New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Monday refused to entertain a public interest litigation (PIL) seeking criminalisation of non-consensual unnatural sex and bestiality.
A bench, headed by CJI D.Y. Chandrachud, said that the apex court cannot compel the legislature to classify a particular act as a criminal offence.
However, the bench, also comprising Justices J.B. Pardiwala and Manoj Misra, granted liberty to the petitioner to make a representation before the Union government.
The newly introduced Bhartiya Nyay Sanhita (BNS), which replaced the IPC, does not recognise non-consensual unnatural sex, sodomy, and bestiality as a penal offence.
Section 377 of the now-repealed Indian Penal Code (IPC) made it a punishable offence with a life sentence or 10-year imprisonment, along with a fine.
The PIL, filed under Article 32, read along with Article 142 of the Constitution, raised the grievance against the lacuna in the BNS, which failed to draw a parallel penal provision for offences which were formerly covered under Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), 1860.
After the implementation of BNS, 2023, from July 1, a void has been created for a provision pari materia to Section 377 of the IPC, said the plea, adding that such an omission constitutes an infringement of the fundamental rights as envisaged under Article 14 and 21 of the Constitution.
“The act of omission on the part of respondent (authorities) leaves the victims of non-consensual unnatural sex in dearth of any legal remedy which would commensurate with the gravity of offence as were earlier defined under Section 377 of the IPC,” said the plea filed through advocate Anoop Prakash Awasthi.
The PIL raised questions over the “missing” protection in the newly enacted BNS with regard to non-consensual unnatural sex and bestiality.
Recently in August, the Delhi High Court had asked the Union government to treat as representation a petition seeking the inclusion of offences of unnatural sex and sodomy in the new penal code.
Stating that “no vacuum could exist in criminal laws”, the Delhi HC told the Centre to decide the representation expeditiously, preferably within six months. It had said that though the judiciary may not define the quantum of punishment for an offence, the legislature should include non-consensual sexual acts in the penal statute.
A plea was filed by the High Court raising concerns over the lack of legal provisions in BNS similar to Section 377 of the IPC, which safeguarded the LGBTQIA+ community. The PIL said that it was necessary to safeguard the queer community, which will be left remediless under the BNS if subjected to non-consensual sexual acts.
In the landmark 2018 Navtej Johar judgment, the Supreme Court unanimously declared Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) as unconstitutional “in so far as it criminalises consensual sexual conduct between adults of the same sex” while hearing a writ petition filed by social activist Johar and five others belonging to sexual and gender minority communities.
The five-judge Constitution Bench decriminalised consensual homosexual intercourse by keeping out of the purview of the IPC’s Section 377. However, it declined to strike down the provision criminalising non-consensual “carnal intercourse against the order of nature with any man, woman or animal”.
–IANS
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