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PIL filed in SC for guidelines to check custodial crimes

Last Updated 08 July 2020, 15:22 IST

A PIL has been filed in Supreme Court to lay down guidelines to fill the gaping legal lacunae, and ensuring an effective framework to prevent custodial torture, deaths and rapes, following the alleged killing of father-son duo in police custody in Tamil Nadu's Thoothukudi district.

NGO 'People's Charioteer Organisation' and advocate Devesh Saxena also sought a direction to the Union Government to form an independent committee of members from all the relevant departments and ministries to review the entire legal framework and find pitfalls to curb the menace.

The petitioner claimed the recent incidents of custodial crimes have traumatised all those who respect the rule of law and personal liberty in the country.

"It is noteworthy to mention here that Indian police are well known for gratuitous beatings, custodial torture, custodial deaths, fake encounters and other blatant state violence...we failed to eliminate the colonial attitude of our police and allowed it to continue with same archaic law such as the Police Act, 1861," it claimed.

The murderous police assault, unending beatings and brutal torture, which caused the death of two innocent traders, a father and a son, Jayaraj, aged 62 years and Bennix, aged 32 years, at Sathankulam Police Station, near Thoothukudi in Tamil Nadu, has brought the issue of custodial deaths to the limelight, the petitioner said.

"It underlines afresh the urgent need for institutional correctives within the policing system in this country and the acute need for Union government to enact a strong law to prohibit and prosecute cases of torture and custodial deaths, in fulfilment of its legal obligations, both national and international, to guarantee protection to right to life," it said.

The petitioner cited the Law Commission's 152nd and 273rd reports, as well as other committee reports along with statues of foreign jurisdiction to buttress its points. It also cited the NHRC's report between 1994-95 to 2017-18 which enlisted the number of death and rapes in judicial custody and police custody as 29979 and 3642 respectively.

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(Published 08 July 2020, 15:21 IST)

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