"Nation Can't Await Another Rape For Real Changes On Ground": Supreme Court

The CJI DY Chandrachud-led bench also expressed strong dissatisfaction with the West Bengal government and the authorities at the hospital over the delay in filing the FIR. New Delhi: The Supreme Court, hearing the Kolkata rape-murder incident today, said the nation cannot wait for another rape for changes on the ground. The DY Chandrachud-led bench also expressed strong dissatisfaction with the West Bengal government and the authorities at the hospital over the delay in filing the FIR and other procedural lapses in handling the case. "Medical professions have become vulnerable to violence. Due to ingrained patriarchal biases, women doctors are targeted more. As more and more women join the workforce, the nation cannot wait for another rape for things to change on the ground," CJI Chandrachud noted. During the hearing, Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud raised several pressing questions regarding the actions of the hospital's administration and the local police. "Why was FIR registered three hours after the body was handed over for cremation," the Supreme Court bench asked. The Supreme Court, on its own, took up the investigation into the brutal rape and murder of a 31-year-old post-graduate trainee doctor at Kolkata's RG Kar Medical College and Hospital on August 9. The incident has triggered widespread protests across the country and raised questions over women's safety, particularly in medical colleges. The three-judge bench is led by CJI Chandrachud and comprises Justices JB Pardiwala and Manoj Misra.  "What was the principal doing? FIR was not filed; the body was handed late to the parents. What is the police doing? A serious offence has taken place, the crime scene is in a hospital... What are they doing? Allowing vandals to enter the hospital?" CJI Chandrachud asked.  Sandip Ghosh, who resigned as the principal of RG Kar Medical College just two days after the incident, has been under scrutiny by the CBI and questioned for nearly 53 hours over the past four days regarding his actions following the doctor's death.  

In response to the bench's questions, Kapil Sibal, representing the West Bengal government, countered that people at the hospital had taken photos, a case of unnatural death was immediately started, and a board was set up with a judicial magistrate present. However, CJI Chandrachud said that it was the hospital's duty to file the FIR, especially in the absence of the victim's parents. Justice Pardiwala questioned the timeline of the FIR, asking, "Who is the first informant who filed the FIR? What is the time of the FIR?" Mr Sibal responded that the first informant was the father of the victim, who filed the FIR at 11:45 pm, followed by the Vice Principal of the hospital. The CJI Chandrachud questioned the time at which the victim's body was handed over for cremation, which was reportedly at 8:30 pm, and pointed out that the FIR was filed three hours later. The autopsy, conducted between 1:45 pm and 4:00 pm, revealed that the doctor had been murdered, yet the FIR was registered much later. "What was the principal, and the hospital board, doing during this time?" asked CJI Chandrachud. "It appears crime was detected in the morning. The hospital's principal tried to pass it off as suicide and the parents were not allowed to see the body. No FIR was filed."

 

"That is not correct," countered Mr Sibal. "FIR registered immediately, and the inquest shows it is a case of murder." The Chief Justice also noted that after the principal's resignation, he was reassigned as principal in another college.  The Calcutta High Court instructed the West Bengal Health Department not to appoint Mr Ghosh to any other medical college until further notice. This order followed his brief and contentious appointment as the principal of Calcutta National Medical College and Hospital, which was met with protests from students and junior doctors.

 

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