Thursday, February 14, 2013

Cruelty Against Husband in India


Cruelty Against Husband in India




In India where marriage is the union between man and woman to get social status in the society and marriage is nothing but procreation and caring of the child. According to Westmark Marriage has been often like as an institution made by itself. As there is increase in number of marriages every day, at the same time breakdown of marriages in the society has also been seen to be increasing whether by fault of husband or wife. Though cases filed by wife against husband and in-laws under Domestic Violence Act and 498-A of IPC to claim maintenance and divorce but all complaints are not filed bona-fidely. Freedoms of education, job opportunities, economic independence and social attitude have brought tremendous change in the status of women. The balance of scale has tilted reversely in favour of women.
Cruelty is an inhuman treatment and it is an act that causes mental sufferings and endangers to the life and health of the other. Cruelty may be in the form of physical as well as mental by the act either of the husband or the wife. Though it is the women who have always been subjected to be tortured and harassed by the husband and relatives, in fact saying this will not be proper as cases of torture and harassment against the husband by the wife is increasing day by day. Cruelty is the main ground to seek divorce as defined under ‘Sec 13(1) (i-a)’ of ‘The Hindu Marriage Act, 1955’ and party who is filing a case must prove that living between husband and wife became impossible.
There are many provisions made applicable for the protection of the women, which has got recognition from our constitutional law. The biased nature of these laws is evident from that fact that unlike almost all laws in INDIA the burden to prove innocence lies on the accused and this means as soon as the complaint is made by the aggrieved person/ wife, the result is that the husband and his family may be immediately arrested and will be considered as accused in the eyes of law. According to the ‘Section 498-A’ of the ‘IPC’ the wife and her parental family can charge any or all of the husband’s family of physical or mental cruelty but genuineness of the case has to be looked into by the court as this section is cognizable, non-compoundable and non-bailable in nature.
What amounts to cruelty against husband? Though it is the duty of the court to decide the case based on facts and circumstances but what amounts to cruelty is an important aspect as misuse of Laws by the wife against husband in society is growing day by day and most apparently some Indian Urban educated women have turned the tables and are using these laws as weapon to unleash personal vendetta on their husbands and innocent relatives and there are certain grounds on which cruelty against husband can be proved:-
• Misuse of Dowry Laws, Domestic Violence Act and ‘Sec: 498-A’ of IPC by wife against husband and in-laws of husband through lodging false complaints.
• Desertion by wife which means wife deliberately intending for separation and to bring cohabitation permanently to an end.
• Adultery by the wife means wife having sexual relationship with some other person during the lifetime of marriage and there must be strict law to punish wife who has committed adultery.
• Wife opting out for second marriage without applying for the divorce proceedings.
• Threatening to leave husband’s home and threat to commit suicide by the wife.
• Cruel behavior of wife where wife tearing the shirt of the husband, refusing to cook food properly or on time and breaking of the mangalsutra in the presence of husband’s relatives.
• Abusing and accusing husband by way of insulting in presence of in-laws and in some cases wife abusing husband in front of office staff members.
• Wife refusing to have sex with husband without any sufficient reasons which can be considered as a ground of cruelty and husband can file a divorce petition.
• Lowering reputation of the husband by using derogatory words in presence of family members and elders.
• Lodging FIR against husband and in-laws which has later proved as false report.
• Conduct and misbehavior of the wife against husband i.e. pressuring husband to leave his home, insisting for the separate residence, mentally torture and disrespectful behavior towards husband and in-laws as well.
• Some other grounds of cruelty i.e. mental disorder and unsoundness of wife, Impotency of wife, illicit relationship of wife with some other person and Wife suffering from the filarial.
• Extra-marital affairs of wife can also be a ground of cruelty against the husband.
• Initiating criminal proceedings against husband and in-laws of husband with mala-fide intention by the wife.
CASE LAWS: situations in Hindu marriage where a wife was held as ‘cruel’ to the husband and the Hindu divorce law was applied by the Supreme Court:
I. Mrs. Deepalakshmi Saehia Zingade v/s Sachi Rameshrao Zingade (AIR 2010 Bom 16)
In this case petitioner/wife filed a false case against her husband on the ground of ‘Husband Having Girl Friend’ which is proved as false in a court of law so it can be considered as cruelty against husband.
II. Anil Bharadwaj v Nimlesh Bharadwaj (AIR 1987 Del 111)
According to this case a wife who refuses to have sexual intercourse with the husband without giving any reason was proved as sufficient ground which amounts to cruelty against husband.
III. Kalpana v. Surendranath (AIR 1985 All 253)
According to this case it has been observed that where a wife who refuses to prepare tea for the husband’s friends was declared by the court as cruelty to husband.
Though the amendments introduced in the penal code are with the laudable object of eradicating the evil of Dowry, such provisions cannot be allowed to be misused by the parents and the relatives of a psychopath wife who may have chosen to end her life for reason which may be many other than cruelty. The glaring reality cannot be ignored that the ugly trend of false implications in view to harass and blackmail an innocent spouse and his relatives, i.e. fast emerging. A strict law need to be passed by the parliament for saving the institution of marriage and to punish those women who are trying to misguide the court by filing false reports just to make the life of men miserable and ‘justice should not only be done but manifestly and undoubtedly be seen to be done’.

cognizance by court

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

कश्मीर में पुलिस के हथियार जमा, फायरिंग पर रोक


जम्मू। जम्मू-कश्मीर में पुलिस प्रदर्शनकारियों पर जानलेवा हथियारों का इस्तेमाल नहीं कर सकेगी। आईजी कश्मीर एसएम सहाय ने मंगलवार को इस आशय के आदेश जारी किए।  
 
शाम तक सभी कर्मचारियों से हथियार जमा करवा लिए गए। सीआरपीएफ वाले भी हथियार जमा करवा रहे हैं। अफजल की फांसी के बाद हुए प्रदर्शनों के दौरान जवाबी कार्रवाई में तीन लोगों की मौत के बाद यह कदम उठाया गया है।
 
आदेश में कहा गया है कि जरूरी हो तो प्रदर्शनकारियों पर सामान्य हथियारों जैसे लाठी या आंसू गैस का इस्तेमाल किया जाए। फायरिंग न की जाए। आईजी ने ऐसा ही एक पत्र सीआरपीएफ के अधिकारियों को भी लिखा है।
 
इससे पहले मंगलवार को मुख्यमंत्री उमर अब्दुल्ला ने आईजी कश्मीर से बात की। उन्हें घातक हथियारों के इस्तेमाल पर रोक के आदेश जारी करने को कहा था।

Dhule's Uniformed Rioters


Dhule's Uniformed Rioters

Police participation in the recent Dhule communal riots shows nothing has changed since 1992-93.
The death of six Muslim youth (all below 25 years) in police firing during riots in the northern Maharashtra town of Dhule on 6 January is proof that very little has changed in the attitude of the Maharashtra police. Twenty years ago, when communal riots rocked Mumbai, the bias of the local police force was more than evident. The Srikrishna Commission as well as numerous other fact-finding committees and media reports documented the incriminatory role of the Mumbai police and its anti-minority attitude.
Therefore it comes as no surprise that once again the communal bias of the local police is on full display, this time in Dhule. A small quarrel (over a lunch bill of Rs 60) turned into a riot and a section of the police not only took sides but also participated in it. Video clippings showing policemen looting stalls, hammering on vehicles in Muslim-dominated areas and aiming above the waist as they fired at rioters in Dhule are in the public domain.
A citizens’ fact-finding committee that visited Dhule in mid-January found that the police failed to act quickly, targeted only the Muslim stone throwers, fired with the intent to kill, left the injured in the police firing unattended, watched while mobs looted and burnt Muslim homes and shops, and that a section among them (police) also looted and damaged Muslim property. (Two policemen identified in the videos have since been suspended.) The committee examined the civil hospital records to verify the police claim that they were attacked with lethal chemicals. It found that a majority of the police personnel were discharged following first aid and a very small number had minor burn injuries. Families of the Muslim victims told the committee that they were afraid to take the injured to the civil hospital following the experience of the 2008 communal clash in Dhule, when they were attacked even there. As a result, all of them opted to go to private hospitals.
While Dhule, which borders Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh with state and national highways running through it, is known for its powerlooms, it is also infamous for kerosene and oil adulteration rackets and even a thriving satta (gambling) industry. Dhule is now a symbol of developmental neglect with a high incidence of unemployment among its youth. Such periodic violence and communal hostility will not help attract capital and improve the town and its surroundings.
Although after viewing the video clippings implicating the police, Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan did acknowledge that “unfortunately there are some communal elements lurking around in the police”, both he and local politicians continue to refer to this incident as a clash between Muslims and the police. How can a police force (even a section within it) that is meant to maintain law and order go about destroying citizens’ property and disregard protocol about dealing with unarmed but enraged mobs?
The state government had been warned by the Srikrishna Commission report about police bias in favour of the majority community during the 1992-93 riots. However, over the past 15 years the state government has shown no interest in prosecuting the police officials indicted by the commission. As a result, the Muslim community has felt increasingly alienated. Its leaders and activists have pointed out that the tendency of the police to pick up Muslim youth for interrogation after every bomb blast and lock them up on flimsy evidence has dented the community’s faith in the system and the police. The violence against the police by a small mob during a Muslim protest meeting at Azad Maidan in Mumbai on 11 August last year is an indication of the deep fissures and the sense of alienation that a section of Muslim youth feel. The calls for sensitisation of the police force towards religious minorities (as also towards other marginalised and discriminated sections) have been many over the years. The role of the police in the Dhule riots shows that at the ground level nothing has changed.
Like in Dhule, all of Maharashtra needs efficient governance and a prejudice-free police force. This much is clear beyond dispute. What is unclear is what the state government is waiting for to make the police force accountable to the citizens of the state regardless of the religion they follow. The absence of a follow-up on the government’s promise of a judicial inquiry into the Dhule riots and killings does not bode well for the future.

SHO suspected drunk in court sent for med test


SHO suspected drunk in court sent for med test

TIMES NEWS NETWORK 


Jaipur: A station house officer (SHO) was allegedly found in an inebriated condition while appearing in high court on Tuesday. The court immediately sent him for medical examination and later asked the authorities to send his blood samples to the FSL and told him to reappear on February 14. 
    Ajay Yadav, SHO of Nagar police station in Alwar, appeared before Justice RS Chauhan on Tuesday for hearing in a case. During his appearance in the 
court, some of the court authorities suspected that he was under the influence of alcohol. 
    The SHO had been told to appear in court after one Kedarnath Sharma filed a petition accusing Yadav of biased investigation in a murder case. When he appeared before the court on Tuesday, the counsel for the petitioner, Sanjay Sharma, informed the court that he (Yadav) was under the influence of alcohol. 
    Justice Chauhan immediately directed SP, Sikar, Gaurav Srivastav to take Yadav for medical examination and report to the court in post the lunch session.

Monday, February 11, 2013

App to report crime to cops launched


App to report crime to cops launched

TIMES NEWS NETWORK 


Jaipur: The handy mobile phone application IWatch beta was officially launched by chief minister Ashok Gehlot at the inaugural day of the egovernance conference at Birla Auditorium in the city on Monday. The officials at the police control room and other police stations are also being trained to get acquainted with the software, especially how and when they have to respond. Now, with the official launch, the application could be used in case of emergency by many users and the information relating to various aspects of the case like domestic help, tenants etc would directly reach police stations by following simple steps on the cell phone. 
    It may be recalled that TOI on January, 23, 2013 had first talked about the application in the story ‘Seen a crime? Raj cops have an app for you’. 
    Sharat Kaviraj, SP, state crime records bureau, who was instrumental in developing the app IWatch Beta, told TOI, “It is available for Android phones at the Google play store. Users will have to download an 829-kb file which will be visible on the phone’s home screen. With 
this application, which is first of its kind in the country, the users can directly upload the information regarding their tenants and domestic help for police verification.” Kaviraj added that it is now an official application which will help the users in getting a proper police response. 
    “Till date more than 1,000 people have downloaded this application. From now onwards, anybody who will seek police assistance through this application will get a proper response,” he added. 
    “The application also has an option to alert police. Whenever the user finds any untoward thing happening at his house and is not able to call up the police, he can directly press ‘alert’ button 
from the mobile. It will send an SMS to the police control room and officers on duty with the exact address and phone number of the user. Thereafter, they will try to contact the user and if he does not respond, a police team would be sent to the address on a priority basis,” Kaviraj added. 
    B L Soni, commissioner of police, said, “It is a very useful application and we will ensure our men get accustomed with the new system as soon as possible. There is some groundwork that is needed to make sure the system works as per the plan.”