advertisement
Shakthi (name changed) is a police constable in Chennai, and has been a part of the force for several years now. Shakthi is also a queer person. When Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code was decriminalised last year, thereby decriminalising homosexual relationships, it was believed that adult queer individuals, like Shakthi, would face no legal hurdles to live as full citizens of the country.
One would assume the legal protection would be more so if the queer person was part of the police force. Shakthi and her partner Nithya (name changed) started facing threats from Nithya’s parents, who dragged the couple to a police station demanding that Nithya go back home with them.
On 18 February, Shakthi and Nithya were summoned to the Thirumangalam police station in Chennai, questioned and ‘counselled’ by the police for over six hours, in the presence of Nithya’s parents and a few activists.
Nithya is a third-year student at a college in Coimbatore, and had left the city a few days earlier to come to Chennai for a break with her partner Shakthi, reportedly after her hostel mates found out about her sexuality and bullied her.
The hostel mates then informed her parents that she had left the hostel, and when her parents called Nithya and confronted her, she came out to them.
At this point, Nithya told the police that she – an adult – had left Coimbatore of her own volition, and wanted to live in Chennai. She also reminded the police that Section 377 had been decriminalised by the Supreme Court, and that there was nothing illegal about her relationship with Shakthi.
The preliminary enquiry at the police station started around 5:45pm, and allegedly went on till 11:30 pm, well past the 6 pm deadline for keeping women in a police station.
The interactions among the couple, the police, and the parents were emotionally charged, leading to shouting matches between the parents and the couple. “It was like a khap panchayat, with one of the police officers saying that Nithya needed to see the “error of her ways”,” Ramakrishnan said.
“It was quite a scary situation, with the family yelling threats at the couple and at us, the people who were there to support the couple,” he said.
Following the altercations at the police station, Nithya was taken to a shelter home. Activists allege that both she and Shakthi received death threats. TNM was unable to speak to Nithya, and the shelter home that she is currently staying in refused to comment on the issue.
Activists familiar with the issue said that this forced them to escalate the matter with higher officials, which is when B Vijayakumari, Joint Commissioner of Police, West Zone, took charge of the issue.
Vijayakumari denies any interference by the police. “The police have not interfered in the issue in any manner,” she said, adding, “The woman (Nithya) is at a (shelter) home now, and the parents have gone back.” The officer refused to comment further on the issue.
“Meanwhile, Shakthi has been transferred to another police station in the city,” Ramakrishnan said. According to a source, the JC has helped all parties involved reach a compromise regarding Nithya’s living situation, and Nithya is satisfied with this currently.
While IPC Section 377 was decriminalised last year, this case clearly illustrates that the spirit of the judgement has not permeated the law enforcement system so far.
“But somewhere, the police officials feel they are morally bound to help the parents. They still empathise with the parents, despite knowing that the couple is doing nothing illegal,” she said.
“The police need to realise that they should be counselling the parents, and educating them that there is nothing wrong with a lesbian relationship, instead of siding with the parents and counselling the couple as if they are doing something wrong and need to reform,” the advocate said.
“We are not asking the police to break the law for us, we are respecting the law and asking them to do the same,” Siva added.
“This case has made us realise that we need to work towards change in mindset within law enforcement, and we have a long way to go before that happens,” Ramakrishnan said.
(The article was originally published on The News Minute.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)