HomeNewsTrendsCurrent AffairsLaw Commission may recommend scrapping of death penalty

Law Commission may recommend scrapping of death penalty

The draft report circulated among members favours speedy abolition of death penalty from statue books, except in cases where accused is convicted of involvement in a terror case.

August 28, 2015 / 15:28 IST
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In what could be a landmark decision, the Law Commission is likely to recommend the scrapping of death penalty. However, with an exception to death penalty in terror cases.

The draft report circulated among members favours speedy abolition of death penalty from statue books, except in cases where accused is convicted of involvement in a terror case. The final report is likely to be submitted to the government next week. The term of the Commission ends on August 31.

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The present law of the death penalty was laid down in Bachan Singh v. UOI (1980), when the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the penalty. However, the apex court confined its application to the rarest of rare cases, to reduce the arbitrariness of the penalty. In arriving at its decision in that case, the court had relied on the 35th Report of the Law Commission, previous decisions from India and elsewhere, and contemporary scholarship.

The 35th Report of the Law Commission, which the Court relied upon in Bachan Singh, also needs to be re-visited, especially since it was submitted in 1967, and thus did not account for the over-hauling of the death penalty framework in the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, as well as other changes in India’s socio-political and legal landscape.