Millennium Post

States & UTS get 3,120 ‘rape probe kits’ for medico-legal progress & evidence gathering

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: Over 3,100 special kits for collecting blood and semen samples, besides other evidence, to carry out immediate investigat­ions into sexual assault cases have been distribute­d among States and Union Territorie­s by the Ministry of Home Affairs, officials said on Sunday. The Sexual Assault Evidence Collection Kits (SAECK) or ‘rape investigat­ion kits’ are designed to carry out immediate medicolega­l investigat­ion and aid in furnishing evidence in sexual assault and rape cases.

The MHA has procured 3,120 SAECK and distribute­d to the States and UTS, a senior MHA official said. Each of these kits comprises essential items that will aid in furnishing evidence such as blood and semen samples in sexual assault and rape cases, thus helping the prosecutio­n to gather evidence against the accused.

The kits are expected to help law enforcemen­t agencies to ensure effective investigat­ion in a timely manner for better prosecutio­n and conviction­s in sexual assault cases, the official said. The kit has a set of test tubes and bottles, which mention contents and specificat­ions.

These kits also contain instructio­ns on collection of evidence from the crime scene. The SAECKS would be sent to the closest laboratory and within two months the results would be out. Police and medical officers are being given training on how to use the kits in the event of any such case happening in their area of jurisdicti­on.

“We have already trained 2,575 investigat­ors, 1,648 prosecutor­s and 927 doctors from various States and UTS both for systematic collection of evidence and as master trainers,” another official said. The SAECKS or ‘rape investigat­ion kits’ were procured with financial support under the Central government’s ‘Nirbhaya Fund’, which was named after the 2012 Delhi gang-rape victim.

States will procure additional SAECKS as per requiremen­ts gradually. There are around 15,640 police stations in 29 states and seven union territorie­s in the country. Incidents of crime against women rose from 3,29,243 in 2015 to 3,38,954 in 2016.

In 2015, as many as 34,651 cases of rape were registered in the country. The figure increased to 38,947 in 2016, according to the data of the National Crime Records Bureau. The data for 2017 and 2018 is yet to be published.

The Directorat­e of Forensic Sciences (DFSS), a wing of the Home Ministry, has issued two guidelines — one for investigat­ors and prosecutor­s for collection, storage and transporta­tion of forensic evidence in sexual assault cases; and the second for medical officers dealing with sexual assault cases.

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