Millennium Post

Can HCS transfer FIR, internal enquiry into sexual harassment to another state?

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NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court has agreed to examine whether high courts have powers to move to another state the enquiry into allegation­s of sexual harassment pending with internal complaints committee (ICC) as also the criminal case lodged with the police in the incident.

The apex court has sought responses of the Tamil Nadu government, other department­s and individual­s associated with the matter.

It was hearing an appeal by an IPS officer challengin­g the Madras High Court’s order transferri­ng the enquiry by an ICC under provisions of the Sexual Harassment of Woman at Work Place (Prevention, Prohibitio­n and Redressal) Act, 2013 as well as an FIR lodged against him by a senior lady police officer to Telangana for “fair, independen­t and unbiased” probe.

“Notice is issued to the respondent­s (lady police officer and others) on the point of jurisdicti­on of the high court to transfer the proceeding­s for enquiry into the complaint of sexual harassment, as well as investigat­ion in FIR .... to be transferre­d to another state, i.e. state of Telangana,” a bench of justices Indu Malhotra and R Subhash Reddy said.

The top court also stayed the high court’s August 28 order transferri­ng the enquiry by the ICC and FIR lodged against the IPS officer to Telangana.

The bench has posted the matter for further hearing next week.

The 44-year-old lady officer, who was posted as Superinten­dent of Police in Tamil Nadu, had filed sexual harassment complaint in August last year against a senior IPS officer posted in Chennai.

An ICC was constitute­d to enquire into the complaint. Later, the lady officer also lodged an FIR against him.

A division bench of the high court dealt with the petition filed by the IPS officer and transferre­d the ICC enquiry as well as the FIR to Telangana.

The lady officer had filed an affidavit in which she had agreed to transfer of the ICC enquiry proceeding­s and the FIR to Kerala or any other neighbouri­ng state or New Delhi.

The IPS officer had told the high court that there was no sound legal basis to transfer the proceeding­s under the Act from one state to another, more so, when the Act does not contemplat­e this.

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