Nepal court upholds 'bikini killer' murder conviction
Nepal's Supreme Court on Friday rejected an appeal against a murder conviction by Charles Sobhraj, the alleged serial killer, con man and prison escape artist linked to backpacker deaths in Asia.
Sobhraj, a French citizen of Vietnamese and Indian parentage, is serving a life sentence in Nepal for the murder of American tourist Connie Joe Bronzich in 1975.
Bronzich was stabbed repeatedly before being burnt almost beyond recognition and then dumped on the outskirts of the Nepalese capital. Sobhraj was found guilty of her murder six years ago.
The 66-year-old, who police describe as a persuasive con man, is known as the "bikini killer" for his links to a string of poisonings, killings and robberies of backpackers across Asia in the 1970s.
He has already served a 21-year sentence in India for culpable homicide, but until 2004 he had never been convicted of murder.
Sobhraj has always maintained his innocence in the Bronzich case, saying he had never visited Nepal before he was arrested at a Kathmandu casino in 2003.
"In my case, there are no documents and no witnesses [to the crime]. I think that the court will have to free me," he told AFP in a 2006 interview.
But Supreme Court judge Ram Kumar Prasad Shaha said while there was no direct evidence against Sobhraj, the circumstantial evidence was sufficient to justify his 2004 conviction. "Therefore, we uphold their verdict," he said.
Dozens of people packed into the tiny courtroom in downtown Kathmandu to hear the ruling, among them Nihita Biswas, the young Nepalese woman Sobhraj is reported to have married while in jail.
Biswas, 22 and the daughter of one of Sobhraj's lawyers, wept as the verdict was read out and accused the court of being "completely biased".
Handwriting analysis played a significant part in Sobhraj's conviction, with signatures on two hotel registration cards around the time of the murder said to be his. His legal team says the originals were never produced during his trial, only photocopies.