2022 മേയ് 11, ബുധനാഴ്‌ച

A victory for crime victims. A recent Supreme Court judgment provides greater participation for victims in the criminal justice process

Guru Sevak Singh, a farmer, poses with the photograph of his brother Guruvinder Singh, who was killed during the farmers’ protest in Lakhimpur Kheri on October 3, 2021. REUTERS REUTERS

A second challenge is that at the moment, there are several provisions and judicial precedents which stand in the way of a comprehensive guarantee of such rights to the victims. For instance, Section 301 limits the right of the victim’s participation at the trial in a court of session to submission of written arguments after evidence is closed in the matter. This position has received judicial affirmation in the case of Rekha Murarka v. State (2019), wherein the Supreme Court proffered that granting victims a right to participation at trial may lead to the trial becoming a ‘vindictive battle’ between the victim and the accused.

Perhaps the best way to tackle both these challenges is to give legislative recognition to the principle of participation which has received the judicial stamp of approval. The CrPC of 1973 is largely based upon the CrPC of 1898. Both these enactments carry scant provisions in terms of access, participation, assistance, protection and compensation to victims of crime. The amendments defining the victim and granting them the right to legal representation and more are hardly adequate to substantively secure internationally recognised rights for victims of crime.

There is an urgent need to amend the CrPC in order to facilitate the recognition of victim rights and to create a statutory framework enabling the same. The recommendations of the Committee for Reforms in Criminal Laws take note of such a need and are expected to work on these lines. Such legislative incorporation can grant recognition to the rights of victims as well as secure their implementation by the lower judiciary as well as the functionaries of the criminal justice system.

G.S. Bajpai is Vice-Chancellor, Rajiv Gandhi National University of Law, Punjab, where Ankit Kaushik is an Assistant Professor

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