Two days after it was cleared by the Union Cabinet, an ordinance on sexual violence against women under which rape that leads to death of the victim can now attract death penalty was today promulgated by President Pranab Mukherjee.
“The President of India has accorded his assent to the Criminal Law (Amendment) Ordinance, 2013 today,” an official release said. A Home Ministry spokesperson also said the ordinance was approved by the President.
The Union Cabinet on Friday recommended the draft of the ordinance to the President for his assent in a bid to fast-track stringent amendments to the criminal laws to check crime against women. The ordinance came less than three weeks before the start of the Budget Session of Parliament.
The ordinance, based on the recommendations of the Justice J S Verma Committee and going beyond, also proposes to replace the word ‘rape’ with ‘sexual assault’ to expand the definition of all types sexual crimes against women.
The ordinance has evoked a mixed response with opposition BJP welcoming it but CPI(M) and several women’s groups opposed it, attacking the government for doing “injustice” to Verma Committee recommendations.
Being brought against the backdrop of the gangrape and brutal assault of a 23-year-old girl in Delhi in December that shook the country, the ordinance entails changes in the criminal law by amending Indian Penal Code (IPC), Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC) and the Evidence Act.
It also proposes enhanced punishment for other crimes against women like stalking, voyeurism, acid attacks, indecent gestures like words and inappropriate touch and brings into its ambit ‘marital rape’
The Union Cabinet at the specially-convened meeting went beyond the Verma Committee’s recommendation by providing for capital punishment in the cases where rape leads to death of the victim or leaves her in “persistent vegetative state“.
In such cases, the minimum punishment will be 20 years in jail which can be extended to the natural life of the convict or death, sources said, adding discretion will be with the court.
After the Delhi gangrape incident, there were vociferous demands for death penalty, but the Verma committee has not favoured it.