Child, Law, And Consensual Sex
Current News
In the last one month, at least three different High Courts have either quashed First Information Reports (FIRs) and pending criminal proceedings or acquitted accused persons under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, 2012.
One High Court released the accused on bail on the grounds that the accused and victim had consensual sex.
Quashed Cases of Consensual Sex
On July 12, The Delhi High Court released a 25-year-old
accused on bail on the premise that the 15-year-old girl had eloped with him on
her own and did not support the prosecution’s story of sexual assault.
On July 10, the Bombay High Court quashed the conviction of
a 25-year-old man under POCSO on the grounds that he had consensual sex with
the 17-year-old girl. The girl had terminated her pregnancy after the arrest of
the accused.
On July 7, The Madras High Court not only quashed an FIR
registered under POCSO and consequential criminal proceedings, but also
directed the Director General of Police to produce the reports of all such
pending cases before the Court.
On June 27, The Madhya Pradesh High Court quashed an FIR
registered under POCSO and all criminal proceedings on the basis that the
sexual relationship was consensual. The judgment did not mention the age of the
accused (who used to be her coach).
The Court recommended that the Indian government consider
reducing the age of consent of the prosecutrix from 18 to 16 years.
Defining consent
A ‘child’ under POCSO is defined as any person below the age of 18 years. Acts of penetrative sexual assault committed on children are criminal offences under POCSO.
The purpose of defining ‘child’ under POCSO, and
of the provision under Section 375 of the IPC (sexual intercourse, whether with
or without her consent, is rape if she is under 18 years of age), is to
safeguard children against penetrative sexual assault irrespective of their
consent, which could even be unequivocal and voluntary.
Otherwise, the third part of Section 90 of the IPC, which
provides that consent is not consent “unless the contrary appears from the
context, if it is given by a person who is under 12 years”, was sufficient to
interpret consent for a child of any age.
An analogy can be drawn with the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989, where, if certain prohibited acts are committed with the knowledge of the caste of the victim, intention does not have to be proved separately.
The provision was made
specifically to safeguard vulnerable groups. Similarly, if children are to be
treated as a separate and vulnerable category, consent should be of no avail if
the accused had knowledge of the victim being a child.
If all ‘consensual sex’ cases are to be quashed by the judiciary, what will be the bottom-line age of consent and who will set that boundary? Can the objective of POCSO be softened and allowed to boil down to Section 90 of the IPC (which is general in nature) where consent of a child who is even less than 12 years of age be admitted.
Can such interpretations be said
to be in the ‘best interests of the child’? In two of the above four cases,
minor girls had become pregnant and terminated their pregnancy. Did the courts
examine whether these girls really understood the consequences of early
pregnancies?
Address the gap quickly
The High Courts have not declared any provision of the IPC
or POCSO unconstitutional. Therefore, quashing the cases of consensual sex may
not lead to any less work for the police; they will still have to register FIRs
whenever a child goes missing or a cognisable offence is reported either by
parents or any other third party and proceed with their investigation.
While reducing the age of consent is within the jurisdiction
of Parliament, the Supreme Court must step in to quickly resolve the gap
between the laid down law (as understood by the investigating agencies) and the
different interpretations by the High Courts.
This acquires importance in light of the Supreme Court judgment in Independent Thought v. Union of India (2017) wherein it held that even sexual intercourse with a minor wife is rape.

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