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THE LEADER ARTICLE: Manufacturing Consent: Rape verdicts reflect
social prejudice
LAXMI MURTHY

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1105524.cms 

[ TUESDAY, MAY 10, 2005 12:00:00 AM ]

What is it about rape that the judiciary cannot restrict itself to
delivering verdicts about the guilt of the accused, but makes
observations on the complainant's behaviour, her moral character and
her marriage prospects? Three recent judgments are indicative of this
disturbing trend; they reflect and legitimise a social prejudice
against rape survivors.

The most recent is the judgment on the rape of a nurse by an employee
of the Shanti Mukund Hospital in east Delhi. On May 3, additional
sessions judge of Karkardooma court, Justice J M Malik deferred his
judgment by a day and ordered the victim to reply to a preposterous
proposal by the rapist to marry her. The young nurse understandably
refused to marry the man who in September 2003 had raped her and
gouged out one eye. She instead demanded that the most stringent
punishment be meted out to him.

Justice Malik, delivering his verdict of life imprisonment, called the
rapist's marriage proposal "false, frivolous and mischievous" and
observed that it was made with the mala fide intention to evade
punishment. Inexplicable, then, is the judge's decision to entertain
this proposal, withhold his judgment and consider reduction in
sentence were the "proposal" to be accepted.

The pressures brought to bear on women subjected to rape and sexual
assault are evident in the formulation of the proposal. The rapist is
projected as helping the victim live a proper life. It is unlikely
that a judge would remotely consider a proposal by a car thief that he
marries the owner of the car so that they can both share the car.

Such attempts to exploit a rape survivor's vulnerability are not few
and far between. In a recent case, the lower court in Mumbai seemed
convinced that the resolution of a rape case lay in marriage. The
acquittal of a rapist by Mumbai sessions court judge B C Singh on May
3 would border on the absurd were it not so tragic.

In a case that dated back to August 2003, the judge acquitted the
accused after the trial was almost complete and the ground prepared
for his conviction.

The judge reportedly (TOI, May 5) offered a police escort to the
marriage party so that the accused did not flee the scene. What
milord, of the evidence in the case establishing the proof of rape?

When patriarchal values determine the nature of judgments, who will
hold judges accountable? In the infamous Suryanelli case, involving a
minor girl who was abducted and gangraped by several men for about 40
days, Kerala high court judges decided that the girl was of a "deviant
character" because she "squandered" Rs 450 given to her for her hostel
fees, and subsequently tried to pawn an ornament to make up the
deficit. Thus, according to the learned judges, the girl was not a
"normal innocent" girl, and the court could not be expected to
"swallow her version".

On January 20, 2005, justices K A Abdul Gafoor and R Basant of the
Kerala high court exonerated all but one of the 36 accused in the
case. The court's disbelief in the lack of the girl's consent led them
to question "whether it was rape at all".

The girl, according to the judges, on returning home after her
"escapade" was attempting to wish away all "consensual sexual
intercourses." She was apparently "attempting to place the blame for
her unfortunate predicament on the shoulders of all with whom she had
sexual intercourse by making convenient omnibus assertions that they
were all rapes".

Let us for now not go into the double standards in society whereby a
girl who has consensual sex is considered to be in an "unfortunate
predicament", whereas a man in a similar position can boast about his
sexual prowess and invincible manhood. Let us, instead, delve into the
assumptions made by judges while delivering their verdicts.

The high court judges found it fit to overturn the lower court
convictions of 35 of the 36 accused, because the victim, in their
opinion, could have "escaped at any time". Disregarding the trauma of
sexually abused women who have been held captive, especially by
politically powerful men, the court inferred from this that she was
willing to go with the accused. The sole judicial conviction was not
for rape, but for procuring a minor and using her for prostitution.

The judgment in the Suryanelli case is all the more disturbing as it
is the first of several cases of sexual abuse and rape to be decided
in the Kerala courts. Such judgments could set dangerous precedents in
cases of sexual crime, particularly when mechanisms to ensure judicial
accountability are not in place.

One can only hope that the Supreme Court, where the Suryanelli matter
is now likely to come up, is more tuned into the harsh realities of
women fighting for justice in cases of sexual violence.

As for matchmaking, that is a task best handled by marriage bureaus. 

The writer is with Saheli, a women's organisation

-- 

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For every minute you are angry, you lose sixty seconds of happiness.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
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SAVAD RAHMAN 
 subeditor,MADHYAMAM daily,
 pooppalam, perinthalmanna,kerala,
 india
 cell:(91)-9846085873

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