About 90 percent of child rape cases were pending trial in India in 2016. No more than 28 percent of such cases ended in conviction, and there is a 20-year backlog in bringing cases to trial, the latest available national crime data show.
These data indicate the government move to prioritise a change to legislation that allows courts to grant the death penalty to rapists of children younger than 12 will not bring quicker or better justice because there is no plan to address conviction failures and court delays.
The new ordinance also adds a minimum punishment of 20 years to anyone who rapes a woman below 16.
Of 39,068 rape victims – including women and girls – in 2016, 43 percent (16,863) of the girls raped were minor, below the age of 18, while 5 percent (2,116) were less than 12 years old, according to National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) data.
The union cabinet on 21 April, 2018, approved an ordinance to the Indian Penal Code, Indian Evidence Act, Code of Criminal Procedure and the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act (POCSO), allowing for harsher punishments to those committing sexual crimes against women and children.
An ordinance is promulgated by the President of India when the union cabinet so recommends and used when Parliament is out of session to quickly pass legislation deemed urgent.
The amendments, known as the Criminal Law Ordinance 2018, come during a period of national uproar. April 2018 was a month where the high-profile rape cases of eight-year-old in Jammu and Kashmir’s Kathua district, and the alleged rape of a minor in Unnao, Uttar Pradesh, allegedly by a BJP MLA, dominated the national media and fuelled much politicised debate along religious and ethnic lines.
Likely Drop in Reporting Rapes
There were 19,765 reported child rapes in India in 2016, or 54 every day, under section 376 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and section 4 and 6 of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act–an increase of almost 6 percent compared to 2014 when 18,661 cases were reported.
Madhya Pradesh reported the most 13 percent (2,467) child rapes nationwide in 2016, followed by Maharashtra (12 percent, 2,292 cases) and Uttar Pradesh (11 percent, 2,115 cases).
Sikkim reported the highest rate of rape, 32.5 rapes per 100,000 children, followed by Mizoram (26.7) and Delhi (14.5), as against the national average of 4.4 child rapes.
About 18-20 percent of child rapes occur in the family and 50 percent in an institutionalized setting, according to this 2013 paper published in the journal Psychological Studies.
Offenders were known to the victims–including both women and girl child–in 94% of the rape cases reported in 2016, NCRB data show. Most of them (29 percent) were neighbours, followed by ‘known persons on promise to marry the victim’ (27 percent) and relatives (6 percent); 30 percent were other known people.
The introduction of a death penalty for those accused of raping a child under 12 years could have a negative effect on reporting, as families fear ostracization and legal consequence for family members.
“The introduction of the death penalty is not a great move. In the family these cases will not be reported, so many of these things happen by known people, the community will protect them,” Flavia Agnes, a women’s’ rights lawyer and co-founder of MAJLIS, a Mumbai-based organisation that provides legal initiatives for women, told IndiaSpend.
“Reporting rates were definitely increasing, but now I believe more people will not report (rapes) for fear of the consequences,” she said.
Conviction Delays And a 72% Failure Rate
Up to 90 percent of rape cases reported were pending trial at the end of 2016.
The conviction rate for child rape was 28 percent – inclusive of cases reported under section 376 of IPC and section 4 and 6 of POCSO Act – in 2016, compared to 34 percent in the previous year under section 376 of IPC, and 41 percent and 32 percent under section 4 and 6 of the POCSO act in 2015 respectively.
Expedited trials are just not happening in India, it will take 20-30 years to improve the system. Just one or two special courts is not enough; this is why so many cases are pending. Plus trials take too long.Flavia Agnes, women’s rights lawyer
Six fast-track courts were set up in Delhi in 2013 after the gangrape of a 23-year-old paramedic student, to address the high rate of unfinished investigations and encourage swifter convictions. However, in 2012, regular courts resolved 500 cases compared to 400 in fast track courts, which failed to serve their inherent purpose, Business Standard reported on December 14, 2014.
The last person to receive capital punishment in India for reasons other than terrorism was Dhananjoy Chatterjee who raped and murdered 14-year-old schoolgirl. Chatterjee was hanged to death in August 2004.
(This article was originally published in IndiaSpend and has been republished with permission.)
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