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Should Rapists Be Hanged?

BAPOO M. MALCOLM
Last updated: 06 April 2016
  4 min read    Share   Bookmark


rape, sexual
      abuse, law on rape, capital punishment, hanging

LCI Learning
The law on rape is not easy to formulate
 
Rape and punishment are very much on the mind these days. The laws are tough and are being used and, unfortunately, misused. Then there are mistakes. Just plain bad luck. This is what one woman said, after identifying the wrong man as her attacker. “My testimony sent an innocent person to prison… I absolutely wanted the earth to swallow me.” In the meantime, the real culprit, roaming loose, had committed a murder. The innocent, a father of three, spent 23 years in jail.
 
The moment there is a report of a sexual crime, alarm bells are set a-gong. The common refrain, ‘Hang the monster’. Granted; so does this author feel, often. Then, the heart wrestles with the brain, and, luckily, the latter comes out on top.
 
When the woman’s quote, above, hit the screen, this article had found its moorings; and what it hopes to achieve is to recognise that we need to err on the side of caution. Retribution being the foundation of our legal system, punishment is a must. But it is not butter that can be spread evenly. Each case is fundamentally different. Moreover, a media-led frenzy is not in the interest of civilised thought. Hanging is not the only answer. At least, not for crimes other than proven treason.
 
Two things bear repeating. One, the author is against capital punishment, not per se, but it’s an error that cannot be corrected. Secondly, rape is the vilest of acts. It does not just destroy a woman. It sears her soul, disfiguring it for life. The problem begins when the two issues dovetail.
 
‘If he is old enough to rape, he is old enough to hang,’ is what we hear very often. Maybe yes; maybe no. It depends on how close one is to the victim. And a lot depends on the ‘graphicity’ of the report. Let us consider some incidents.
 
A) A youngster, under the influence of alcohol, commits rape. The girl dies in the brutal aftermath. The boy serves a short sentence and goes home.
 
B) A child steals a few rupees. Everyone says he made a ‘mistake’. Won’t do it again. He does more than that, with impunity.
 
C) Four youngsters invade a court in Delhi and gun down a policeman and critically wound an undertrial. They will be tried as juveniles; the decision being taken just before the new amendment to the Juvenile Justice Act.
 
D) A girl of 15 is raped. She delivers a child. A superior court has second thoughts about the conviction. A judge suggests ‘marriage’. Shades of what cops do. Eight years later, she agrees. The ‘father’ is now free.
 
E) A woman is repeatedly raped by her husband. Domestic violence? When we still consider a wife to be the ‘husband’s property’?
 
F) A girl is caught cheating at a senior college exam. The father argues that she is just a‘mulgi’, a kid! Won’t do it again. Then, he starts to bargain. Cut two marks, he pleads. Ok, cut five marks. Would you believe her, if she cried ‘rape’ in later years?
 
You be the judge.
 
A) The ‘Nirbhaya case’, generating so much angst.
B) An almost everyday occurrence.
C) A recent incident at the Karkardooma court.
D) Was in the news a few days back; adding to the chaff collecting in the mind.
E) A crime or bedroom antics?
F) Sounds funny; but are the parents not encouraging the child? 
 
The Nirbhaya case was brutal. But should the law be changed for every juvenile? Should each kid be hanged? The victim’s parents’ deep anguish is understandable. But when parents take up for their own child at the drop of a hat, who is to cast the first stone? 

And then, there is another matter to consider. If the penalty for rape is certain death, will the rapist let the victim live? He would kill her, for two reasons. One, there will be no witness. Secondly, you can't hang a man twice.
 
The change in the Juvenile Justice Act is not as severe as demanded. Yet, will it reduce juvenile crime? Only time will tell. 
 
This author thinks it will be ‘déjà vu’.

Courtesy: Moneylife

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Comments

9 years ago Manvendra Yadav


9 years ago neha roy

It very shame full and tough for any female to face the out side world ..rapist not just kill her soul but also kill her courage... Its destroy almost a family's reputation.. There r so many cases where the rapist kill the victim ... Then why not to hang the rapist...its the time to take real steps ... Some cases people deserve the second chance but not every time


9 years ago neha roy

It very shame full and tough for any female to face the out side world ..rapist not just kill her soul but also kill her courage... Its destroy almost a family's reputation.. There r so many cases where the rapist kill the victim ... Then why not to hang the rapist...its the time to take real steps ... Some cases people deserve the second chance but not every time


9 years ago dr g balakrishnan

First capital punishments must be struck down by the court under a judicial review, it need not wait for the legislators to decide then the golden era for india is possible. in the case of unconscionable rapes the perpetrator may be sent to longer term of jail say 25 years and over by the time he is released be becomes some sane man , seeing such incarceration new perpetrators would be far away from rapes,is my considered opinion of several years of thinking as a professor of law...


9 years ago dr g balakrishnan

you cannot have cake and eat it too. problem is you want down graded education under so many ways of concessions, what you will get is peanuts only in the judiciary too..as judges do not know how to think as a judge but he starts thinking in the lines of the legislator, as he thinks legislator is better learned person not realizing that the legislator background mostly background of crimes of one kind or the other..see that way you got Vijay Mallayya as a n MP in the Rajya sabha, similarly a lot in lok sabha , so too in every state legislatures. this situation would not correct if the Election commission itself passes a right election process with right kind of contestants, by simply outlawing the criminals of any kind when they come to file their own nominations supported by other similar type, when you are a criminal how can you be a meaningful citizen any man of robust common sense would say, is it not. if the political parties question the election commission let it move the supreme court for judicial review, if the hon SC is really matured enough would pass order in favor of election commission means that is for the benefit of the common man as citizens.


9 years ago dr g balakrishnan

problem is we have criminally tainted legislators are day be day increasing, when so what a criminal minded man would do the same is the situation of the legislators, that means our democracy is degenerating is obvious unless judiciary pulls up its socks nothing better is is likely; but problem is judiciary itself lackadaisical as the judges today thanks to poor judging abilities caused by half bred legal education with that equipment they worked as advocates quite long and by so called influences they become judges what kind of judging you would get, the culprit you yourself just you loved downgraded education for you under so many concessions you looked for so better face it sir


9 years ago dr g balakrishnan

politics of law making is the order of india so every law is a crisscross kind of law is always germinating here that way so many confused positions of law surfaces.


9 years ago dr g balakrishnan

legislators are no big thinkers and hence their statutes need to be always questioned by a court of law, that means every statute passed need to pass through a judicial review when that statute is applied then the very statute need be reviewed by the court, why even by the first instance trial court itself is my considered view.


9 years ago dr g balakrishnan

what would you punish that husband or the incest man same punishment need to be needed out that is rule of law. if so how a statute can be passed to hang a person who committed rape, if passed that act need to be quashed since passed by a irrational legislators....


9 years ago dr g balakrishnan

Like rose is a rose is a rose, so also rape is a rape is a rape in any situation. so if husband without the wife's consent forces himself on her is also a rape....


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