Many rapists escape thru' loopholes
There are special laws and special courts to ensure justice for rape survivors. And yet, justice for most of them remains forever illusive. There are at least three guilty parties here -- defective investigation, incompetent prosecution and the law that favours the accused.
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Incidents
of rape are alarmingly frequent in the country but punishment of the
perpetrators is not.
Yet,
no one has been made accountable for the failure.
Like
many rape victims, Rebeka (not her real name), a mother of two children, saw
the accused in her case acquitted by the High Court in 2007. She had been
raped at her village in Lalmonirhat at night while returning home. According to
the case statement, she was gagged and raped by a local man.
The
HC, while delivering the judgment, pointed out a few loopholes in the
investigation and the case the prosecution presented. Coupled with the absence
of medical evidence, the court decided to acquit the accused.
Following
the rape, an arbitration had been called on October 10, 2000. The two sides
failed to reach a compromise and four days later the victim filed a case with
the local police. But none of the attendees of the village arbitration were
produced to testify before the court, the HC observed.
The
investigation officer admitted to not sending the victim's clothes for chemical
examination and that neighbours, “who are competent witnesses”, were not
examined or made witnesses at the women and children repression prevention
tribunal in Lalmonirhat.
The
HC said, “Although the defence has not examined any witness the defence version
has been proven to some extent by the evidence of the prosecution.”
In
Dhaka Metro area alone, five special tribunals disposed of 2,057 cases out of
4,436 filed with different police stations between 2001 and 2016. Only 22 cases
saw conviction, according to court and prosecution sources.
The
accused escape punishment, as the court in the above case said, “When the
medical report doesn't support the allegation of rape and when the evidence of
the prosecution witnesses, who are partisan, are sharply contradictory and when
the neighbouring disinterested [neutral] witnesses are not examined.”
Though
the special tribunal in Lalmonihat had sentenced the accused to rigorous
imprisonment for life, it didn't hold anyone accountable for the mistakes nor
did it take any action to fix them. And finally the conviction did not sustain
at the HC.
WHAT
IS THE ROLE OF PUBLIC PROSECUTOR?
Rebeka
was a mother of two children when she was raped. Even immediate medical
examination would probably fail to get signs of “forceful sexual intercourse”
defined as rape in the penal code, which was later adopted in the Women and
Children Repression Prevention Act 2000.
In
such a circumstance, “it is the legal acumen of the public prosecutor”, Supreme
Court advocate Khurshid Alam Khan said, to make the victim's account believable
with other circumstantial evidence and social and legal perspectives.
Public
prosecutor (PP) of the special tribunal-2, Dhaka, Ali Akbar said he had seen
acquittal of accused in more than 90 percent of the rape cases tried at the
court over the last eight years because of medical reports not establishing
rape.
Khurshid
Alam disagrees with the view that rape cannot be proved at court without
medical evidence.
If
that were the case, he said, PP doesn't have any job to do.
“The
court is the ultimate authority to judge the performance of PP and inform the
authority concerned [the law ministry] of his negligence for action,” the SC
lawyer added.
But
there has never been such an instance.
HOW
SLOPPY WORK BY IO AND MAGISTRATE FAILS TRIAL:
In
the judgment of another rape case in Jamalpur involving an 11-year old girl,
the HC pointed out that the magistrate who was a prosecution witness during
cross-examination said he had recorded the statement under section 164 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure on white paper as the required form was not there.
Thus,
the statement was not considered valid and this vital piece of evidence was
dismissed.
In
a recent study on judgments of murder cases, including cases filed under the
Women and Children Repression Prevention Act 2000, the Police Bureau of
Investigation (PBI) found that accused got acquittal in 123 cases. Mistakes
were made by investigation officials, medical officers or magistrates in ninety
percent of the cases.
“The
honourable judges pointed out some of the mistakes,” but didn't order any
action against those responsible, the PBI said in the report.
During
rape cases, investigation is the foremost part of the legal procedure. Evidence
should be collected sincerely and meticulously, said Kawser Ahmed, a Supreme
Court advocate. “If there are mistakes by an investigation officer in the first
place, there is no way to re-do it because by that time, evidence would be
destroyed,” he added.
In
a judgment delivered in February 2007, the HC said the victim, an 18-year-old
SSC examinee, had been subjected to forceful sexual intercourse as per the
medical report, but the report should not be relied upon because it was
submitted 34 days after the examination.
But
submission of medical reports months after the examination is not a rare thing,
as suggested by advocate Fahmida Akhter Rinky, a member of Bangladesh National
Women Lawyers' Association, who worked on cases involving women and children
for nearly a decade.
She
has even seen investigation officer fail to mention the name of the doctor who
performed the medico-legal examination.
AN
UNJUST SYSTEM:
If
the system remains this way and there is no accountability, rape victims will
not get justice, Khurshid Alam says.
“They
are left just like orphans.”
To
address the issue of accountability, an order was passed by HC in 2016.
The
High Court directed the Supreme Court registrar general to form a cell to
monitor whether trials of cases under the Women and Children Repression
Prevention Act, 2000 are finished in 180 days.
The
monitoring cell is to report to the SC and the government for taking
appropriate action against judges, public prosecutors and investigation
officers who will fail to assign causes for not disposing of the cases on time,
read the full text of the HC verdict.
The
bench of Justice M Enayetur Rahim and Justice JBM Hassan delivered the short
verdict on December 5, 2016 after hearing a suo moto rule on the
issue.
But
such monitoring is yet to happen.
NO
ONE IS ACCOUNTABLE:
Prompted
by this, the HC asked the authorities if the special tribunals across the
country, public prosecutors and police officers, were submitting such reports
to them on failing to complete trial within the set timeframe. It eventually
learnt that the provision had never been complied with.
The
law also provides for action against the people responsible for the failure
based on the reports.
To
make investigation officers accountable, Superintendent of Police Mostofa
Kamal, of the PBI, said they should be more skilled and a mechanism placed to
monitor their actions.
Khurshid
Alam echoed his view. He said the ability of PPs and IOs has to improve through
interaction with judges, experts, human rights activists, academicians,
researchers and through training.
In
the 2016 HC judgment, the court said there is a need for a monitoring cell that
would study the explanations of tribunals, public prosecutors and police
officers for their failure to finish trial within 180 days.
The
order, if complied with, may help plug some of the loopholes during trial.
The
registrar general of the Supreme Court or the registrar of the High Court
Division should play the lead role for the monitoring cell, as suggested by the
HC.
Md
Golam Rabbani, registrar of the HC Division, recently told The Daily Star his
office was trying to find out the status of compliance with the order.
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