Manipur naked woman parade: Case Transferred To CBI, govt adopts “zero tolerance towards any crimes against women”- Centre Tells SC

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  • The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) urged the top court to transfer the trial outside Manipur in the case for the conclusion of the trial in a time-bound manner. 
  • The Centre informed the Supreme Court that the Manipur naked women parade case was transferred to CBI. 
  • The government has “zero tolerance towards any crimes against women”- It said. 
  • An all-women team of one senior special (psychiatrist), one specialist (psychiatry) and one psychologist from the district hospital in Churachandpur was deputed to assist the victims,” it said. 

The Centre informed the Supreme Court that it has transferred to the CBI the probe into a case related to two women being paraded naked in strife-torn Manipur, saying the government has “zero tolerance towards any crimes against women”.

The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), in an affidavit filed through its Secretary Ajay Kumar Bhalla, also urged the top court to transfer the trial outside Manipur in the case for the conclusion of the trial in a time-bound manner. Seven persons have been arrested in the case so far. The details of the sexual assault on two women came out in the open last week through the leak of a video of the incident.

The top court, on July 20, took note of the incident and said it was “deeply disturbed” by the video and directed the Centre and the Manipur government to take immediate remedial, rehabilitative and preventive steps and apprise it of the action taken.

Filing its response, the Centre said, “The Government of Manipur has recommended to Secretary, DOP&T for entrusting the case to CBI for further investigation, which has been duly recommended to Secretary, the investigation shall, thus, be transferred to the CBI.” The affidavit said the central government believed that the investigation should be completed at the earliest and the trial be also conducted in a time-bound manner “which must take place outside Manipur. The power to transfer the case/trial outside any state is only with this court and, therefore, the central government is making this request to this court to pass such an order with a further direction to conclude the trial within a period of six months from the date of the filing of charge sheet by the CBI,” it said.

“The approach of the central government is of zero tolerance towards any crimes against women. The central government considers offences like the present one to be too heinous and deserve to be taken not only with the seriousness deserved but justice should be seen to be done so that it has a deterrent effect throughout the nation with respect to crimes against women,” it said. “An all-women team of one senior special (psychiatrist), one specialist (psychiatry) and one psychologist from the district hospital in Churachandpur was deputed to assist the victims,” it added.

The central government will also provide the services of experts from its medical institutions as per requirement and legal aid has also been offered to the victims through the District Legal Services Authority, it said.

Tension mounted in the hills of Manipur after a May 4 video surfaced last week that showed two women from one of the warring communities being paraded naked by a few men from the other side. The video was doing the rounds on the eve of a planned protest march announced by the Indigenous Tribal Leaders’ Forum to highlight their plight. At least 150 people have been killed and several hundred injured since ethnic violence broke out in the state on May 3 when a ‘Tribal Solidarity March’ was organized in the hill districts to protest against the majority Meitei community’s demand for Scheduled Tribe status.

(With inputs from agencies)

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