Narrow scope: sex crimes against children -80 per cent of the accused are known to the victims
According to the NCRB in 2018, there was an 18 per cent jump in registered POCSO cases in 2017, but convictions at the end of 2016 stood at a mere 28 per cent
In a nation that treats sexual crimes against minorities with shocking indifference, a regressive legal reading of legislations can be profoundly disheartening. Already, the prevailing culture of shame and silence, augmented by parental unwillingness to teach children to differentiate between good and bad touch, puts minors at risk. Judicial ambiguity on the matter could add to the existing, formidable challenges, the poor conviction rate being one. According to the National Crime Records Bureau in 2018, there was an 18 per cent jump in registered POCSO cases in 2017, but convictions at the end of 2016 stood at a mere 28 per cent. Tardy legal proceedings — ironically, POCSO was enacted to hasten prosecution — give the accused time to intimidate victims and their families into withdrawing complaints. The reluctance to prosecute deepens when the accused is a family member. In 2020, a special POCSO court was told that 80 per cent of the accused were known to the victims, with a majority of them being relatives. The signals sent out to a vulnerable constituency from institutions tasked with protecting it are as dismal. In 2018, several young girls were found to have been sexually assaulted for months in a shelter home in Muzaffarpur. For too long, the onus of identifying and disclosing sexual crimes has been on the victim, even though POCSO seeks to correct this inversion. The reluctance of victims, guardians and investigative bodies to pursue justice will only grow in the light of judicial misreadings of law and crime.
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