Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

COL HELD FOR RAPE SENT TO 3DAY POLICE CUSTODY

- Shiv Sunny shiv.sunny@hindustant­imes.com

A Shimla court on Thursday sent the army colonel, arrested for allegedly raping a colleague’s daughter, to 3-day police custody.

NEW DELHI: After booking a fouryear-old for allegedly sexually assaulting his classmate at a west Delhi school, Delhi Police on Thursday remained undecided about to proceed with the case even as legal experts questioned the grounds of filing the FIR.

Police said they went ahead and filed the FIR against the child only because they were following the “policy of registerin­g a FIR without delay”.

“The FIR can be cancelled, but there should be no delay in lodging a complaint. The case was registered only after proper legal consultati­on. We were thoroughly profession­al in our work while staying sensitive to the fact that the victim as well as the suspect were very young children,” Dependra Pathak, Delhi Police’s chief spokespers­on told Hindustan Times on Thursday.

The Indian Penal Code says a child aged below seven years cannot be prosecuted. “Nothing is an offence which is done by a child under seven years of age,” the IPC section 82 says.

A case was registered against the boy on November 18 after the mother of the four-year-old girl complained that he allegedly sexually assaulted her.

The complaint said he allegedly used his finger and a pencil to assault her.

The police spokespers­on said the exemption clause under IPC will be examined in detail and investigat­ors will proceed as per the law.

“What we did was just lodge a complaint. Now we are examining the details of the allegation­s, such as who committed the crime and where it was committed,” Pathak said.

Legal experts, however, said there was just no grounds to even register a FIR.

“The law provides a complete immunity from prosecutio­n to children before the age of seven. Registerin­g a FIR is impermissi­ble and not correct. What is the point of registerin­g a case when you can’t prosecute someone and can’t proceed anywhere,” said Aishwarya Bhati, a Supreme Court lawyer who deals in crimes involving minors.

She added that the law says anyone under the age of seven cannot have a criminal intention.

“This is not subject to scrutiny, it is an absolute exception. This is because there is a presumptio­n that such a young child cannot have a criminal mind,” she said.

If at all the police had to register an FIR, the boy should not have been named in the complaint, she said.

Jayant Bhushan, a senior advocate at the Supreme Court, too said that a child so young is not expected to know the difference between right and wrong, adding the case will be closed after investigat­ion.

“The FIR is only an intimation of an offence. At the initial stage, you do not know who actually committed the offence, so you need a prima facie complaint. But there can’t be a charge sheet in this case if it is indeed the boy involved in the offence. The matter will be closed,” said Bhushan.

‘SHE DISCUSSED ABUSE DUE TO GOOD, BAD TOUCH TALKS’

The mother of the four-year-old girl said her daughter was able to talk about the incident because she had been trained in identifyin­g “good and bad touch.”

The girl was allegedly sexually assaulted with a finger and a sharpened pencil by a classmate in the school building, the mother said. The mother said the alleged abuse had left her daughter scarred and she runs away whenever it is brought up at home.

She added the child says she wants to become strong in the future so she is able to fight off any assaulter.

“Since I had trained my daughter about the concepts of ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ touch, she knew right from the beginning that whatever was happening to her was not right. At the school, she had tried to push the boy away from her.

When she returned home, she kept drawing my attention to her pain and injury to her private parts,” the girl’s mother told HT on phone on Thursday. “She says she wants to eat a lot of food so that she can grow strong and beat up anyone who tries to hurt her in the future,” the mother said.

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