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Don’t reveal identities of rape victims, Supreme Court says

EVEN THE DEAD HAVE DIGNITY AND CANNOT BE ‘NAMED OR SHAMED’, APEX COURT WARNS

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Even the dead have dignity. They cannot be “named or shamed”. This was the observatio­n of India’s Supreme Court yesterday as it dealt with the issue of disclosure of identity of rape victims, including the eight-year-old girl who was raped and brutally murdered recently in Kathua in north Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir.

Right to privacy

It said that even in cases where the rape victims were alive and were either minors or of unsound mind, their identities should not be revealed as they have the right to privacy and they cannot live under such a “stigma” throughout their life.

“Think of the dignity of dead also. It [media reporting] can be done without naming or shaming them. The dead also have dignity,” a bench comprising Justices Madan B Lokur and Deepak Gupta said while hearing the matter in which senior lawyer Indira Jaising raked up the issue of section 228-A of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), which deals with disclosure of identity of victims of sexual offences.

The bench, which agreed to examine the aspect related to section 228-A of the IPC, also questioned how the identity of a minor rape victim could be disclosed even after getting consent from her parents.

“Why should this happen, that the identity of a minor victim be disclosed just because her parents have given consent,” the bench asked, adding, “Even if a person is of unsound mind, she has a right to privacy. A minor will become major. Why should this stigma be there for life”.

No blanket media ban

Jaising, who is assisting the court as an amicus curiae, said it was necessary for the apex court to clarify section 228-A of the IPC.

She said there cannot be a “blanket ban” on the media from reporting such incidents and the apex court would have to balance freedom of press and the rights of the victim.

The bench said the issue required clarificat­ion. It asked that even in cases where the victim had died, “why should there be disclosure of name”.

Jaising, without directly referring to the Kathua incident, said in a recent case, the victim had died which had led to demands for justice.

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