People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 01 January 06, 2013 |
CPI(M) NOTE TO JUSTICE VERMA
COMMITTEE Anti-Women
Crimes Demand Holistic
Approach, Strict
Laws, Urgent Steps Below
we reproduce the text of the Note submitted by the
Communist Party of THIS
is in reference to the public notice issued by the
government of India
regarding the formation of the committee under the
chairmanship of Justice
Verma to suggest possible amendments in the “criminal
laws and other relevant
laws for quicker trials and enhanced punishment of
criminals accused of sexual
assault of an extreme nature on women.” We believe
that a much more holistic approach is required and
regret that the terms of
reference are limited only to these two issues. The
committee had been set up
in the wake of the heinous crime of extreme brutality
including gang rape
committed on a young paramedical student in However, in a
situation where crime against women and in particular
the crime of rape is the
fastest growing crime, it is essential for the
government to review the present
laws and the proposed amendments so as to cover all the
major aspects. In this
context we would like to draw your attention to the bill
introduced in the Lok
Sabha on October 19, 2012, which seeks to “amend the
IPC, the CrPC 1973 and the
Indian Evidence Act” insofar as it concerns rape and
sexual harassment of women
(henceforth referred to as the bill). Some of these
proposals are flawed. It
will amount to the application of double standards to
the crime of sexual
harassment and assault on women if only clauses
pertaining to a particular type
of sexual crime are considered for improvement while the
law remains weak and
ineffective on a range of other issues connected with
sexual crimes. We would
also like to point out that in a society based on class
and caste inequalities,
women of the economically exploited and caste oppressed
sections, particularly
dalits and tribals are even more vulnerable to sexual
assault. We therefore
seek your indulgence in accepting this memorandum which
deals with issues which
we consider are germane to the prevention of and
punishment for cases of rape
and cases of sexual assault and harassment. 1) Clauses in
the IPC and other relevant laws concerning sexual
assault have to be gender
specific not gender neutral as proposed in the Bill
referred to above. It is a
total trivialisation of the issue of sexual assault on
women to suggest that it
is a gender neutral crime. Thus the amendments moved to
sections in the IPC
namely 375, 376,376A 376B, 376C and 376D to make them
gender neutral must be
withdrawn. We hope you will make this recommendation. 2) The Bill
widens the definition regarding sexual assault which is
welcome. However, it
falls short in enhancement of punishment. The bill
proposes amendments in Section
375.2 (a to l) in the redefined clauses. The
perpetrators of the crime in these
sections are men who are public servants such as police
personnel, management
of staff of jails, other institutions etc. This list
should be expanded to
include army men, paramilitary forces. Sexual assault
committed by them should
be considered as Aggravated Sexual assault. Aggravated
sexual assault should
include gang rape, custodial rape, child rape, rape
during communal or caste
driven violence, rape of a woman suffering mental or
physical disability,
sexual assault which causes grievous bodily harm or
disfigurement. 3) In such
cases of aggravated sexual assault/rape the punishment
should be rigorous life
imprisonment till death. (Where the
sexual assault is accompanied by other forms of violence
leading to the death
of the victim, the rarest of rare categories, which
could include the death
penalty, may be applied by the courts.) 4) In other
cases of rape the maximum sentence should be life
imprisonment. It is found
that courts rarely give the maximum sentence.
It is therefore essential to increase minimum
sentences in all cases of
sexual assault from the existing level which are only
seven years for rape and
ten years for aggravated sexual assault/rape. The
present legal framework also
permits courts to further reduce the sentence to even
less then the minimum in
the name of extenuating circumstances. This must be
prohibited. 5) The
critical issue is the requirement for time-bound
processes of justice in all
cases of rape. The law must specifically mention the
formation of special fast
track courts for all cases of rape. 6) In all
cases of sexual assault the case must be completed
within three months. 7) Since our
proposal is for speedy justice, the accused must by law
continue to remain in
jail till the verdict is pronounced. No bail can be
granted to a rape accused
while the hearings are on as the entire process will be
time-bound. 8) Public
servants not implementing the law including timely
filing of FIR should be
punished with a minimum punishment of one year and fine
which may extend to
three years. In the proposed amendment on this issue in
the Bill there is no
minimum prescribed. 9) There must
be rehabilitation measures including financial help
mandated by law for victims
of sexual assault which should be decided according to
the requirements. It is
humiliating and insulting to women when so-called rape
compensation packages
are declared such as 20,000 rupees etc by some state
governments. The
rehabilitation should include medical expenses and also
may also include a government
job. Counselling and other help must be mandatorily
provided. 10) Acid
attacks on women are a fast growing crime. A new clause
is sought to be
introduced in the bill under Sec 325 B. Depending on the
extent of injury the
law must provide for life imprisonment while the minimum
sentence must also be
enhanced. The law must provide for medical
rehabilitation. 11) Sec 354
and 509, which contains such archaic terms as “outraging
the modesty of a
woman” must be redrafted to specifically use the term
sexual harassment and the
punishment enhanced. Sexual harassment has nothing to do
with the modesty of a
woman and everything to do with impermissible sexual
behaviour and assertion of
power by the criminals. The sentence should be enhanced
to a minimum of one to
five years depending on the degree of harassment,
whether verbal, physical etc,
and also a fine imposed. Serial offenders should be
punished with the maximum. 12) In this
connection steps are required to prevent the broadcast
or publication of
demeaning and highly sexist advertisements that tend to
commodify women’s
bodies. With the wide reach of satellite channels these
advertisements promote
aggressive misogynist cultures. The relevant rules and
laws must be amended to prevent
such advertisements, since on this count,
self-regulation has failed. 13) The law
must mandate the setting up of a monitoring mechanism to
audit the steps being
taken by various government agencies to prevent, control
and punish those
involved in sexual crimes against women including
minors. An annual report of
the monitoring mechanism must be made public. 14) The legal
framework against sexual crimes must make it mandatory
to include in all
educational syllabuses in schools and colleges, gender
sensitization courses
for boys and girls, men and women. This is essential to
change the thinking of
a predominantly male-child preference based society
along with culturally
sanctioned retrograde male privileges. 15) In spite
of the surge in so-called honour crimes the government
has failed to bring any
stand alone law for the purpose. The illegal fatwas of khap panchayats
are a case in point. These diktats range from fatwas on dress codes for young women and
school girls, to bans on
friendships, self choice partnerships, the punishment
also ranging from
boycotts to public lynching and killings. Narrow vote
bank politics has
influenced governments leading to inaction and even
encouragement to these
self-proclaimed panchayats in spite of repeated
instruction for action from
various courts including the Supreme Court. We request
the commission to
recommend a stand-alone law to cover all honour related
crimes and to take
strict action against the diktats and their enforcement
by the so-called khap
panchayats including their
disenfranchisement. There are
other flaws in the bill and the legal framework which
need to be addressed and
which have been raised by women’s organisations. ADMINISTRATIVE STEPS Along with
the legal framework, it will also be necessary for the
government to urgently
take administrative steps. One of the critical issues is
to make public spaces
safe and secure for women at all times. This must
include all forms of public
transport. With the privatisation of transport systems,
the accountability of
the government has been diluted and no action is taken
against private bus
owners. For example, even now many buses in For fast
track courts to be set up, it is essential for the
government to recruit a
large number of judges at various levels. Recruitment
must go hand in hand with
strict standards of the quality of the recruitment.
Judges often reflect
retrograde social outlooks towards women. Thus gender
sensitive standards must
be set for such recruitments. It will also
be necessary to recruit many more women police personnel
to be able to speed up
the investigations and be involved in help-lines etc,
and training courses are
required for this. It is
essential for the central government and the state
governments to work out
standard operating procedures which should immediately
come into place once a
complaint of sexual harassment and/or rape is reported. We are aware
of the far reaching recommendations you had made for
legal measures against
sexual harassment at the workplace. Unfortunately, not
only has the government
diluted or subverted some of those important
recommendations but it passed the bill
without discussion in the lower house while it is yet to
be placed before the
upper house. We mention this only because of our anxiety
that without a
comprehensive report on the issues connected with sexual
harassment and
assault, government may find a short cut to ignore the
issues which will be of
great disservice to women and girls in particular and
the society at large. It
is with the request that the committee take note of the
wider issues involved
that we submit this memorandum to you. The urgent
requirement is to reform the
laws and take urgent administrative steps to do justice
to the brave young
woman whose life was brutally cut short and also the
countless others who have
been victims of sexual assault and are yet to get
justice. January
3, 2013