The
Supreme Court issued notice to Attorney General KK Venugopal in a
plea filed by nine women lawyers questioning the
trivialization of sexual offences by courts in
India. The plea was filed by Advocate Aparna Bhat along with eight other women
lawyers that challenged the order of the Madhya Pradesh High Court where a man
accused of sexual assault was directed to go to the victim’s house on
Rakshabandhan and allow her to tie a rakhi on him as a condition of bail.
The
Bench was headed by Justice AM Khanwilkar and B. R. Gavai who issued a notice
to the office of Attorney General and sought his assistance in the matter while
posting the matter for hearing on November 2. Senior Counsel Sanjay Parikh, who
appeared on behalf of the petitioners, submitted that such observations in
cases of sexual assault cases, rape, and the conditions imposed are not in the
interest of victims. He also stated that the appeal has been filed in an
“extraordinary circumstance”.
The Bench also questioned if
this issue is restricted to Madhya Pradesh or other states as well. The nine
women lawyers submitted that courts all over the country should be restrained
from imposing such conditions as these are “against the principle of law”.
On July 30th, the high
court ordered and granted bail to the accused in the case and imposed a
condition that the accused along with his wife shall visit the complainant’s
house and request her to tie Rakhi to him with the promise to protect her to the best of his ability for
all times to come. Parikh told the bench that “The trauma of the victim is trivialised by such
conditions”. The petitioners had clearly stated that they have not
challenged the grant of bail, but only the condition of tying Rakhi.
The substantial question that arose
while discussing this matter was whether it is appropriate for a court to impose extraneous
conditions in a case seeking bail. Another important question that arose
for consideration apex court in this matter was whether the High Court ought to have employed sensitivity
and circumspection while dealing with a case that involves a sexual offence
committed against a woman.
The plea made by the parties
declared that since the judgment comes from a High Court, it would trivialize
such a heinous offence. The court also added that such an act, direction and
observation would normalize what is essentially a crime that involves a sexual
offence which has been committed against a woman.
Rakshabandhan is a festival of
guardianship between sisters and brothers wherein they promise to protect one
another. But the petitioners strongly argued that the said bail condition
amounts "to a gross trivialization of the trauma that the complainant
suffered in the present case.
The petitioner also highlighted the
fact that the offence of outraging the modesty of the victim was done by
forcibly entering into the house of the victim and stated that even when the
law prescribes that the victim
be kept far away from the accused, the direction given by the High Court
was contradicting and would lead to the victimization of the survivor in her
own house.
This nes has been reported by Yashasvi Kanodia
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