Kathua rape and murder: Delhi High Court pulls up media
The court said the “nature and manner” of the reportage was in “absolute violation of the specific provision of law disrespecting the privacy of the victim, which is required to be maintained in respect of the identity of a victim”.
The Delhi High Court on Friday took suo motu cognisance of the publication of photographs and the name of the eight-year-old child who was allegedly gang-raped and murdered in Kathua district of Jammu and Kashmir.
A Bench of Acting Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice C. Hari Shankar, in a nine-page order, said the “nature and manner” of the reportage was in “absolute violation of the specific provision of law disrespecting the privacy of the victim, which is required to be maintained in respect of the identity of a victim”.
The High Court order lists reports in The Times of India, The Hindu, The Statesman, The Pioneer, The Navbharat Times, The NDTV News Channel, First Post, The Week, The Republic TV, The Deccan Chronicle, The India TV and The Indian Express, which was brought to its attention.
The court issued notice to the media outlets to show cause why action should not be taken against them. It impleaded the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting as well as the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR), the National Commission for Women (NCW), and the Delhi Commission for Women (DCW). The case is listed for April 18.
The High Court ordered the media to “forthwith” stop the publication of information, which may lead to the disclosure of the identity of the child victim.
The Bench said the media, when reporting cases involving crimes committed against children, was “expected to not only know but follow the strict stipulation of law.”
The Bench referred to provisions in the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act of 2012 and the Indian Penal Code which specifically bars the media from revealing the identity of a victims of sexual offence.
The court said it was “pained” that none of the authorities, including the NCPCR, the NCW or the DCW, “reacted to this terrible development.”