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Law against torture: being humane

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MEANINGS are given in BOLD

Two decades (a period of ten years)  after signing the UN Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, India is yet to ratify (sign or give formal consent to (a treaty, contract, or agreement), making it officially valid) it. There can be little justification for such a prolonged delay in passing legislation to give effect to the convention. In recent times there is a fresh note of urgency attached to the need for early ratification, as the country has pending requests for the extradition (the action of extraditing a person accused or convicted of a crime; handover) of its nationals from other countries.

For, as pointed out by the Supreme Court, the absence of a stand-alone law prohibiting torture may prevent many countries from agreeing (have the same opinion about something; concur) to India’s extradition requests. Such a law may be in the national interest, the Chief Justice of India observed during the course of a hearing on a public interest petition seeking the enactment (the process of passing legislation) of an anti-torture law in accordance with the country’s commitment. The court also noted that India was subjected to close questioning during the Universal Periodic Review of its human rights obligations at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.

It cannot be forgotten that an extradition request relating to Purulia arms drop case suspect Kim Davy failed owing (yet to be paid) to the apprehension that he may be ill-treated in India. In an era of increasing international cooperation on criminal matters, India will be better served if it is seen as adhering to international treaties, especially its obligations under the Convention against Torture, which it signed in 1997.There may be some doubt whether India needs a fresh law to prevent and punish torture. Provisions relating to causing hurt or grievous (very severe or serious) hurt, especially with a view to extracting a confession, criminal intimidation (the action of intimidating someone, or the state of being intimidated; terrifying) and wrongful confinement already exist in the Indian Penal Code.

However, the idea of a stand-alone law ought to be ultimately seen as a more tangible (perceptible by touch) way of expressing commitment to eliminating torture. A concrete step towards enacting a law was made when the Prevention of Torture Bill, 2010, was passed by the Lok Sabha in 2010, but it was referred to a Select Committee in the Rajya Sabha. In its report submitted in the same year, the committee recommended exhaustive amendments to the Bill to make it consistent with the language and intent of the Convention. Thereafter the Bill lapsed (no longer valid; expired). The government now says it has referred the matter to the Law Commission for an authoritative view.

Given the pervasive (spreading widely throughout an area or a group of people) nature of custodial (relating to or requiring imprisonment) violence and its complex policing requirements, the present legislative and administrative framework is obviously inadequate to prevent torture in a country of India’s size. It is imperative (of vital importance; crucial) that a strong law that criminalises torture, imposes stringent (strict, precise, and exacting) punishment for it and contains liberal provisions for those suffering torture to complain against their perpetrators (a person who carries out a harmful, illegal, or immoral act), prosecute them and be compensated and rehabilitated (restore (someone) to health or normal life by training and therapy after imprisonment, addiction, or illness), is passed at the earliest.


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