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HC ruling on child porn atrocious: Apex court

MHC ruled watching porn not offence under Pocso Act

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NEW DELHI: Terming as ‘atrocious’, the Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear a plea challengin­g a Madras High Court ruling which said that mere downloadin­g and watching child pornograph­y is not an offence under the Pocso Act and the Informatio­n Technology law.

The High Court had, on January 11, quashed the criminal proceeding­s against a 28-yearold man charged with downloadin­g on his mobile phone pornograph­ic content involving children. The present-day children are grappling with the serious issue of watching porn and instead of punishing them, the society must be “mature enough” to educate them, it had also said.

A bench comprising Chief Justice DY Chandrachu­d and justices JB Pardiwala and Manoj Misra took note of the submission­s of senior advocate

HS Phoolka, appearing for two petitioner organisati­ons, that the High Court judgement was contrary to the laws. “This (the HC judgement) is atrocious. How can the single judge say this? Issue notice returnable in three weeks,” the CJI said.

A senior lawyer appeared for two petitioner organisati­ons -- ‘Just Rights for Children Alliance’ of Faridabad and New Delhi-based ‘Bachpan Bachao Andolan’. The NGOs work for the welfare of children. The top court also sought the response of S Harish, a resident of Chennai and the two police officers concerned of Tamil Nadu. The high court had quashed the criminal case against Harish under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (Pocso) Act, 2012 and the Informatio­n Technology Act, 2000. “In order to constitute an offence under Section 67-B of Informatio­n Technology Act, 2000, the accused person must have published, transmitte­d, created material depicting children in a sexually explicit act or conduct. A careful reading of this provision does not make watching child pornograph­y, per se, an offence under Section 67-B of Informatio­n Technology Act, 2000,” the High Court had said.

Even though the said section of the IT Act has been widely worded, it does not cover a case where a person has merely downloaded in his electronic gadget child pornograph­y and watched the same without doing anything more, the high court had said.

Admittedly, there were two videos involving minor boys that had been downloaded and were available on the mobile phone of the petitioner, and those were neither published nor transmitte­d to others and were within the private domain of the petitioner, it had said.

The Madras High Court had, however, expressed concern over children watching pornograph­y.

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