SC bars disclosure of identity of rape victims

The Supreme Court directed that names and identities of victims of rape and sexual assault should not be disclosed or revealed even in remote manner.

share this post:

Why is it in the news ?

  • The Supreme Court directed that names and identities of victims of rape and sexual assault should not be disclosed or revealed even in remote manner.
  • A bench headed by Justice Madan B Lokur directed the print and electronic media not to reveal identity of victims of rape and sexual assault “even in a remote manner”.

More in the news

  • The police and forensic authorities have been barred from disclosing the identity of a rape victim after parental nod.
  • Putting first information reports (FIRs) on rape and those under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, 2012, in public domain also stands prohibited.
  • Protection to the identity of rape victims would also extend to social media posts on which any sort of identity disclosure has been barred.
  • The court set aside the argument that the identity of a dead victim of sexual crime should be revealed as it would become a “symbol of protest or treated as an iconic figure”.
  • The top court also highlighted how rape victims were prejudiced and treated worse than their perpetrators and that society’s attitude towards rape victims needed to change.
  • It further added that the victims had a right to privacy and should not have to live under such stigma throughout their lives.
  • Even the dead have dignity and they cannot be named or shamed.
  • Only Special Courts under POCSO can permit the disclosure of the identity of a minor victim, that too, only if such divulgence were in the interest of the child.
  • The court urged States and Union Territories to set up at least one ‘one-stop centre’ in every district within a year to support women affected by violence.

Source

LiveMint.