The Chhattisgarh High Court acquitted the accused in a 2004 rape case from Dhamtari district, citing the absence of penetration under the pre-2013 law. This ruling marks a setback to decades of progress in India's rape jurisprudence.
The Chhattisgarh High Court acquitted the accused in a 2004 rape case from Dhamtari district, applying the pre-2013 interpretation of Section 375 of the Indian Penal Code, which required penetration as an integral element of the offence. This decision relies on the law as it existed before amendments prompted by the December 2012 Delhi gang rape and the subsequent nationwide protests that led to the Justice J S Verma committee's recommendations.
The Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2013 expanded the definition of rape, emphasizing consent and recognizing the complexities of sexual violence. The editorial notes that the ruling retreats into narrow formalism, potentially reviving the hyper-technical scrutiny that reforms aimed to eliminate.
The arc of gender justice in India has been uneven, but it has increasingly moved away from technicalities that expose survivors to narrow scrutiny and moral judgment in patriarchal institutional frameworks. Judicial rebukes of invasive medical practices, such as the banned two-finger test, and the 2013 reforms' stance that a victim's character or sexual history is irrelevant to prosecution signal a shift in tone and an acknowledgment of sexual violence's many forms.
The key lesson from this ruling is that gender justice cannot afford complacency. Legal reforms must remain responsive to contemporary realities, including the need for gender-neutral laws on sexual violence that address harm beyond binary frameworks or the contentious issue of marital rape. Ultimately, the commitment to justice depends not just on technical fidelity but on confronting harm in its full complexity.