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Rajya Sabha debates Juvenile Justice Bill

| | Dec 22, 2015, at 09:13 pm
New Delhi, Dec 22 (IBNS) Union Minister for women and child development Maneka Gandhi on Tuesday made a strong pitch in the Rajya Sabha for the Juvenile Justice Bill, which seeks to amend the law to allow trying those over 16 years of age and accused of heinous crimes, as adults.

"If the convict has reformed, then he will walk free otherwise he will be put in jail...The new bill will mandate regular review of juvenile convicts," she said and urged the upper house to approve the bill, already passed by the Lok Sabha.

Present in Parliament as the Rajya Sabha debates the Bill are Asha Devi and Badrinath, the parents of Jyoti Singh, a 23-year-old medical student who was gang-raped and tortured by six men on a moving bus in Delhi on December 16, 2012. She died in a Singapore hospital 13 days later.

Congress member Ghulam Nabi Azad also supported the Bill. "Opinions about the age of juvenile is divided. We will have to keep in mind that the criminals can misuse juveniles," he said.

Opposing the present system of keeping juvenile culprits in homes, Azad said : " One thing is very important. for these culprits there should be a different setup for them. They shouldn’t be kept in the same cell with hardened criminals for the fear that they could turn out even worse than they were."

 Jyoti's parents have been leading a mass demand for  a change in the law. While Jyoti's other attackers have been sentenced to death, the youngest was released on Sunday after three years in a remand home. Now 20, he could not be tried in court for the brutal murder as he was a few months short of 18 at the time of the attack.

Asha Devi said on Tuesday morning  after meeting Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi that he had assured her of his support. But, say sources, the support of his party, crucial for the bill to be passed in the Rajya Sabha, is not all that clear.

Asha Devi says she understands that a change in law will now not affect her case, but feels it is the least she can do for other women.

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