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An Indian Perspective
Criminal
responsibility for torture
Saumya
Uma
In India, the prohibition against torture is absolute in theory. However,
the use of torture by police, armed forces and other state agencies
is a stark reality. Today, it remains less an individual aberration
and more a systemic failure to build a culture of human rights among
such agencies. However, torture practised by non-state actors, including
armed insurgent groups, terrorist outfits, fundamental political outfits,
members of "upper" castes and other de facto power-holders
requires to be equally condemned. Even as the Supreme Court lays down
more and more guidelines to prevent custodial torture, the routine use
of torture upon civilians continues unabated.
In India,
torture takes place for a variety of reasons as a substitute for police
investigations, for fabricating cases and saving influential persons
by implicating innocent persons, for "teaching a lesson",
for extortion and for maintaining status quo and preventing empowerment
of oppressed groups of people. It is often seen as the only way to maintain
law and order, control terrorism and crimes committed by the underworld,
extract confessions and investigate crimes. The victims are the most
vulnerable sections of society, including poor, uneducated, illiterate
persons, dalits, religious minorities, women, children, adivasis
(indigenous persons), civilians in "disturbed areas" and human
rights defenders. Many such victims have little knowledge of law and
poor access to the justice delivery system, and those who do access
the courts are often intimidated and coerced against asserting their
rights and demanding justice.
The
Legal Framework
Neither the Indian Constitution nor any other law contain an express
prohibition of torture. However, judicial pronouncements have interpreted
the right to life in Article 21 of the Constitution of India as a right
not merely to survival or existence, but the right to live with dignity.
Torture involves the violation of dignity and therefore falls within
the ambit of Article 21. Several provisions of the Code of Criminal
Procedure provide for judicial scrutiny of detentions, and vest powers
and responsibility with the magistrates to act proactively in situations
of custodial torture of arrested / detained persons. Causing hurt to
a person in order to extract a confession, wrongful confinement, voluntarily
causing hurt / grievous hurt, kidnapping, abduction and murder are all
penal offences under the Indian Penal Code (IPC). As a general rule,
the Indian Evidence Act prohibits the use of confessions obtained in
police custody as evidence in court (S. 25).
In
addition to domestic law, provisions that ban torture in international
conventions that India has ratified are also binding on it. India has
ratified the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR),
which bans torture and other forms of cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment
even in times of national emergency or when the security of the state
is threatened (Articles 4 and 7). The Indian government signed the Convention
Against Torture (CAT) in 1997 but has not ratified the same, on the
ground that existing laws have adequate provisions to prevent torture,
in addition to constitutional safeguards. Further, India has ratified
the Convention for Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) in 1968,
the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) in 1992, the Convention
on Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) in 1993, and
is bound by the provisions of these conventions, all of which guarantee
a right not to be subjected to torture, or to cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment. In addition, India is also bound by provisions
of the four Geneva Conventions of 1949, and in particular, provisions
of Common Article 3 that prohibits torture in situations of internal
armed conflict. India is not a party to the Rome Statute on International
Criminal Court, which spells out torture as a war crime and a crime
against humanity.
Laws
of Grave Concern
Draconian laws have been enacted with arbitrary, unbridled powers that
license police and armed forces to inflict torture on individuals in
the name of national security and countering terrorism. The Prevention
of Terrorism Act (POTA), Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act (AFSPA),
The Public Safety Act, National Security Act and preventive detention
laws are some such examples. POTA contained many provisions that give
arbitrary and unfettered powers to the security agencies. Instead of
deterring terrorist activity, this law has been used against juveniles,
old people, members of minority communities, dalits, adivasis,
industrial workers, political opponents and human rights defenders,
for acts including illegal custody, solitary confinement, torture, forced
confessions, sexual and religious humiliation, encounter killings and
disappearances. It is therefore small mercy, that the new Indian government
repealed this law.
The AFSPA
has come under fire in recent times, with the alleged rape, torture
and killing of Manorama in Manipur in July 2004 by members of the armed
forces. This law gives unbridled powers to armed forces to enter, arrest
and search without a warrant, and the right to shoot to kill if the
member of armed forces is "of the opinion that it is necessary
to do so for the maintenance of public order." The Act has been
justified, time and again, as the only means to control the situation
of insurgency in the North-eastern states, and to prevent the secession
of the north-eastern states. However, experts say that the AFSPA had
failed to suppress insurgency in the state and has proved counterproductive,
as it has festered civilians' hostility to Indian authorities, and has
caused insurgency-related activities to increase. In addition, various
state-specific laws exist in the north eastern states and Jammu &
Kashmir, that strengthen the powers of apprehension, arrests, searches
and shooting given to the security forces, as the only way to handle
the situation in 'disturbed' states. In addition, clones of POTA continue
to exist in many states, including Gujarat & Maharashtra.
The police
and armed forces enjoy virtual impunity under Section 197(1) and (2)
of the Criminal Procedure Code, which provide for a prior sanction of
the central government for prosecution of public servants. Similar requirements
of government sanction are also hemmed into AFSPA and other laws, including
the Prevention of Corruption Act, for prosecution of a public servant
for corruption. However, the Supreme Court has confirmed that government
sanction is not required for prosecution of malicious actions that do
not fall within the ambit of official duties (Shembhoo Nath Misra
vs. State of Uttar Pradesh, AIR 1997 SC 2102). In addition, under
Section 19 of the Human Rights Protection Act of 1993, National Human
Rights Commission (NHRC) cannot directly investigate complaints of human
rights violations by the armed forces, but can only request a report
from the central government, based on which it can send its recommendations
to the government. This provision has been severely criticised by national
and international human rights organisations, including the NHRC itself.
These,
and such other legislation, have infused and contributed to an overall
climate of impunity within the country. Arbitrary, unbridled and sweeping
powers given to the police and the armed forces under these laws have
reduced their sense of accountability for their acts. Even though some
safeguards against torture and other human rights violations have been
incorporated in these laws, such safeguards are rarely implemented.
Justice and accountability for acts of torture continues to remain an
elusive issue in India.
The
author is a co-ordinator of 'Justice and Accountability Matters' programme
of Women's Research & Action Group, Mumbai.
Photo: AFP
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