advertisement
The PW11 in this case is a three-year-old child whose parents filed an FIR against the trustee of the school she was studying in after she confided in her mother that he had sexually assaulted her. While the court acquitted the French national for want of substantive evidence, certain choice words used in the order, however, have evoked strong reactions.
The problematic term being- ‘ravished’. This was used to describe the act of sexual assault that the child had complained about. Senior advocate Abha Singh points out that while courts have used the word ‘ravish’ to describe sexual assault in the past, that doesn’t make it acceptable.
Senior Advocate Rebecca John too believes that the term reeks of misogyny when used instead of sexual assault.
The case came to light around May 2017 after the three-year-old girl’s parents filed an FIR in Mumbai's MIDC police station in Andheri, alleging that their child was sexually assaulted in school by the founder and trustee of the school. The parents also alleged a teacher’s involvement in the case.
They claimed that their child was being sexually assaulted for months and only spoke up about the ordeal after her mother spotted bruises on her body. Following this, both the accused were arrested by the Mumbai police.
While recording her deposition, the judge asked a detailed set of 87 questions to the three-year-old, whose answers appeared to be inconsistent. When initially asked if the ‘boy teacher’ (the school trustee) would take off her pants and touch her private parts, the minor says ‘no’. During the latter part of the questioning, when asked, “The boy teacher used to come in the classroom and he used to touch you at the private part and this was the secret between you and accused no 2 (the teacher)? The girl nodded and said, “Yes”.
Apart from this, the minor was also asked questions related to the time she spent at the school, including her teachers, a tree house located at the school, lunches, among other details. The court then observed that,
Quoting past cases, senior advocates point out that even if a minor does turn hostile, the onus of proving their innocence lies on the accused.
In such cases, circumstantial evidence then comes into play. However, advocate Rebecca John adds that constant repetition of questions tends to confuse the minor.
The court observed that “…no accused can be convicted if the witnesses do not support the prosecution case or give quality evidence, as in the present case where the evidence of the victim is unreliable and untrustworthy…,” thus acquitting the accused.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)