Here are the key
provisions - Juvenile bill-2015
Parliament
on Tuesday passed the juvenile justice bill, a day after members cutting across
party lines agreed that the important legislation should be taken up
immediately.
The bill
provides for the trial of those between 16 and 18 years of age as adults for
heinous offences. Also, anyone between the age of 16 and 18 who commits a less
serious offence may be tried as an adult if he is apprehended after he attains
the age of 21.
Key
provisions of Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Bill, 2015
1.
Juveniles aged 16-18
accused of heinous crimes (rape, murder) to be tried as adults
2.
Could face
imprisonment up to 7 years but won’t get life sentence or death penalty
3.
Juvenile Justice
Board to decide if every accused minor should be tried under Juvenile Justice
Act or in regular trial court
4.
Juveniles convicted
under the regular justice system cannot contest polls and are ineligible for
government jobs
5.
Corporal punishment
has been made an offence and is punishable between 6 months and 3 years in jail
6.
Employing a child
for begging will invite up to 10 years in jail
7.
Use of children by
militants will carry up to 7 years in jail
The
law at present
Currently,
a juvenile accused (under 18 years) is tried by the Juvenile Justice Board and
if convicted, sent to a reform home for a maximum of 3 years — as in the case
of the recently-released convict in the December 16 , 2012, gang rape.
What
happened in Parliament on Tuesday?
Giving
out the bill’s details, Women and Child Development Minister Maneka Gandhi said
borstals -- a custodial institution for young offenders -- would be set up
under the proposed law to house juveniles accused of heinous crimes.
Maneka
Gandhi said juvenile crime was being encouraged by the existing law.
“Juveniles’
involvement in crime is increasing the fastest. Children walk into police stations
and say we have murdered... send us to a juvenile home,” she said.
Leader of
Opposition in the Rajya Sabha Ghulam Nabi Azad said juvenile convicts should
not be kept in jail with “hardened criminals” and there should be a separate
place for them.
Parliamentary
Affairs Minister M. Venkaiah Naidu, meanwhile, said the government had listed
the bill several times in the monsoon session as well as the winter session but
it could not be taken up.
“This law
will not be applicable in retrospective,” he said, which means it will not be
applicable on the rape convict who has already been freed.
Members
from the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) and DMK also questioned the hurry in
passing the bill, suggesting that it may be sent to a select committee.
However,
none of the notices to send the bill to a house panel were presented to Deputy
Chairman P.J. Kurien.
An
emotional move?
Communist
Party of India-Marxist leader Sitaram Yechury called it an emotional move.
“If
tomorrow, a 15-year 11-month-old commits a crime, will you change the
definition again? Today, ISIS is recruiting 14-15 year olds. Are we going to
reduce the age from 18 to 16 to 14?” he asked.
“The
culprit who has committed the horrendous crime, you cannot punish him. That
sentiment of punishing him is there. These are matters that merit a certain
consideration. Refer it to a select committee,” he said.
Kurien,
however, said there was no proposal to send the bill to a panel, after which
members of the Left parties staged a walkout.
The bill
was passed through voice vote after that.
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