Source: NCRB
Source: NCRB There are two major reasons for rising rapes against children over the past four years: First, a rise in reporting; and second, new criminal laws, experts told IndiaSpend. “Reporting of child abuse and rape cases have increased due to the lowering of the stigma attached, but incidence has also increased, definitely,” said Amit Sen, a child and adolescent psychiatrist from Delhi. The rise of social media has created awareness about child abuse, said Sonali Gupta, a clinical psychologist from Mumbai. “Furthermore, many instances of celebrities opening up about being abused in their childhood (for instance, the actor Kalki Koechin) have also motivated many parents to report abuse,” she said. Simultaneously, the introduction of POCSO in 2012 and the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act in 2013 was instrumental in higher reporting of rape against children—although sexually active teenagers now run the risk of consensual intercourse being classified as rape. The new definitions of rape “The definition of rape… now includes many more sexual actions than were earlier classified as sexual assault,” said Ved Kumari, a professor at Delhi University’s Faculty of Law. She explained how POSCO has raised the age of consent for girls from 16 to 18 years. This means boys who have consensual sex can be charged with rape. Before the new laws, only “peno-vaginal assault” was considered rape with an excessive emphasis on torn hymens (which continues), according to Shaibya Saldanha, co-founder of Bangalore’s Enfold Trust, an advocacy that focuses on child sexual abuse. “But now, injuries to vagina and other parts are considered as evidence,” said Saldanha. “For boys, it was even more difficult as only serious anal injuries would be considered as evidence. POCSO states that a child’s testimony and circumstantial evidence will be of paramount importance.” As a consequence, there has been “a huge increase” in child-sexual-abuse cases after the POSCO Act of 2012, said Audrey D’Mello, Project Director at Mumbai’s Majlis Law, a legal advocacy.
RAHAT is a program by Majlis Law to provide socio-legal support to survivors of sexual assault, so that survivors are not traumatised in the course of investigation and prosecution. This is what they found during a study of 644 cases they handled in Mumbai:
- 51% of the victims were between 11 years and 18 years old
- 91% of rapes were committed by known persons and involved long-term abuse
- 46% of family rapes were by fathers
POCSO conviction rate | |||
---|---|---|---|
No. of FIRs registered | No. of cases in which charge-sheets filed | No. of cases in which accused convicted | No. of cases in which accused acquitted |
6816 | 5340 | 166 | 389 |
2014 | No. of cases in which trials completed | No. of convictions | %age of conviction |
---|---|---|---|
POSCO | 406 | 100 | 24.6 |
Rape | 5527 | 1717 | 31.1 |
Assault on women (girls) with intent to outrage her modesty | 1404 | 412 | 29.3 |
Source: Lok Sabha; Note: It is possible that cases under IPC 376, IPC 354 and POCSO overlap. For instance, in a single rape case, the police might use either IPC 376 or IPC 376+ POCSO or just POCSO. It depends on the discretion of the investigating officer and other factors.
The data might be unclear, but those who deal with abused children make it clear that insensitivity and the unhelpful attitude of police, lawyers and untrained hospital staff makes prosecution and conviction difficult. “There is absolutely no sensitivity amongst policemen to handle cases of child abuse. POCSO as a law is quite good but it needs to be implemented effectively as well,” said Sen, the Delhi psychiatrist. In several court trials, said Chennai’s Rajaratnam, she has witnessed defence lawyers making the process so “unpleasant and humiliating for the children that their trauma increases”. Often, parents decide it is better to drop out of the case than traumatise a child further. D’Mello of Majlis Law believes the only way forward is to work within the system. She explained how Majlis, for years, has provided the Mumbai police training and sensitisation, created standard operating procedures to handle sexual-assault cases, made officers aware of POCSO Act provisions, and helped when they recorded victims’ statements.Pendency In Court Cases For Rapes | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | No. of cases for trial including pending cases from previous year | Pendency at end of year | Percentage pendency |
2010 | 17187 | 20594 | 83% |
2011 | 19394 | 23181 | 84% |
2012 | 22812 | 26972 | 85% |
2013 | 28171 | 33328 | 85% |
2014 | 31976 | 37519 | 85% |
Source: NCRB
POCSO And Outraging Modesty Cases | ||
---|---|---|
Specific act | Total no. of cases for trial including pending cases from previous year | Pendency at end of year |
POCSO | 8379 | 7970 |
IPC 354 outraging modesty | 13162 | 11607 |
Source: NCRB
It is clear there is much to do. In 2014, 85% of child-rape cases—registered over five years—were pending, as were 95% of POCSO cases and 88% of cases for “outraging modesty”, according to the NCRB. Bringing support systems together—the lesson from Bangalore It’s not just the police and the justice system, hospitals too are not equipped to handle sexual-abuse cases against children. The issues include a lack of privacy for victims and trained staff. “Another problem is that every stakeholder likes to blame the other stakeholder,” said the Enfold Trust’s Saldanha. “Police blame the hospital. Hospital blames the police and so on,” she said. “Therefore, it is important to bring all stakeholders together, which is why we started Collaborative Child Response Units (CCRU).” In 2011, Enfold helped set up CCRUs in hospitals, the first such units in India—aimed at providing child victims with proper treatment and social and legal support. A collaboration between Enfold, the government of Karnataka and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), there are now CCRUs in three leading Bangalore hospitals. These centres also link and train counsellors, medical practitioners, social workers, the judiciary, legal workers, NGOs and the police—with the well-being of the abused child in mind. Hospitals are clearly a vital link in the chain. “It is necessary to train doctors to handle sexual assault cases as well as document case details,” said Shailesh Mohite, Head, Forensic Department at Nair Hospital, Mumbai. “Since their testimony matters a lot, they must be trained to handle cross examination at court.” Social media can endanger children The exploding growth of social media has increased awareness about child-abuse issues, but it is also endangering the safety of children. Experts said that exposure to the Internet occurs earlier than ever, and it is important that parents are careful about sharing pictures and details of their children online. Recently, a series of stories on The News Minute, a new portal, explored how online pictures on Facebook were being used by pedophiles. “This should be a wake-up call for all of us as parents,” said Vidya Reddy of Chennai-based NGO, Tulir-Centre for the Prevention and Healing of Child Sexual Abuse. “There are people interested in our children sexually. Social media are only a reflection of society.” Shakthi V, a popular blogger and writer, has written a post on how parents should guide their children in accessing the internet. “I know children who fake their age to get on Facebook, there are some who create profiles on all social sites faking their ages,” he writes. “This is just one group of kids. There are others who get on to dating sites and get into all sorts of messy things there. The overall conclusion is that kids and the internet are a potent combination that goes very bad.” ■ (Saha is a freelance journalist based in New Delhi.) ______________________________________________________________________ “Liked this story? IndiaSpend.org is a non-profit, and we depend on readers like you to drive our public-interest journalism efforts. Donate Rs 500; Rs 1,000, Rs 2,000.”