The signatories include entire organisations working on women and children’s rights, along with prominent individuals like historian Uma Chakravarti, food rights activist Veena Shatrughna, lawyer Indira Jaising, scholar Nivedita Menon, activist Lalita Ramdas, women studies scholar Mary E. John, transgender activist Rachana Mudraboyina, writer Gogu Shyamala, women’s rights activist and artist Sheba Chhachhi, The Wire‘s public editor Pamela Phillipose, and filmmakers Anand Patwardhan and Nishtha Jain, reiterated their position against the death penalty.
Pointing to numerous instances where capital punishments failed to reduce the number of rapes, murder, sexual assaults and killings, the statement held that the death penalty was not a deterrent against crimes and that countries where the death penalty was not abolished continued to witness high homicide rates.
Also read: Teach the Justice System to Be More Aware of Women
The signatories also held that there was “no short cut to justice and safety” and that the only way to stop crimes against women was to make improve the criminal justice system. Referring to violence against Adivasi and Dalit women, the statement said that there was a “need to understand the pervasiveness of this kind of violence on women and evolve punishments that act as true deterrents to the very large numbers of men who commit, and get away with, such crimes”.
The full statement is reproduced below.
As individuals and groups who have been engaged in the struggles for women’s rights, safety and justice, it is often presumed that we would support the demand for death penalty for sexual assault. But for decades, even as we have consistently fought to make the world safer for women through changes in policy and law, and social awareness by breaking the silence on these heinous crimes, we have consistently argued against the death penalty for sexual assault, as well as, all other crimes.
In the light of the death warrant being issued on 7 January 2020 against Akshay Kumar, Vinay Sharma, Pawan Gupta, and Mukesh Singh convicted of the brutal assault, gangrape and murder of a 23-year old medical intern in Delhi in December 2012, we reiterate our position against the death penalty.
We understand the inexorable pain of the parents and other loved ones of women and children who are raped and, in many cases, killed. However, efforts by politicians and parties, courts and other vested interests to capitalise on their pain and make the case a matter of the nation’s honour, give false hope that the harshest punishment of death will prevent all such cases in the future. The bare truth is that even after the Indian state executed Auto (Gowri) Shankar in 1995, Ranga and Billa (Kuljeet Singh and Jasbir Singh) in 1982, and Dhananjay Chatterjee in 2004 for rape/s and murder, sexual assaults and killings continue unabated.
We are against the death penalty because:
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The death penalty is NOT a deterrent against crimes, as evidence from across the world shows. In America, where the use of the death penalty varies between states, homicide rates of states with the death penalty are 48-100% higher compared to states without it. Studies in Canada have illustrated that homicide rates remained significantly lower after abolition of the death penalty. And a 2018 multi-country study across 11 nations which have abolished capital punishment also affirms the same.
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There is no short cut to justice and safety. The death penalty often becomes a short cut when, in fact, there is a need to focus on long term social change, and the State’s failure to ensure the security of women. The only way to stop such crimes is the certainty that the criminal justice system will work with honesty, integrity, competence and fairness against every accused, irrespective of their social standing, power position, class, or caste. Instead, what the State is trying to do is to distract us by creating an ‘illusion of justice’, by selectively hanging people even as it protects others responsible for similar crimes.
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Tragically, brutal sexual assaults occurs with frightening regularity and impunity in our country, especially against adivasi and Dalit women, workers in the unorganised sector, women with disabilities, hijras, kothis, trans and gender queer physiques, and sex workers. Additionally, during incidents of sectarian violence, women of certain castes and communities become targets of sexual assault, torture and murder. There have been, and continue to be, a large number of women similarly targeted in conflict areas such as Jammu & Kashmir, Manipur, and Chhattisgarh. There is a need to understand the pervasiveness of this kind of violence on women and evolve punishments that act as true deterrents to the very large numbers of men who commit, and get away with, such crimes.
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In the December 2012 case, violence was meted against the victim by strangers, which has rightly triggered a wide discourse on women’s safety in public spaces. However, the majority of sexual crimes are committed by members of their family, neighbours, friends, teachers, guardians and other acquaintances. Not surprisingly, therefore, reporting of such crimes remains abysmally low. In all these instances, the process of seeking justice is severely stacked against victim/survivors, and the conviction rate for reported sexual crimes remains as low as 26%! Consequently, most perpetrators of sexual violence enjoy a high degree of impunity, including being freed of all charges which we believe is the greatest cause for the continued prevalence of such violence.
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We are not anti-punishment. Rather, we are pro-justice. Let us remember that the Justice Verma Committee, which was set up immediately after the December 2012 incident, stood against death penalty for sexual assault, and as did the Law Commission of India in its 262nd Report on The Death Penalty in 2015.
No matter how heinous the crime, we believe that every human being has an inalienable right to life and holds the potential for reform, if only the State and society will commit themselves to it, instead of baying for blood. In this case, the blood of those convicted in the December 2012 case.
There is no quick answer to stopping sexual crimes. We need to walk together on the long and complicated path to dismantling patriarchal and caste/community-based privilege, impunity and power, and the pervasive misogyny based in customs, tradition, law, the courts, government and society.
We hope the President of India will commute the death sentence of the convicts of the December 2012 case to a lifetime in prison, and in doing so, the lead the nation towards the vision of a society based on equality and justice, not revenge and retribution.
Issued by:
Organisations:
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Saheli Women’s Resource Centre, New Delhi
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Forum Against Oppression Of Women, Mumbai
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HAQ: Centre For Child Rights, New Delhi
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National Alliance of People’s Movements
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LABIA – A Queer Feminist LBT Collective, Mumbai
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All India Progressive Women’s Association
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Women And Transgender Organisations, Individuals Joint Action Committee, Hyderabad
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Feminists In Resistance (FIR), Kolkata
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Tarshi, New Delhi
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Anhad, New Delhi
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Gamana Mahila Samuha, Bangalore
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The Feminist Collective, Sonipat
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Caring Citizens’ Collective, Hyderabad
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City Makers Mission International
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Nirantar, New Delhi
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Shakti Shalini, New Delhi
Individuals:
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Uma Chakravarti, New Delhi
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Veena Shatrugna, Hyderabad
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Indira Jaising, New Delhi
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Sujatha Surepally, Karimnagar
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Mary E John, Delhi
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Sheba Chhachhi, New Delhi
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Pamela Philipose, New Delhi
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Rachana Mudraboyina, Hyderabad
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Gogu Shyamala, Hyderabad
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Pratiksha Baxi, Delhi
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Nivedita Menon, New Delhi
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Priya Pillai, Activist , New Delhi
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Lalita Ramdas, Alibaug
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Shabnam Hashmi, New Delhi
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Anand Patwardhan, Mumbai
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Yash, Bangalore
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Vyjayanti Vasanta Mogli, Hyderabad
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Vivek, Delhi
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Vineeta Bal, Pune
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Vinay, Bengaluru
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Vikram, Mumbai
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Vikas Kumar, Bengaluru
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Vijaya, Bhiamvaram
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Vidya, Bangalore
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Victor Van Bijlert, ‘s-Gravenhage, The Hague
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Vibhuti Patel, Mumbai
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Venu Arora, Faridabad
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Veena Gowda, Mumbai
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Veena Padmanabhan, Gurgaon