Activists wary as India rushes to justice after Delhi gang rape
IT’S no surprise the Indian street wants faster, harsher justice for sexual crimes after a horrific gang rape that rocked the nation, but some activists worry the government will trample fundamental rights in its rush to be in tune with popular rage.
Last month’s rape of a physiotherapy student on a moving bus and her death on Dec. 28 in hospital triggered a national debate about how to better protect women in India, where official data shows one rape is reported on average every 20 minutes.
Many women’s rights groups are cautiously hopeful the protests and outrage that followed the crime can be channeled into real change — fast-track courts for sexual offences and a plan to hire 2,500 new women police in Delhi are measures already in the works.
But legal experts and some feminists are worried that calls to make rape punishable with death and other draconian penalties will cramp civil liberties and are unconstitutional. They say India needs better policing and prosecutions, not new laws.
“If there are not enough convictions, it is not because of an insufficiency of law, but it is the insufficiency of material to base the conviction on,” said retired Delhi High Court judge R.S. Sodhi.
Five men have been charged with the student’s rape and murder and will appear before a New Delhi court later on Monday. They are due to be tried in a newly formed fast-track court in the next few weeks. A teenager also accused will likely be tried in a juvenile court.
Ahead of Monday’s court appearance the five still had no defense lawyers — despite extensive interrogations by the police, who have said they have recorded confessions — after members of the bar association in the South Delhi district where the case is being heard vowed not to represent them. The men will be assigned lawyers by the court before the trial begins, but their lack of representation so far could give grounds for appeal later should they be found guilty — similar cases have resulted in acquittals years after convictions.
“The accused has a right to a lawyer from point of arrest — the investigations are going on, statements being taken, it is totally illegal,” said Colin Gonsalves, a senior Supreme Court advocate and director of Delhi’s Human Rights Law Network.
Senior leaders of most states on Friday came out in support of a plan to lower to 16 the age that minors can be tried as adults — in response to fury that the maximum penalty the accused youth could face is three years detention. A government panel is considering suggestions to make the death penalty mandatory for rape and introducing forms of chemical castration for the guilty. It is due to make its recommendations by Jan. 23.
“The more you strengthen the powers of the state against the people, the more the possibility you create a draconian regime,” said Sehjo Singh, Program and Policy Director with ActionAid in India and an expert on Indian women’s social movements.
“We want to raise the bar of human rights in India, we want to raise the standards, not lower them.”
The Indian Express newspaper warned against “knee-jerk” reaction and said any change to the juvenile law “must come after rigorous and considered debate. It cannot be a reaction to a fraught moment.”
Courts are swamped with a backlog of cases in the country of 1.2 billion people and trials often take more than five years to complete, so the launch by Chief Justice Altamas Kabir of six fast-track courts in the capital to deal with sexual offences was widely greeted as a welcome move. Several other states including Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra are now looking at following Delhi’s example. But Gonsalves says while the courts are a good idea on paper, similar tribunals in the past delivered dubious verdicts and put financial pressure on the rest of the justice system.
India set up 1,700 fast-track courts in 2004, but stopped funding them last year because they turned out to be costly. The courts typically work six days a week and try to reduce adjournments that lead to long delays in cases. “The record of the fast-track courts is mixed,” Gonsalves said. Conviction rates rose, he said, but due process was sometimes rushed, leading to convictions being overturned.
“Fast-track courts were in many ways were fast-track injustice,” he said.
The real problem lies with bad policing and a shortage of judges, Gonsalves said. India has about a fifth of the number of judges per capita that the United States has.
Indian police are often poorly trained and underpaid, and have sometimes been implicated in organized crime. Rights groups complain the mostly male officers are insensitive to victims of sexual crimes.
Resources for, and expertise in, forensic science is limited in most of the country’s police forces and confessions are often extracted under duress. The judiciary complains it is hard to convict offenders because of faulty evidence.
Human Rights Watch said reforms to laws and procedures covering rape and other sexual crimes should focus on protection of witnesses and modernizing support for victims at police stations and hospitals.