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On Friday night, a 23-year-old Kerala woman called the police and informed them that she had cut off the sexual organs of a 54-year-old swami after he allegedly tried to rape her. She called it an act of vengeance and self-defence.
The parents of the woman were followers of the swami, who has his ashram at Padmana in Kollam, Kerala. The act, which soon made headlines in the country, was lauded by Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan.
Vijayan said in Thiruvanathapuram on Saturday:
A Kerala police inspector also commented and saw the act as perhaps the only escape the woman could think of.
The alleged rapist, Hari alias Ganeshananda Theerthapada Swami, had reportedly been abusing the woman for the past eight years. This means that the woman was a minor when the abuse started.
Speaking to The Quint, Supreme Court lawyer Kamini Jaiswal described the alleged abuse as “horrendous”.
Jaiswal also spoke of the government’s inability to curb crimes against women.
Another SC lawyer, Karuna Nundy, told The Quint that a person under the threat of rape has a right to private defence.
Battered Women’s Syndrome is a mental disorder developed in victims of long-term abuse. This condition has both physical and psychological implications, and can be used as defence in this case.
Currently, a case been registered against the Swami under Section 376 (rape) of the IPC and under sections of POCSO.
As Nundy pointed out, Battered Women’s Syndrome can make for a defence argument too. Additionally, Sections 96 to 106 of the IPC also deal with right to private defence of person and property and allow provisions for “the purpose of protecting one’s own body and property as also another’s body and property when immediate aid from the state machinery is not readily available and in so doing he is not answerable in law for his deeds”.
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Published: 20 May 2017,08:06 PM IST