KartavyaDesk
news

Custodial Deaths in India

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Governance

Source: NDTV

Context: A Madurai Bench of the Madras High Court condemned the custodial torture of Ajith Kumar in Sivaganga, Tamil Nadu, calling it “more brutal than a murder.”

About Custodial Death in India:

What is Custodial Death?

• Custodial death refers to the death of a person while in police, judicial, or military custody—before trial, during trial, or after conviction.

• It includes both natural causes (like illness) and unnatural ones (like torture, assault, or negligence).

Custodial Death Statistics in India:

NHRC (2021–22): 2,150 deaths in judicial custody and 155 in police custody and only 21 saw disciplinary action (0.23%).

NCRB (2000–2020): 1,888 deaths reported and only 26 convictions despite 893 cases filed against police.

Between 2017–22: 345 judicial inquiries; 123 arrests, 79 chargesheets, but 0 convictions.

Tamil Nadu (2016–2022): 490 deaths—highest in southern India.

Reasons for Custodial Deaths in India:

Lack of Anti-Torture Law: India has signed but not ratified the UN Convention Against Torture and no standalone anti-torture legislation.

E.g. Law Commission (273rd Report) recommended such a law in 2017.

Opaque Investigations: Police often destroy evidence or manipulate records; conviction is rare.

E.g. In Ajith’s case, post-mortem shifted and CCTV footage missing.

Overcrowded & Understaffed Prisons: Poor medical care, mental health neglect, and high stress lead to deaths by suicide or illness.

Targeting Marginalized Groups: SCs make up 38.5% of preventive detenues in Tamil Nadu, despite forming only 20% of the population.

Weak Internal Accountability: Arrests without FIR, unofficial detentions, and cover-ups are common practices in lower ranks.

Important Judicial Pronouncements:

DK Basu vs State of West Bengal (1996): Laid down 11 guidelines for arrest and detention—mandatory medical check-ups, arrest memo, etc.

Nilabati Behera vs State of Orissa (1993): Compensation awarded to victim’s family; held State responsible under Article 21.

PUCL vs Union of India (2005): Directed installation of CCTV in lockups for transparency.

In Re: Custodial Violence (2020): Supreme Court asked states to file compliance reports on CCTV installation.

Way Forward:

Anti-Torture Legislation: Enact a specific law defining custodial torture and mandating time-bound trials.

• Inspired by 273rd Law Commission Report and global practices.

Independent Oversight: Strengthen NHRC with suo-motu powers, mandatory reporting, and follow-up on police abuse cases.

Ratify UNCAT: Bring legal and procedural reforms to meet international human rights standards.

Strengthen Forensic & CCTV Evidence: Use tech-enabled tracking (e.g., body cams, digital case logs) to reduce evidence tampering.

Police Reforms: Implement the Supreme Court’s Prakash Singh guidelines—fix tenure, separate investigation and law & order duties.

Special SC/ST Safeguards: Enforce SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act provisions during detention and custodial procedures.

Fast-track Courts: Set up special benches for custodial death trials to ensure timely justice and deterrence.

Conclusion:

Custodial deaths reflect not only institutional apathy but also a deep-rooted disregard for constitutional values. Addressing this requires structural reforms, stronger legal safeguards, and a shift towards rights-based policing.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

All News