Rage of the
self-righteous Republic


A view of the Parliament House in New Delhi. |
Politicians have yielded to public
outrage by allowing a juvenile aged 16, charged with committing a heinous
crime, to be treated as an adult. The new Act ignores the reality of juvenile
crime and disempowers the most vulnerable section of our society
In a speech to Harvard Law School in the 1890s, Justice Oliver
Wendell Holmes, Jr. called the law “the government of the living by the dead”
and said “to a very considerable extent, no doubt it is inevitable that the
living should be so governed”. The December 16, 2012 rape and murder in Delhi
of Nirbhaya, and the consequent legislative changes spawned by the incident,
illustrate just this proposition.
First, the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2013, redefined the offence of rape as well as the standards of proof
required to sustain an allegation. Now the Rajya Sabha has just passed the Juvenile
Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Amendment Bill, 2015, which allows for children between the ages of 16 and 18 to be
tried in adult courts for heinous crimes.
Private grief, public empathy
Driving the agenda of the dead are Asha Devi and Badri Singh Pandey, parents of Nirbhaya, who are now the face of India’s response to the tragedy. For the past three years, their public mourning for their brutalised, dead daughter has been a very intense affair. They are present at every court hearing of consequence, they have attended innumerable condolence meetings, commemorations and vigils. They have not allowed their daughter’s fighting spirit to die. We feel their sorrow, and share and understand their anger. To them, the release of the juvenile offender, in this case after only three years in a correctional facility, appears to be inordinately early.
Driving the agenda of the dead are Asha Devi and Badri Singh Pandey, parents of Nirbhaya, who are now the face of India’s response to the tragedy. For the past three years, their public mourning for their brutalised, dead daughter has been a very intense affair. They are present at every court hearing of consequence, they have attended innumerable condolence meetings, commemorations and vigils. They have not allowed their daughter’s fighting spirit to die. We feel their sorrow, and share and understand their anger. To them, the release of the juvenile offender, in this case after only three years in a correctional facility, appears to be inordinately early.
But the righteous anger of this couple has become Schadenfreude
and worse for a whole mass of citizenry. Anger is being exploited by TRP-driven
purveyors of outrage porn, to strike at all possible newsworthy targets. The
juvenile delinquent has been demonised to the point where any revelation of his
current identity is likely to result in violence against him. Parliament is
being excoriated in the mistaken belief that a legislative fix could have
ensured continued incarceration of the juvenile. It is being suggested that
legislative inaction over the passage of the Bill through the Rajya Sabha has
been responsible for the juvenile walking free. Even when informed that the
Constitution of India prohibits retroactive criminal punishments, the
proponents of outrage for outrage’s sake point to the grave dangers of
unpunished juvenile crime. They suggest that the new legislation, which enables
trying juveniles as adults, is an effective deterrent which will ring-fence
middle-class India from being attacked by juvenile criminals hell-bent on rape.
The absence of a deterrent law, they suggest, is akin to inviting undeterred
juvenile crime.Worse thanthedisease
But has juvenile delinquency reached epidemic proportions requiring legislation? Or is it a single juvenile, involved in a grossly revolting case, whose facts are being used to create a fear which did not previously exist? While television anchors have harangued us about how juvenile crime has risen by 47 per cent, they have failed to inform us that actual juvenile crime is still less than 2 per cent of reported crime figures.
But has juvenile delinquency reached epidemic proportions requiring legislation? Or is it a single juvenile, involved in a grossly revolting case, whose facts are being used to create a fear which did not previously exist? While television anchors have harangued us about how juvenile crime has risen by 47 per cent, they have failed to inform us that actual juvenile crime is still less than 2 per cent of reported crime figures.
Second, most of it is non-violent crime and often the result of
vagrancy. Most importantly, most children in trouble with the law come from
extremely poor backgrounds and are often runaways from hunger and abuse at
home. Does this most vulnerable section of our society require legislation to
keep it from being a menace to the rest of us? To my mind, legislation may be a
remedy worse than the disease.
Harsh legislation is a cheap fix for politicians to douse public
anger at events. But harsh laws do not diminish the problem, nor do they
protect future victims. TADA [Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention)
Act] and POTA [Prevention of Terrorism Act] did not end up reducing terrorism,
but they ended up empowering lazy policing. The Act to prevent atrocities on
Scheduled Castes often ends up as a vendetta tool in government employment.
Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code, which was introduced to combat
dowry-related crimes, has been so abused that the Supreme Court had to step in
to regulate its blatant misuse; the section has been responsible for many a
salvageable marriage being wrecked. Criminalising cheque bouncing has resulted
in our criminal courts being flooded with cases from financial institutional
lenders and magistrates ending up as recovery agents. Yet, we as a society,
keep clamouring for harsher laws, which politicians enact to escape being
targets of outrage. We fail to heed Irish statesman, author and political
theorist Edmund Burke’s dictum that “bad laws are the worst sort of tyranny”.
As a country, our lawyers, faced with delay in the civil courts,
resort to the threats of the criminal justice system, where pretrial denial of
individual liberty is often the norm. The maximum proportion of female
offenders in any Indian jail is women arrested under the dowry laws. Their
accusers are women as well but often put up to such accusations by male
relatives and lawyers. Every crime which entails prison time ends up
imprisoning a family as well. Criminal laws made to benefit a particular
section end up being misused against them. It is in this background that we
must consider the question of whether as a nation, we are better off treating
our children in conflict with the law as adult offenders to be punished or as
juvenile delinquents to be reformed.
The new Act has yielded to outraged opinion by making possible the
trial of a young offender as an adult if he or she is accused of a heinous
crime. Heinous crime is defined as crime that carries a sentence of
imprisonment for seven years or more under any law. A variety of acts,
including non-violent crimes such as forgery, or even crimes of incitement such
as sedition, attract a prison term of seven years or more. Under the new law, a
stone-pelting teenager in Kashmir or a teenage purveyor of counterfeit currency
from Kanyakumari is as likely to be treated as an adult criminal.
Pitfalls of extreme justiceWe, as a nation, also have a warped attitude towards sex and
sexuality, with notions of family pride and honour bound in. A lot of cases of
young love and elopement do end up in police stations as charges of rape and
kidnapping. An angry father of a runaway girl often has no means of restoring
societal honour except by alleging that his daughter or ward was unwillingly
taken away. Similarly where “love jihad”-type allegations are made, the filing
of rape and kidnapping charges is usually the norm. When return is not an
option for runaway teenagers, the other option is often voluntary death. When,
previously, erring teenagers could be admonished, today we risk imprisoning
them unless both sets of parents act maturely. We therefore need to very
carefully evaluate how far we wish to traverse down the path of criminalising
our youth.
From the policeman who makes the arrest, to the Juvenile Justice
Board that takes the call on whether to allow prosecution as an adult, large
amounts of discretion will necessarily operate. Those who can afford it can and
will challenge any decision to prosecute in higher courts. The result is more
likely to be greater uncertainty, and lesser justice, as criminal trials get
stalled by appeals to superior courts.
“Extreme justice is often injustice,” wrote dramatist Jean Racine,
and an India that disempowers the loneliest, the lost and the last will be a
much harsher place. Whether safety lies in the path of harshness, or in
effective implementation of existing laws, is a call for the republic to take.
Justice Holmes, to return to his Harvard lecture, advised: “The past gives us
our vocabulary and fixes the limits of our imagination; we cannot get away from
it. There is, too, a peculiar logical pleasure in making manifest the
continuity between what we are doing and what has been done before. But the
present has a right to govern itself so far as it can; and it ought always to
be remembered that historic continuity with the past is not a duty, it is only
a necessity.”
Has Nirbhaya’s death necessitated harsh laws to deal with India’s
young people or have we elders failed our succeeding generations of youngsters
by exposing them to adult penalties?
(Sanjay Hegde is a senior Supreme Court
advocate.)