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Death for Rape - Conflicting Notions

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April 27, 2018

What is the issue?

  • Recently, an ordinance was passed for mandating death penalty for those convicted for raping minors below the age of 12.
  • While some have welcomed this, some others have dismissed it as a political gimmick with little deterrent value.

What are the views of the supporters of the ordinance?

  • The supporters believe that severity of punishment has a direct bearing on the reduction in the reduction in the commission of a crime due to fear. 
  • Rational jurisprudence demands that punishment meted out should be in proportion to the crime.
  • Rape of a minor below 12 years of age is a heinous crime by any standard that severely damages the child’s physical and psychological wellbeing.
  • Hence, it is desired to present a more severe punishment to this category of offenders than those involved in other rapes.
  • The ordinance backers have also stated that debates regarding the same have been around since 2012-13 and hence it is not a knee-jerk reaction.

What are the views of those criticising the ordinance?

  • People who oppose the ordinance vouch that it is a highly rushed through patchy legislation that will have little consequence on the crime.
  • They also stress that, as raping a minor and killing him/her would attract the same punishment, this might prompt the offender to murder the victim.  
  • Notably, victims do constitute the primary evidence and their elimination could make the conviction of the perpetrators very difficult.
  • Additionally, the ordinance route for the bill is said to have bypassed the deserved parliamentary scrutiny, which is crucial to refine its provisions.
  • Moreover, in a considerable number of cases, the offender is a relative to the victim, and death penalty might put the victim’s side in such cases under a moral dilemma on whether to report the case.

What is the way ahead?

  • Increasing the severity of punishments hasn’t always led to reduction in crime, and available data suggests that there is no concrete connection between both.
  • Either ways, just making a law doesn’t change anything unless robust mechanisms are evolved to nail the offenders with surety.  
  • There needs to be considerable improvements in our criminal justice system to ensure that criminals are brought to book through fair and swift trials. 
  • Protection for victims and witnesses needs to improve and more sensitivity needs to be bred into our investigative forces to ease the pressure on victims.
  • Additionally, there is gross under-reporting of rapes in India due to social stigma, and concerted efforts are needed to overcome this.

 

Source: The Hindu

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