London, Jun 15 (PTI) The UK’s Solicitor General on Monday moved the Court of Appeal over a British Sikh man’s minimum life term of 21 years behind bars for the murder of a teenager in south-east England, under the Unduly Lenient Sentence scheme. Vickrum Digwa, 23, was sentenced to life imprisonment after a jury found him guilty of stabbing 18-year-old Henry Nowak to death.
The judge sentenced him to life imprisonment, imposing a 21-year minimum timeline before he can be considered for parole – a ruling now being challenged for not going far enough. “This case horrified me, and I know that feeling is shared by the British public,” said Solicitor General Ellie Reeves. “It is right that difficult questions need to be answered about the way the police handled Henry’s Nowak’s murder, while my role is to review Digwa’s sentence for his crimes. After careful consideration, I have taken the decision to refer this case to the Court of Appeal,” she said. “No sentence can ever undo the devastation that Henry’s family have suffered, or fill the void left by his loss. But I hope this referral goes some way towards bringing them the justice they deserve,” she added. The verdict, delivered by Judge William Mousley at Southampton Crown Court earlier this month, followed a highly charged trial where Digwa attempted a religious defence for his murder weapon.
He claimed he used a kirpan, the ceremonial knife Sikhs have a legal dispensation to carry, in self-defence during a confrontation with Nowak in December 2025. However, as the details were laid out in court, British Sikh groups and parliamentarians condemned such misrepresentation of the kirpan and highlighted that “no religious protection or justification applied” in the case. It caused community tensions in the city, with the Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary charging several protesters in connection with violent clashes near the crime scene. Its officers, meanwhile, remain under an Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) investigation amid allegations of “two-tier” policing, where one community is prioritised over another.
It relates to footage of the victim’s final moments from a police body-worn camera that showed him being handcuffed by officers over Digwa’s allegations of racism, which were later debunked in court. “You have brought shame upon your family and your religion… Your actions have stirred up racial tension in Southampton and across the country which have made many Sikhs worried about their safety,” Justice Mousley said in his sentencing remarks. There had been some concerns that Digwa’s life sentence with a minimum 21-year term was unduly lenient. In cases where it is felt a sentence is too low in relation to the enormity of a crime, the Crown Court ruling can be sent for a review by the Court of Appeal in the UK. England’s Law Officers, such as the Solicitor General, have 28 days from sentencing to make such a decision. By law, only certain types of very serious cases can be reviewed, such as murder, manslaughter and rape. However, victims and bereaved families have up to six months to appeal for a sentence to be reconsidered, rather than being strictly limited to 28 days. PTI AK RD RD
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