SC pulls up HC for being lenient to acid attacker
The Supreme Court Monday awarded a compensation of `3.50 lakh to an acid victim from Vizianagaram in Andhra Pradesh, and slapped a oneyear imprisonment on the accused.
The Hyderabad high court for AP and Telangana had let off the accused, Gorripottu Eshwara Rao, with one-month imprisonment and `6,000 fine for the offence committed in May 2003.
A Bench of justices Dipak Misra and R. Banumathi directed the AP government to pay `3 lakh to the victim, Ravada Sasikala, within three months; `50,000 has to be paid by the accused within six months.
Pulling up the high court for showing leniency on the accused, the Bench said the case is an example of an “uncivilised and heartless crime”.
The apex court said it unacceptable to allow the concept of leniency in such a crime. “A crime of this nature does not deserve any kind of clemency. It is individually as well as collectively intolerable,” the Bench said.
It said the accused might have felt that his ego had been hurt by the girl’s denial to his proposal for marriage, or he might have suffered a “sense of hollowness” to his “exaggerated sense of honour”, but the criminal act does not
deserve any leniency.
“The approach of the high court shocks us, and we have no hesitation in saying so. When there is medical evidence that there was an acid attack on the young girl, and the circumstances (along with) evidence (are strong)… there was no justification to reduce the sentence to the period of 30 days already undergone,” the Bench said.
When a sentence of 30 days is imposed in the acid attack on a young girl, justice is not served, it said.