Victim Dignity in Criminal Justice

Syllabus: Issues related to women

Context and Significance

Secondary Victimisation and Institutional Failure

  • Public comments by Maharashtra State Commission for Women revealed private victim communications.
  • Such statements reinforced victim-blaming culture, even within women-protection institutions.
  • This reflects persistent social prejudice undermining women-centric legal reforms.

Legal Framework Protecting Victim Dignity

    • Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2013 (Nirbhaya Act) aimed to curb character assassination.
    • Section 53A, Indian Evidence Act (now Section 50, BSA, 2023) bars using victim’s character.
    • Section 146, Indian Evidence Act (now Section 48, BSA) prohibits questions on sexual history.
    • Focus of trial must remain strictly on facts of the alleged offence.
  • Supreme Court Directives
    • State of Punjab vs Gurmit Singh (1996): Victim testimony not to be doubted on moral grounds.
    • Courts condemned excessive scrutiny as adding “insult to injury” to survivors.
    • Section 228A IPC (now Section 72, BNS) bans disclosure of victim identity, even posthumously.
    • Media scrutiny of dying declarations violates dignity and investigation integrity.

Gaps Between Law and Practice

  • Extra-judicial victim shaming by public functionaries undermines legal safeguards.
  • Institutional commentary creates a damaging “social verdict” against victims.
  • Reveals contradiction between progressive law and regressive societal mindset.

Way Forward

  • Training and sensitisation of police, prosecutors, and judges on victim trauma.
  • Zero tolerance for victim-blaming attitudes in investigations and public discourse.
  • Resource strengthening: forensic labs, women’s desks, digital evidence systems, legal aid.
  • Emphasis on constitutional morality, solidarity, and dignity-centred justice delivery.

Conclusion

  • Phaltan case underscores that laws alone are insufficient without ethical implementation.
  • Protecting victim dignity requires institutional accountability and societal transformation.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top