Madras High Court confirms death sentence for man convicted of sexual assault of three girl children
Justices N. Anand Venkatesh and K.K. Ramakrishnan say imposing only life sentence would send a devastating message to the community that the soul of a child is cheap and that a monster could trade the lifelong peace of the victims for the comfort a prison cell
Account subscription benefits alongside Premium Stories, Editorials, Opinions and more. Unlock these with Subscription
The View From India Looking at World Affairs from the Indian perspective.
First Day First Show News and reviews from the world of cinema and streaming.
Today's Cache Your download of the top 5 technology stories of the day.
Data Point Decoding the headlines with facts, figures, and numbers
Health Matters Ramya Kannan writes to you on getting to good health, and staying there
The Hindu On Books Books of the week, reviews, excerpts, new titles and features.
A view of the Madras High Court. File | Photo Credit: K. Pichumani
The Madras High Court on Tuesday (June 30, 2026) confirmed the death sentence imposed by a trial court on a daily wage labourer, Anandha Sekar, under the Protection of Children for Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act of 2012 for having subjected three girl children aged six, seven and eight to aggravated penetrative sexual assault in Tirunelveli city in 2023.
A Division Bench of Justices N. Anand Venkatesh and K.K. Ramakrishnan dismissed a criminal appeal filed by the convict challenging his conviction as well as capital punishment imposed by a special court for POCSO Act cases in Tirunelveli on March 12, 2026. The judgment was reserved in the Madurai Bench of the High Court but delivered at the principal seat in Chennai.
The judges wrote: “The measure of a society’s civilisation is found in how it protects its most vulnerable and no one is more vulnerable than a child trusting the sanctity of the whole. The accused before us did not merely commit a crime against the physical body. He executed a calculated and systematic campaign of terror of three young souls by wielding threats of death and forcing these children to witness the violation of one another. He did not just break the law but he extinguised the light of their childhood and left in its place a lifetime of haunting shadows.”
Authoring the verdict, Justice Venkatesh wrote: “A crime so grotesque, so utterly devoid of a shred of human conscience demands a judicial response that mirrors society’s collective abhorrence. To spare the life of the perpetrator who committed such cold blooded and protracted cruelty would be an act of misplaced mercy rendering the law a silent spectator to the destruction of the innocent.”
The Division Bench further observed that not imposing capital punishment and instead commuting it to life imprisonment even in a serious case such as the present one “would send a devastating message to the community that the soul of a child is che
📌 Kaynak
Bu haber XML kaynağından derlenmiştir. Tamamı için orijinal habere gidin.
Orijinal haberi oku →