[And, this guy is the Prime Minister of the country.
Just think of it, so had been Jawaharlal Nehru!
What a descent!

《Predictably, Modi’s claim invited immediate ridicule on social media, with
Twitter users challenging him to cite an example of a rape case that was
solved in such a short time. There is, of course, no such example – filing
chargesheets in rape cases itself often takes months, even when cases are
fast-tracked. However, it is worth listing the many reasons why Modi’s
statement is riddled with problems.

*No one hanged for 15 years*

To begin with, the Prime Minister’s claim that rapists are being hanged
within days is completely unfounded. India has not executed a rape convict
since 2004, when Dhananjoy Chatterjee was hanged for the rape and murder of
a 14-year-old girl.

In April 2018, the government introduced the provision of capital
punishment for the rape of girls below 12 years, following which nine
people have been sentenced to death, but their sentences have not yet been
executed. In fact, in any case of capital punishment, convicts are allowed
a chance to file mercy petitions with the Supreme Court and the President –
a process that can take months or years.》]

https://scroll.in/article/911536/fact-check-are-rapists-now-getting-hanged-between-three-and-30-days-as-modi-claimed?fbclid=IwAR0Vb9gsPPEZjT_HmCDwvn0-HyVyqKEiYFAKWkzyivZQlPSkUFeuZI3KlX0

Fact check: Are rapists now getting hanged between three and 30 days, as
Modi claimed?
At a rally in Surat, the prime minister claimed that these days, justice is
being served in less than a month for victims of sexual violence.
Fact check: Are rapists now getting hanged between three and 30 days, as
Modi claimed?

People take part in Not In My Name protest against the rape cases in Unnao
and Kathua, at Parliament Street, in New Delhi, on Sunday. | Arvind
Yadav/HT Photo

Jan 31, 2019 · 04:03 pm

Aarefa Johari

How long does the Indian justice system take to hang rape culprits to
death? According to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, it takes just between
three and 30 days.

At a rally in Surat, Gujarat, months before the 2019 general election, Modi
claimed that these days, convicted rapists are “hanged within 3 days, 7
days, 11 days and a month”, according to ANI.

PM Narendra Modi in Surat: There used to be rapes in this country earlier
too, it is a shame that we still hear about such cases. Now, culprits are
hanged within 3 days, 7days, 11 days & a month. Steps are being taken
continuously to get daughters justice & results are evident.
pic.twitter.com/eA1SBipQUH

— ANI (@ANI) January 30, 2019

Predictably, Modi’s claim invited immediate ridicule on social media, with
Twitter users challenging him to cite an example of a rape case that was
solved in such a short time. There is, of course, no such example – filing
chargesheets in rape cases itself often takes months, even when cases are
fast-tracked. However, it is worth listing the many reasons why Modi’s
statement is riddled with problems.

No one hanged for 15 years
To begin with, the Prime Minister’s claim that rapists are being hanged
within days is completely unfounded. India has not executed a rape convict
since 2004, when Dhananjoy Chatterjee was hanged for the rape and murder of
a 14-year-old girl.

In April 2018, the government introduced the provision of capital
punishment for the rape of girls below 12 years, following which nine
people have been sentenced to death, but their sentences have not yet been
executed. In fact, in any case of capital punishment, convicts are allowed
a chance to file mercy petitions with the Supreme Court and the President –
a process that can take months or years.

No official data
The National Crime Records Bureau, which maintains official records of
crimes across the country, has not released its annual crime report since
2016.

In 2016, NCRB recorded a total of 55,071 rape cases, of which more than
16,000 were pending from the previous year. Chargesheets were filed in
33,628 of the total rape cases, and a total of 16,678 cases were still
pending at the end of 2016 – a pendency rate of 30%. Conviction rates,
meanwhile, were as low as 25%.

In the absence of NCRB data for 2017 and 2018, it is impossible for Modi to
make any official claim about how quickly rape cases are being resolved
today. And even if rape statistics were available for the past two years,
it is unlikely that the situation would have improved as drastically as
Modi suggested in his statement.

In fact, the government’s own guidelines for how long a rape trial should
take allow more time than Modi’s boast of between 3 days to a month. In
April 2018, the central government cleared an ordinance that set a
two-month time limit for completing investigations in a rape case, and
another two months for completing the trial.

How fast-track courts really work
There has been a push for fast-track courts for speeding up justice in rape
trials ever since the 2012 Delhi gang rape case. But these special courts
have not proved to be the magic solution for rape that they were imagined
to be.

India would need at least 1,800 fast-track courts to hear the backlog of
pending rape cases, but up till the beginning of last year, there were just
722 such courts across the country. It was not until November 2018 that the
central government approved the establishment of 1,023 fast-track special
courts to hear pending cases of rape and child sexual abuse.

It is too soon to know how effectively these new fast-track courts will
work, but so far, the speedy functioning of fast-track courts has been
hindered by several factors, including a dearth of judges, lack of
administrative and infrastructural support, and often the same hostility
and insensitivity that make regular court trials a traumatic ordeal for
rape survivors.

While fast-track courts need more resources to function effectively, delays
in rape cases often begin well before they reach the trial stage. Police
are known to take weeks – sometimes months – to file chargesheets in rape
cases, and there are just a few cases in which chargesheets have been filed
more promptly. For instance, in 2013, the Rajasthan police took just one
week to file a chargesheet in the case of a 13-year-old girl’s gang rape,
and police officials claimed with pride that it was the first time they had
been able to act so swiftly.

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Peace Is Doable

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