AA Edit | U'khand shocker: 'Dating' means jail
The proof of the pudding is in its eating. When it comes to the efficacy of laws, whether they are the Raj-era Indian Penal Code, or the Bharatiya Nyaya Samhita, or the Juvenile Justice Act, for that matter, it all depends on the men and women who implement them and whether they are being invoked for the purpose that they are meant to serve, as envisaged by the legislature.
Hence, the reports from Uttarakhand saying that the high court there is surprised by the information presented before it through a public interest litigation — that 20 male minors have been jailed for months for the offence of, wait for it, dating — should not shock the common man. More interestingly, the prayer in the PIL is not just against the incarceration of the boys, but also against the “discrimination” they faced in the process — for the girls who are in fact the co-accused have been let off.
Uttarakhand is a part of
The Juvenile Justice Act was introduced to protect the children who could possibly be in conflict with the law. But to jail them for very human and humane acts is an affront to civilisation. The high court has issued notices to the