Bangalore: AIADMK supremo Jayalalitha will have to remain in jail for at least six more days after she failed to get any immediate relief from the Karnataka High Court, which deferred until October 7 a hearing on her plea for immediate bail.

Recently unseated as Tamil Nadu chief minister, Jayalalitha was also seeking the suspension of her four-year sentence in the disproportionate assets case.

With a thick security blanket thrown around the entire court complex, the High Court vacation bench took up the matter for an urgent hearing with Jayalalitha’s counsel Ram Jethmalani pleading for suspension of the sentence pending appeal under Section 389 of the Criminal Procedure Code and for her release on bail.

Under this provision, pending any appeal by a convicted person, the Appellate Court may order that the execution of the sentence or order appealed against be suspended. Also, if the person is in confinement, that he or she be released on bail, or on own bond.

Opposing Jayalalitha’s plea, Special Public Prosecutor Bhavani Singh told Justice Rathnakala that the suspension of conviction sought by Jayalalitha “is not allowed under the law.”

Singh also objected to Jayalalitha seeking bail under Section 389, saying that “because of the status of the accused, being a former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, she may misuse the liberty.” Singh also filed a memo about his appointment as SPP in the case. Singh, who was SPP in the Special Court in the disproportionate assets case, had told the court yesterday that he had not yet received any official notification appointing him as the SPP.

After a brief hearing in the packed court, the judge adjourned the matter to October 7 to be taken up by a regular bench.

Soon thereafter, some supporters of the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), upset over the order, expressed their displeasure outside the court complex but were dispersed by police.

Police officers were deployed in good strength with each person being checked thoroughly at all entry points of the court complex entrance before being let in.

The court is on Dasera holidays from September 29 to October 5. October 6 is a government holiday on account of Eid Al Adha. The High Court had yesterday posted the matter for hearing on October 6 but after Jayalalitha’s counsels made a plea for an urgent sitting today, the court allowed it.

In a verdict on Saturday at the end of an 18-year old legal battle, Special Judge John Michael D’Cunha had convicted Jayalalitha, sentencing her to four years imprisonment, and slapped a staggering fine of Rs1 billion (Dh59.57 million) in the Rs660 million corruption case.

Jayalalitha’s aide Sasikala, her relatives V.N. Sudhakaran, disowned son of the former Chief Minister and Ilavarasi will also have to spend at least six more days in jail as their petitions for bail and suspension of the sentence were also adjourned till October 7.

In her petitions seeking immediate bail and challenging her sentence, Jayalalitha has maintained that the charges of amassing wealth against her were false and that she had acquired property through legal means.

Jayalalitha has also contended that the trial court has overlooked several judgements and has not considered the binding nature of various income tax orders and decisions of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, which had accepted the income and the level of expenditure pleaded by her.

Besides Jayalilithaa, three other accused were also sentenced to jail for four years, besides being slapped with a fine Rs10 crore each.