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Seven years after the brutal Nirbhaya gang rape that shook the entire nation, the conviction rate in rape cases in the country is as low as 32.2 percent despite laws dealing with sexual assault being made stringent in the aftermath of the incident.
What is perhaps more worrisome is that while the conviction rate in rape cases has increased marginally in recent years, the charge-sheeting rate has gone down – which means cases are not going to court.
The charge-sheeting rate in rape cases dropped to 86.6 percent in 2017 from 95.4 percent in 2013, the NCRB statistics show.
Shilpi Jain, who was the defence lawyer in the Alwar rape case wherein a foreign tourist was raped by Bitti Mohanty, son former Odisha director general of police B B Mohanty, said the field-level staff of police dealing with rape investigation need to be made more efficient.
"A sub-inspector is the highest-level officer who files a charge sheet, so one can imagine the quality of the content," said Jain.
Similarly, the prosecutors who deal with the cases at the district level are of low caliber and less driven, she said, adding that all these factors make up badly investigated cases which results in a low conviction rate.
All the accused, including a juvenile, were arrested and charged with sexual assault and murder. One of the accused, Ram Singh, died in police custody of possible suicide on 11 March 2013 in the Tihar Jail.
A week after the horrific attack on Nirbhaya, the Justice JS Verma Committee was set up to review the criminal laws to sternly deal with sexual assault cases.
The Committee's report, which was published within a month, formed the basis of the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act of 2013 to set the maximum punishment for rape as the death penalty rather than life imprisonment.
The Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015 was also passed by Parliament, allowing for juveniles in conflict with the law in the age group of 1618, involved in heinous offences, to be tried as adults.
But despite the two laws being made stringent, the rate of conviction in rape cases remain as low as 32 percent, as per NCRB data.
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