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On April 24, 1996, he snuck up behind Hara Kunta as the rival official in the local transporter's union sipped tea at a shop in a busy market in Assam's capital, Gauhati. With a swing of his machete, Das decapitated Kunta. Then he carried the bloody head by the hair to a nearby police station screaming, "I have killed him." Courts ruled that the public nature of the crime, combined with Das' horrifying walk through the streets, warranted the death penalty. Last month, President Pratibha Patil agreed, refusing a plea for clemency, and condemning Das to be the first person to be executed in Assam since a prisoner convicted of three murders was hanged in 1990. Though there are no legal options left, his family continues to appeal for mercy. "My son has already spent 15 years in jail, why kill him now," Mahendra Das' 75-year-old mother, Kusum Bala, told a local newspaper. The victim's family is impatient for the execution. "There is no point showing sympathy to a killer like him," Hara Kanta's daughter-in-law Sarada Das said. If no professional hangman can be found, prison rules would allow a convict to volunteer to carry out the execution, said Brojen Das, the jailer. No one has yet come forward, he said. For now, Mahendra Das, 45, spends his days in a 6-by-12-foot (1.8-by-3.7-meter) prison cell, where he will remain until an executioner can be located, Brojen Das said. "He is hoping against hope that somehow he can be saved," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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