This Article is From Jan 30, 2021

Supreme Court Panel Acts After Judge's Controversial Sex Assault Orders

On January 19 Justice Pushpa Ganediwala ruled that groping a minor's breast without "skin-to-skin contact" wasn't sexual assault.

She ruled that 'holding the female's hands' or 'opened zip of pant' wasn't 'sexual assault'.

Highlights

  • On Jan 20, the Collegium recommended Justice Pushpa Ganediwala's name
  • She ruled groping a minor without skin-to-skin contact was no sex assult
  • She also ruled "holding girl's hand, open pant zipper" was no sex assault
New Delhi:

In a rare instance, the Supreme Court Collegium has withdrawn its recommendation to confirm the permanent status of a Bombay High Court judge who had passed two controversial orders on sexual assaults in the past few days. The decision to not grant permanent status has been based on the possible need for "more exposure" in such cases, according to sources in the top court.

"There is nothing personal against her. She needs exposure and may not have dealt with these types of cases when she was a lawyer...She needs exposure and training," a source in the Supreme Court told NDTV.

The procedure for appointing permanent judges or making judges permanent involves the Collegium sending its recommendations to the Central government which then approves it. Sometimes, though, the recommendations are returned to the Collegium with queries.

On January 20, the Supreme Court Collegium, headed by Chief Justice S A Bobde, recommended Justice Pushpa Ganediwala's name for confirmation as a Permanent Judge of the Nagpur bench of the Bombay High Court. The judge, however, recently passed two judgments on sexual assault that sparked a huge furore and possibly jeopardised her chances.

In a January 19 ruling, she ruled that groping a minor's breast without "skin-to-skin contact" cannot be termed as sexual assault as defined under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act.

The Supreme Court on Wednesday put that order on hold, allowing Attorney General KK Venugopal to file a petition against it. The order was "disturbing" and would create a dangerous precedent, the Attorney General had said.

On Thursday, in another case, Justice Ganediwala ruled that "the acts of 'holding the hands of the prosecutrix' (female victim), or 'opened zip of the pant'...does not fit in the definition of 'sexual assault'," and quashed the conviction of a man under POCSO. The victim, in this case, was a five-year-old minor.

Following these judgments, the Collegium reversed its decision to recommend Justice Ganediwala a permanent judge, sources said. The Supreme Court Collegium is rarely known to recall or withdraw the recommendations it makes to the government. Besides the Chief Justice, Justices NV Ramana and RF Nariman are part of the three-member Collegium, which takes decisions related to to various High Court judges.

Justice Pushpa Virendra Ganediwala was born on March 3, 1969 at Paratwada in Maharashtra's Amravati district. She was a panel advocate for various banks and insurance companies and was also an honorary lecturer in various colleges of Amravati. She was directly appointed district judge in 2007 and was elevated as an additional judge of the Bombay High Court on February 13, 2019.

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