Saturday, 19 September 2020

 

         LAW NEEDED TO COMPENSATE VICTIMS OF WRONGFUL ARRESTS.

 

Dr. Kafeel Khan, of the Gorakhpur tragedy fame a couple of years ago who tried to save infant lives by buying oxygen cylinders out of his own pocket and was jailed by the UP govt. for it, has been freed by the Allahabad High Court which found no evidence against him. He was kept in various prisons for eight months without legal justification. Dr. Khan, however, is one of the lucky ones.

This govt. has been in an overdrive this past year to lock up anyone who can think independently of its propaganda machinery, or express himself in opposition to its anchors and spokespersons- academists, activists, the rare journalist, students, NGOs. One of its main instruments in this pogrom is the deadly legacy bequeathed it by the Congress, the UAPA ( Unlawful Activities Prevention Act) now suitably amended by the BJP to fit its image. NCRB data shows that 3005 cases have been registered under UAPA between 2016 and 2018, more than 350 in UP alone. Tellingly, however, in 2016( the last year for which data is available) 22 cases out of 33 which were decided ended in acquittal: in other words, two out of three arrested were found not guilty. And this is only at the trial court stage; after the appeals process the convicted figure would come down even further. And this exposes the government’s game: the idea is not to convict since the charges are usually trumped up and without any evidence, the intention is to harass, teach “them” a lesson, intimidate and take them out of circulation for as long as possible.But in the process thousands of innocent persons would have been locked up for months and years without reason. Anjum Zamarud Habib was in prison for 5 years,  Mohammad Amir Khan for 14 years, the Akshardham temple blast accused for much longer before being exonerated of terrorism charges. That is why Kafeel Khan was lucky, and why this is as good an inflection point as any to consider the endemic problem of malicious prosecution and wrongful arrests in this country, and whether or not the state should provide reparation to these victims of deliberate state excesses.        The guarantee that no citizen shall be deprived of his personal liberty without reasonable evidence against him is the bedrock of human rights, and the corner stone of an equitable system of justice.  As the criminal justice system heads towards total collapse and the govt. compensates by legislating more and more draconian laws stipulating arrests without any inquiry and/ or no provision of bail, such detentions shall surely increase. It is time to address the issue rationally.

  Citizens in India are being confined illegally on a colossal scale, either in police lock-ups or in judicial custody. Our prison population is about 4.50 lakhs, of which 70% (  3.10 lakhs) are undertrials who have not yet been convicted of any offence. The majority of them are not likely to be convicted either. According to NCRB data  the national conviction rate for IPC offences is just 45%; in other words, of the 3.10 lakh undertrials in jail 55% or 1.65 lakhs will be found innocent for want of evidence ! A further 25% of them will get off on appeal. But they would have spent years behind bars, deprived of their liberty and natural rights, their future blighted by the stigma of imprisonment. Why were they arrested in the first place ? Why did the courts send them to judicial custody if there was no prima facie evidence against them ?

 The answer is nothing short of an indictment of our entire criminal justice system: callous apathy, venality and incompetence of the police, failure and lack of due diligence on the part of our lower courts , and complete indifference of the policy makers. To begin with, many of our laws themselves are defective to the point of being blood thirsty- laws relating to dowry deaths,  suicide, rape, domestic violence, atrocities on scheduled castes, sedition, terrorism are so crafted that the " accused" can be arrested straightaway without the need for any corroborating evidence. This is grist to the police mill which in any case is more interested in " closing" a case by arresting someone than in ensuring that actual justice is done by catching the real culprits . Quite often public/ political/ media pressure is so intense that an arrest-any arrest- is the only way to get them off their backs. Thereafter shoddy investigation, external influences, lengthy delays, witness intimidation, frequent transfers and lack of any accountability ensure that 65 of 100 cases will inevitably end in acquittal, either at the trial stage itself or in appeal(s). Meanwhile, of course, those arrested will languish in jail.

 The same bizarre process applies to convictions after trial. In the Akshardham Temple blast case of 2002 six accused were convicted by the trial court and High Court: three were sentenced to death and three others to imprisonment ranging from 10 years to life. All six were acquitted by the Supreme Court on 16th May 2014 . But by then their lives had been destroyed as they had spent the intervening ten years in jail. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of such cases playing out every year. Should the nation not compensate them for the miscarriage of justice even though no reparation could possibly bring back the years lost, the reputations tarnished, the families torn apart?

 There are many types of wrongful confinement: False Arrest ( detaining a person without lawful authority), Wrongful Arrest ( taking someone into custody without prima facie evidence), Wrongful Imprisonment ( confining someone without just cause or without using legal channels), and Wrongful Conviction ( imprisoning someone on grounds/ evidence subsequently found to be inadequate). The first three are blatant violations and transgressions of the law; only the last type is a consequence of a legal process, but it is nonetheless no solace to the victim. All four are rampant in India.

 The  genuine democracies have accepted that victims of a necessarily imperfect criminal justice system are entitled to reparation from the state, and have devised mechanisms for it. In the USA 29 states have legislated Wrongful Conviction Compensation statutes which provide compensation ranging from US$ 50,000 to US$100,000 for every year of wrongful imprisonment. A typical case is that of one Marty Tankleff who was wrongly convicted for the murder of his parents and had to spend 17 years in incarceration before he was acquitted in 2007. He was awarded compensation of US$ 3.4 million dollars . In the UK , Canada, New Zealand, Germany too systems exist for the state to be sued in such cases. It is next to impossible to do so in India because both, specific legislation or a general law  are missing. We have failed to enact a law on reparations even though India is a signatory to the International Covenant On Civil and Political Rights.

 The framework for having such a law exists, however. Articles 32 and 26 of the Constitution allow the Supreme Court and the High Courts, respectively, to pass orders and provide relief in such matters, and it is the constitutional right of a citizen to approach the courts. There is also a wealth of jurisprudence and case law to mandate that the state pay compensation for wrongful confinement. The relevant landmark judgments by the Supreme Court are in Bhim Singh vs State of Jammu and Kashmir, and in Rudul Sah vs State of Bihar ( 1983); in the latter case the SC laid down the legal responsibility of the State in no uncertain terms:

“ The State must repair the damage done by its officers to the petitioner’s rights. It may have recourse against its officers.”

Over the years both the Supreme Court and various High Courts( MP, Jharkhand, Kerala, Bihar, Assam, Madras) have also awarded compensation to petitioners in their writ jurisdiction, the most notable and recent one being the Rs. 13 million reparation paid to the ISRO scientist Nambi Narayan by the Kerala govt. for arresting and hounding him for 26 years on false spying charges.

But this sporadic, discretionary, pick and choose approach is certainly not adequate. Let us not forget that most of the undertrials and victims of police high handedness come from the weakest sections of society ( economically and socially) and do not have the resources to file writ petitions and engage expensive lawyers. Nor do they have the social eminence of a Nambi Narayan to motivate the media to take up their case. There should be a simple, specific legislation that can be accessed at the level of a district court or even a statutory authority like the District Magistrate. The law should, among other aspects, lay down the compensation to be paid for both pecuniary and non pecuniary damage caused to the petitioner by his illegal confinement, and the scale of reparation. There should also be a provision for recovery of the amount from the salaries of the officials involved. This is necessary to curb the growing enthusiasm of the police to carry out any illegal order of their political bosses, or even to indulge their own brutish instincts.  

   Wrongful confinement of any type by any agency of the state is a violation of human rights, and when it occurs on the scale that it does in our country it amounts to a negation of an equitable justice system. The prevailing concept of " arrest first, gather evidence later" is abhorrent to the spirit of jurisprudence. One can understand the indifference of the government and the parliamentarians, but what is inexplicable is the silence of the judiciary and the bar. Is it because the former is equally guilty through its casual approach, and the latter because this infringement of fundamental rights is good for business? Whatever the reason may be, it is high time laws are put in place to compensate the victims of wrongful arrests/ convictions and to punish the perpetrators. At the least, this would have a salutary effect on the way our police conduct investigations and the judges examine evidence. The people have voluntarily given the state enormous power over their lives in order to live in a just and lawful society; when the state errs in the exercise of this power it must offer reparation to its victims. Not doing so would be breaking a covenant that is the bedrock of a democracy.

 Here is a PIL crying out for suo moto attention of the Supreme Court, one of far more consequence for the common citizen than a suo moto contempt petition.

 

 

 

10 comments:

  1. Extremely pertinent article.

    An overhaul of the criminal justice system is required.

    An aspirin would not work where a 100% arterial blockage exists.

    About time we start.....

    ReplyDelete
  2. Avay, this is a very thoughtful piece. It goes far beyond the oft-heard demand for police reforms. As is clearly brought out by you, it is not merely the police that needs to be fixed, it is the entire criminal justice system. In a system where a suspect may have to spend years in jail as an under-trial, we must have a very strict set of laws to regulate the length of such incarceration. As of now, the poor and the unconnected have little chance of relief once some policeman decides that there is enough reason to throw her/him behind bars.

    ReplyDelete
  3. From the little one has picked up in over 3 decades of wandering in government jobs, one thing stands out – most lawyers would have been happy (mighty pleased?) in very ordinary employment if they were employable enough as graduates or PGs. The last-resort pursuit of the study of Law being an indicator of their continued (and possibly future) unemployability. And thereafter pursuing the venal practice(s) of an “advocate” in the fishy-fish markets of our Lower and High courts. After years and decades of practice with an irretrievably convoluted statute, a predatory police and sleazy repeat criminals or first time innocent victims, not to mention the ‘fixing’ of outcomes (for much consideration - which is the why the millions of poor, low caste under trails remain under trials?), some of these hardened but well connected fellows do get picked up as judges through another opaque method and then with Murphy’s law taking its own course end up as Ms Justice of this and that court!
    Exceptions apart, gross overestimation of the Judiciary – without any consistent evidence to show for its assumed brilliance and wisdom which (or lack of which) is ironically and zealously defended by a divinely ordained contempt of court statue!

    The SC taking up suo moto Mr Shukla’s plea on the issue of reparations, could be the sort of miracle* that WE THE PEOPLE have been waiting for since 1947. Alas!
    (* standard dictionary meaning applies)

    ReplyDelete
  4. If ever such reforms happen (and why not is no longer irrelevant, thanks to the above), the architects could also keep in mind that punitive measures do not have to be restricted to imprisonment, fines and death.
    Community service (and there are hundreds of such service to be performed - from kar sevak work at places of worship to working for night shelters) - would, more often than not, be of much finer effect.
    I have long believed that one of the most abused services in India is its police service. For uncountable reasons now, the service is completely tarnished and the same brush has spared virtually no one. If there is one force needing dignity it is this. Pay, living conditions, upward mobility, working conditions, unequal training/ sensitisation, political interference and the use of graft have rendered the most important peacetime organisation to exist in a separate reality. Much can be done, whether decision makers accept it or not. Everything is about people, the individual and the group, call it what you will. From making bad laws to desultory indifference - it is always the individual and then a group.
    But for all that and a word in favour, this country is still learning to be an independent democratic republic that lives to serve its people.
    It has therefore to be seen that She (India) is protected from her own first. How, depends on her own also.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Write yo your MP. Shukla doesn’t do anything. Just keeps on writing. Nothing else to fo

      Delete
  5. Avay Shukla has comprehensively and compellingly addressed a critical issue. However, a prerequisite for any change will have to be wide-spread awareness. For this the contents of this article needs to be available in all Indian languages and circulated through regional print and digital media

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Indian Justice System is overburdened and takes long time . In US how blacks in the South are imprisoned for long time for minor crimes . It is a disease like Covid. Prevention is the best medicine

      Delete
  6. The flawed criminal justice system and the horrors that await it's unfortunate victims has been highlighted starkly in the recent hotstar serial "criminal justice"... Pretty much the stuff that banana Republics are made of...a grin reminder of Henri charriere's Pappillon... Such a multitude of devil's Islands exist here that this inhumanity certainly needs that this article be translated into multiple languages, widely circulated so that it catches the eye of those safe citadels who hold the power to restore these tattered human rights!

    ReplyDelete
  7. It seems that the author is drawing a debatable legally sustainable inference to the effect that acquittal in the court trial amounts to miscarriage of justice with the accused alone, and apparently to the exclusion of the victim of the crime who sets the process of law into motion to get justice from the criminal justice dispensation system through the state agency of Police/police station. No such empirical evidence is available to hold that the acquittal of the accused invariably isat par with his innocence.In Kishanbhai vs the State of Gujarat(2013) the Apex court has held that every acquittal amounts to miscarriage of justice against the victim or the accused.It will be interesting to know that there are over 1.83 crores of criminal cases pending trial in the subordinate courts across the country.At the rate of 1.1 accused per under-trial case there should be around two crores accused involved in criminal trials at any time. The current under-trial population of 3.10 lakhs, in the prisons, amount to around 1.55% only of the accused facing trial from inside the prisons. And, 98.45% of the under-trial population in the subordinate courts is facing trial from outside the jails. One can always imagine the clout they wield to influence the outcome of the trial in their favour while enlarged on bail. It is the most liberal manifestation of BAIL NOT JAIL principle across the globe.i think we should be concerned as much as for the victim of the crime, if not more, as much as for the accused having been acquitted in the court for reasons, to a large extent, beyond the control of the victim of the crime.

    ReplyDelete
  8. I am from North America. MR. Shukla is always critical of Hindu Government. In Southern United States many jails are owned and managed by private companies. They bill the US Govt according to how many prisoners they look after. More prisoners the more money they make. They were partnering with the police illegally in arresting blacks on small misdemeanours to make more money. Prisoners were seldom tried. Trump discovered that and issued orders for their release. Many blacks appreciated that. Have you heard “Black lives matter “

    ReplyDelete