*No compromise on human rights
http://www.hindu.com/2010/05/10/stories/2010051051250800.htm
*

The criminal justice system is founded on a slew of jurisprudential
principles that protect the rights of suspects and accused. These include
the right against self-incrimination, the right to remain silent, and the
right against providing information under physical or mental pressure.
Despite this, invasive procedures such as narcoanalysis, brain-mapping, and
polygraph tests have been routinely used by the police — and, shockingly,
with the approval of the courts. In holding that the forcible use of these
tests is unconstitutional, the Supreme Court of India has drawn attention to
the inherent violence in such investigative procedures, which constitute a
gross abuse of human rights. The landmark 251-page judgment arrives at two
broad legal conclusions. First, such coercive testing violates Article 20
(3) of the Constitution, which stipulates “no person accused of an offence
shall stand witness against himself.” Secondly, it is an infringement of the
right to personal liberty as understood in the context of Article 21, in
particular the right to privacy, the right to a free trial, and the right
against cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.

The court has made it clear that nobody can be compelled to undergo
narcoanalysis, brain mapping, or lie detector tests and that any statements
made during those procedures are not admissible as evidence. Such tests are
permissible only when taken voluntarily. But even in such cases, they must
be conducted in strict compliance with the National Human Rights
Commission's Guidelines for the Administration of the Polygraph Test — which
includes safeguards such as the mandatory recording of consent before a
magistrate and the conduct of all tests by an independent agency. Proponents
of the three tests, including those who concede that they sometimes produce
false results, advance pragmatic arguments for their retention. They claim
that the tests are a softer alternative to third degree methods of
interrogation, which might become further entrenched in their absence. They
also argue that these tests can serve the public interest in extraordinary
situations: they can help uncover terror plots and prevent devastating
attacks. Interestingly, the Supreme Court has not dismissed such arguments
out of hand. Instead, it has taken the high ground to hold that as a court
of law, it can only seek to preserve the balance between the competing
interests of personal liberty and public safety, as they are reflected in
the Constitution. The judgment must be acclaimed as a major blow for
democratic and human rights in the face of invasive procedures that violate
the mind.

*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Ours is a battle not for wealth or for power.
It is a battle for freedom. It is a battle for the reclamation of human
personality."
- Dr BR Ambedkar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*

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