A Bombay High Court judge, is back lashed for her interpretation of sexual assault under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, had in two recent rulings acquitted two persons accused of raping minor girls. The High Court said that the victims’ testimony did not inspire confidence to fix criminal liability on the accused.
Justice Pushpa Ganediwala recently acquitted a man accused of groping a 12-year old girl’s breast because he did not make skin to skin contact, and days earlier, ruled that holding the hands of a five year old girl and unzipping pants do not amount to ‘sexual assault’ under the POCSO Act.
In a recent judgment, she acquitted two persons accused of raping minor girls after noting that the testimony of the victims did not inspire confidence to fix criminal liability on the accused persons.
Justice Pushpa Ganediwala says in one of the judgments, that, “No doubt, the testimony of the prosecutrix (victim) is sufficient for conviction of the accused. However, the same ought to inspire confidence of this Court. It ought to be of sterling quality.”
In the second judgment, she said sole testimony of the victim in rape cases is sufficient to fix criminal liability.
“However, in the present case, considering the sub standard quality of testimony of the victim, it would be a grave injustice to send the appellant behind bars for 10 years,” her order said
In the hearing of January 14 and 15 she raised doubt on how could a single man gag the victim, undress both of them and rape without leading to a scuffle. She wondered how an unmarried couple was allowed to stay in a house by the family members and how did it find the privacy to indulge in physical relations.
On January 15 Justice Pushpa Ganediwala was hearing an appeal filed by one Suraj Kasarkar, 26, against his conviction for rape of a 15-year-old girl. He was sentenced to ten years in jail.
The Prosecution describes the case that, in July 2013, Kasarkar barged into the girl’s house and raped her. The accused in his appeal claimed that he and the girl were in a consensual relation, adding the case was lodged against him at the behest of the girl’s mother after she learnt of the relation.
Justice Ganediwala while acquitting the accused noted that the alleged act of forceful sexual intercourse is unbelievable to the natural human conduct. Her order noted that the girl while deposing before the trial court said she was 18 years old and that she had falsely claimed she was 15 years old in the FIR at her mother’s instance.
The order said that the deposition of the victim on the alleged incident does not inspire the confidence of the court. “It seems highly impossible for a single man to gag the mouth of the prosecutrix (victim) and remove her clothes and his clothes and to perform the forcible sexual act without any scuffle. The medical evidence also does not support the case of the prosecutrix,” the order said.
“Had it been a case of forcible intercourse, there would have been scuffle between the parties. In medical report no injuries of scuffle could be seen,” Justice Ganediwala said adding the defence of consensual physical relations does appear probable.
In the judgment of January 14, Justice Ganediwala was hearing an appeal filed by 27-year-old Jageshwar Kawle, who was convicted under the POCSO Act and Indian Penal Code (IPC) for raping a 17-year-old girl. He was sentenced to ten years.
The prosecution’s case was that the accused took the girl to his sister’s house for two months and had sexual intercourse with her several times. The court order noted that except the statement of the victim that the accused had sexual intercourse with her there was “absolutely nothing” to support the case of rape.
In the order, Justice Ganediwala also raised doubt as to how did other members of the house allow an unmarried boy and girl to sleep together and also how could the victim and the accused get privacy to indulge in sexual intercourse.
Justice Ganediwala was appointed as a district judge in 2007 before which she was an advocate. She was elevated as Additional Judge of the Bombay High Court in February 2019. On January 20 this year, the Supreme Court Collegium approved her appointment as a permanent judge of the high court