The
Nagpur bench of the Bombay High Court has reduced the life sentence of a man
convicted under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (Pocso) Act to
10 years of rigorous imprisonment, stating that the original punishment was
“harsh and excessive,".
A
division bench comprising Justices Nitin B Suryawanshi and Pravin S Patil
upheld the trial court’s findings, confirming that the prosecution had proven
the charges beyond reasonable doubt. The accused, a labourer from Akola, was
convicted in 2013 for sexually assaulting a one-and-a-half-year-old girl and
was sentenced to life imprisonment. He later appealed to the high court,
seeking a reduction in his sentence.
According
to court records, the incident took place when the accused forcefully entered a
home in the absence of the male head of the family. The child’s mother,
noticing the intruder, left to alert the neighbours. When she returned, she was
horrified to find him assaulting her infant daughter.
The
man then allegedly grabbed the woman’s arm and attempted to rape her, but fled
when she screamed for help.
Meanwhile, during the hearing, the defence lawyer
argued that there was no substantial evidence of the crime and claimed that the
medical officer’s testimony regarding the child’s injuries was only
corroborative, not substantive evidence.
However,
the high court dismissed this claim, ruling that the medical reports,
eyewitness testimony, and circumstantial evidence conclusively established the
crime under the Pocso Act.
"On
careful scrutiny of the prosecution evidence, we are of the view that the
prosecution has proved its case beyond reasonable doubt," the bench
stated.
The
court further ruled that based on the woman’s testimony and supporting medical
evidence, it was clear that the accused had committed a serious assault on the
infant victim.
While
upholding the conviction, the high court also ruled that life imprisonment was
"too harsh" and revised the sentence to 10 years of rigorous
imprisonment.
"However, we find that the sentence imposed on
the appellant is harsh and excessive. In the facts of the present case, we are
of the opinion that a sentence of 10 years rigorous imprisonment would meet the
ends of justice," the court said.