*Dealing with issues of impunity
* Tarunabh Khaitan
http://www.hindu.com/2011/02/08/stories/2011020854861100.htm
* The Rajya Sabha shows the way in the manner in which it handled the
Prevention of Torture Bill, 2010. *

We like to berate our parliamentarians. It is true that some of them are
indeed opportunist, corrupt and lazy. But it is also true that the media
would selectively broadcast scenes of pandemonium in legislatures but often
fail to report serious and sincere work done by parliamentarians. Who can
then blame the politicians for thinking that there is no reward for hard
work, and that the only way to attract attention is to turn up the volume?
*

Deserves credit
*

The journey of the much reviled Prevention of Torture Bill, 2010, in the
Rajya Sabha so far is a good example of how legislators ought to perform
their law-making function, and therefore deserves credit. The Bill,
ostensibly designed to criminalise acts of torture by public servants, was
rightly condemned as a fig-leaf, the real purpose of which was to ensure
that public servants could resort to torture with impunity. Among its many
defects was the impunity provision contained in Clause 6 of the Bill, which
required that no court could proceed with a complaint of torture unless the
government of the day permits the prosecution of the suspect public servant.

This clause duplicated a colonial-era provision that is now recited
unfailingly in most of our criminal statutes: from Section 197 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure, 1973 to Section 19 of the Prevention of Corruption
Act, 1988. Indeed, Section 6A of the Delhi Special Police Establishment Act,
1946 (the law that constitutes and governs the functioning of the Central
Bureau of Investigation) goes a step further. It sets down that the CBI
cannot even conduct an enquiry or investigate, let alone prosecute, a
corruption case without prior sanction from the Central government. These
impunity provisions have been the main stumbling blocks to the prosecution
of public servants, whether it is for corruption or for torture.
*

Committee's report
*

The government managed to use its numbers to get the Prevention of Torture
Bill passed in the Lok Sabha after a brief, late-evening debate last year.
By the time the Bill reached the Rajya Sabha, however, civil society had had
a chance to examine its deplorable provisions. At least some Rajya Sabha MPs
listened, and were convinced that the provisions of the Bill needed to be
scrutinised more closely. The government wisely conceded their demand and a
Select Committee was set up under the chairpersonship of Ashwani Kumar.

The December 2010 Report of the Rajya Sabha Select Committee on the
Prevention of Torture Bill is remarkable for the sincerity and seriousness
with which it treats the issue of torture. The committee's recommendations,
if accepted, will fix most of the infirmities of the original Bill. Although
the entire report is worth commenting upon, its discussion and
recommendations with regard to impunity provisions are particularly
noteworthy.

Adopting a sagacious approach to the problem of prior sanction requirements,
the committee recognised the need to “insulate honest public servants from
false, frivolous, vexatious and malicious prosecution.” At the same time, it
felt that such a provision should not be used to shield those officials who
have, in fact, “intentionally tortured or abetted the torture of
individuals.” Thus, the committee captured the classic dilemma in
prosecuting public servants — we want them to discharge their duties without
fear and favour, but want to ensure that they are accountable for what they
do (or fail to do). Impunity provisions such as Clause 6 of the original
Torture Bill, or Section 197 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, only take
into account the need to shield public servants. They give no consideration
to the need to ensure accountability. Instead of finding a proportional
solution that adequately caters to both concerns, it completely ignores the
second.
*

Recommendations
*

The committee finds a more appropriate balance “so as to provide adequate
safeguards to honest and upright officials, while at the same time ensuring
that the sanction provision was not used to deny the victims ... their right
to justice through speedy trial.” To accomplish this nuanced goal, it
recommends an amended Clause 6 (re-numbered as Clause 7 in the Bill
recommended by the committee), which has the following provisions.

First, while retaining the general requirement of prior governmental
sanction for prosecution of public servants, the committee recommends the
inclusion of a deeming provision: if the government has not acted on a
request for sanction for three months, sanction would be deemed to have been
given. This will ensure that a government cannot frustrate prosecution by
simply refusing to act on a request for sanction.

Second, the committee recommends that should the government refuse to
sanction prosecution, it must record its reasons in writing. Under the
current practice, the government has no obligation to justify publicly why
it has refused to sanction the prosecution of any public servant. This
opacity allows the government to use the power of sanction to settle
political scores rather than to ensure accountability.

Third, and perhaps most importantly, the committee recommends that an order
refusing such sanction may be appealed before a High Court by an aggrieved
person. Currently, a person can only file for a judicial review of a
decision to refuse sanction; there is no right to appeal. The difference
between an appeal and a review is significant. The powers of a review court
to correct a decision are much more limited than that of an appellate court.
A review court mainly ensures that certain technical rules of
decision-making were followed, and that the decision was not so unreasonable
that no reasonable person could have made it. An appellate court, on the
other hand, can examine the issue on merits and substitute its own judgment
for that of the government. In sum, the possibility that its decision may be
appealed will require the government to act on judicial rather than on
political grounds while granting or refusing sanction.

These recommendations strike the right balance between the need to protect
honest officers and to hold public servants to account. The Rajya Sabha
committee's work deserves commendation. Indeed, the formula stipulated by
the committee should not be restricted to torture alone. It may well prove
to be the best answer to the problem of impunity in corruption cases too.
Will the government continue to use this arbitrary power as a bargaining
tool to gain allies or as a punishment for its foes? Or will Parliament
follow the Kumar Committee's recommendation and put in place safeguards that
are necessary to check its misuse?

( Dr. Tarunabh Khaitan is Fellow in Law, Christ Church, University of
Oxford.)

*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"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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