SC sets aside HC order advising girls to control sexual urges
A bench of justices Abhay S Oka and Ujjal Bhuyan said it has passed several directions for the authorities on dealing cases under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act
PTI
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Representative Picture
New Delhi, 20 Aug
The Supreme Court on Tuesday set
aside an order of the Calcutta High Court in which it acquitted an accused in a
sexual assault case and made "objectionable" observations advising
adolescent girls to "control sexual urges".
A bench of justices Abhay S Oka and
Ujjal Bhuyan said it has passed several directions for the authorities on
dealing cases under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO)
Act.
Justice Oka, who pronounced the
verdict on behalf of the bench, said directions have also been issued on how
the judgements should be written by the courts.
The top court had on 8 December last
year criticised the verdict and termed as "highly objectionable and
completely unwarranted" some observations made by the high court.
The apex court had taken cognisance
of some of the observations made by a division bench of the high court and
initiated a writ petition on its own, observing that judges are not expected to
"preach" while writing judgements.
The West Bengal government had also
challenged the 18 October, 2023 verdict of the high court in which these
“objectionable observations” were made. In its judgement, the high court had
observed that female adolescents should "control sexual urges" as in
the "eyes of the society she is the loser when she gives in to enjoy the
sexual pleasure of hardly two minutes".
The high court had made the
observations while hearing an appeal by a man who was awarded a 20-year
sentence for sexual assault. The high court had acquitted the man.
While hearing the matter on 4 January,
the apex court had observed that certain paragraphs in the high court verdict
were "problematic" and writing such judgements was "absolutely
wrong".
In its order passed on 8 December last
year, the apex court referred to certain observations made by the high court
and said, "Prima facie, the said observations are completely in violation
of the rights of the adolescents guaranteed under Article 21(right to life and
personal liberty) of the Constitution of India."
It had observed the issue before
the high court was about the legality and validity of the order and judgement
dated September 19/20, 2022 by which a man was convicted of offences under
sections 363 (kidnapping) and 366 (kidnapping, abducting or inducing woman to
compel her marriage) of the Indian Penal Code as well as section 6 of the
Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act.
"As per the order of the Chief
Justice of India, suo motu writ petition under Article 32 of the Constitution
of India has been initiated mainly due to sweeping observations/findings
recorded by the division bench of the high court of Calcutta in the impugned
judgment," it had said.
The apex court had said in the
appeal against conviction, the high court was called upon to adjudicate only on
the merits of the appeal and nothing else. "But we find that the high
court has discussed so many issues which were irrelevant. Prima facie, we are
of the view that while writing a judgment in such an appeal, the judges are not
expected to express their personal views. They are not expected to
preach," it had said.
In its verdict, the high court had
acquitted the man stating that it was a case of "non-exploitative
consensual sexual relationship between two consenting adolescents, though
consent in view of the age of the victim is immaterial".
The high court had said it is the
duty/obligation of every female adolescent to "protect her right to the
integrity of her body; protect her dignity and self-worth; thrive for the
overall development of herself transcending gender barriers; control sexual
urge/urges as in the eyes of the society she is the loser when she gives in to
enjoy the sexual pleasure of hardly two minutes; protect her right to autonomy
of her body and her privacy".
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