Mr Mailnali will be back home soon.
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