About the Company

KPS Legal is a law company made up of ex-government officials from the customs, excise, and service tax departments, as well as DRI and FEMA. From the original adjudicating authority to the high court level, KPS Legal only deals with indirect taxes issues.

About the Responsibilities

As an intern you are required to:-

  • Deal with client compliance.
  • Work on managing court hearings.
  • Take care of the drafting

Location

Mumbai, Maharashtra

Openings

1

Eligibility

  • English Proficiency (Written) MS-Word
  • are interested for a full-time internship (in-office)
  • can start the internship between 17th Jun’22 and 22nd Jul’22
  • have suitable talents and interests
  • are available for a period of six months

Perks

  • Certificate
  • Flexible work hours
  • 5 days a week
  • Free snacks & beverages

How to Apply?

Interested candidates may apply from here:- https://www.linkedin.com/jobs/view/3131028035

Disclaimer: All information posted by us on Lexpeeps is true to our knowledge. But still, it is suggested that you check and confirm things on your level.

For regular updates, we can catchup at-

WhatsApp Group:

https://chat.whatsapp.com/GRdQLsHRwmB7QVRmS3WK

Telegram:

https://t.me/lexpeeps

LinkedIn:

https://www.linkedin.com/company/lexpeeps-in-lexpeeps-pvt-ltd

A criminal petition had been filed by an individual under Section 482 of the Cr.P.C to quash the FIR registered against the petitioner. The FIR was registered by the Chennai Police for the offences punishable under Sections 3 (2) a, 4 (1), 5 (1) a & 5 (1) d of The Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act, 1956 and 370 A (2) of the Indian Penal Code, 1860.

The Police had raided a massage center which was allegedly a brothel. The petitioner was also present along with the sex workers and was apprehended. The petitioner argued that firstly the allegations against the petitioner are not true. Secondly, even if they are true, doing sex work is not illegal, only running a brothel is. Therefore, the petitioner cannot be penalized for the offenses.

It was further argued that the petitioner is not the accused as per the FIR, however, it has been stated in the alteration report that the petitioner was present during the raid along with the sex workers. The contentions of the report are false. Further, the act of the petitioner also cannot be said to be an act of pressurizing the sex workers to commit acts, in which they were not interested.

The High Court relied on the judgment of the Apex Court in the case of BUDHADEV KARMASKAR Vs. THE STATE OF WEST BENGAL & ORS wherein it has been held that the sex workers should not be arrested or penalized while raiding a brothel, as only running of the brothel is unlawful. It further observed:

“In the case on hand, merely because the petitioner was in the place, which is alleged by the respondents to be a brothel being run by some person, the petitioner cannot be fastened with any penal consequence………From the aforesaid decision, any sex worker, being an adult and indulging in sexual act with his/her own consent, the police authorities should refrain from taking action against such individuals. From the facts, as is evident from the FIR and the alteration report, there is no whisper about any coercion on the sex workers to commit the act, more so from the petitioner”

Therefore, in light of the above, the FIR against the petitioner was quashed.

Case: Udhaya Kumar vs The State and Others

https://www.mhc.tn.gov.in/judis/index.php/casestatus/viewpdf/658791

INTRODUCTION

The Latin proverb that suits the Juvenile Justice framework in India best is ‘Nothing Novi Spectrum’ which suggests that nothing is new on this planet. There is an assumption in the entire world since the old-time frame that Juveniles ought to be managed mercifully on the grounds that there exists a school of thought that says- young people, by and large, have a propensity to answer in a serious and delayed dissatisfaction which goes with forceful methodologies.

Over the most recent couple of years, it is likewise seen that the violations done by kids younger than 15-16 have expanded essentially. The overall propensity or the brain research behind the responsibility of the wrongdoing or the reasons for wrongdoing are early-valuable encounters, prevailing manliness, childhood, financial ruins, absence of training, and so on. It involves a disgrace that the kids younger than 6-10 these days are utilized as instruments for doing unlawful or criminal operations. Since a child’s mind is naive and manipulative in nature, they can be baited at a pitiful expense.

Before the Eighteenth Century, juvenile offenders were dealt with in a similar way as other criminal wrongdoers[i]. Around the mid-eighteenth hundred years, a push for specific treatment of juvenile offenders began.

DISTINCTION BETWEEN JUVENILE AND CHILD

A minor is a person who is under the age of legal obligation and responsibility, or who is yet to reach the lawful age of 18 years. An accused child of a crime cannot be attempted as a grown-up and moved to a Child Care Centre, whereas a juvenile is somebody between the ages of 16 and 18. A young person who has been accused is a juvenile and can be tried in court as an adult.[ii] As a rule, the two terms have a similar definition, however, the difference lies in the legal implications. Minor indicates a child or teen, while a juvenile indicates either an immature person or a young offender.

PRESENT SCENARIO

At present time, a development for the exceptional treatment of juvenile offenders has begun throughout the world including in many nations like the U.K. and the U.S.A. This development began around the eighteenth hundred years. Before this, juvenile offenders were treated as same as other criminal wrongdoers[iii]. Furthermore, the General Assembly of the United Nations has embraced a Convention on the Rights of Child on the twentieth of November 1989 to safeguard the well-being of juvenile offenders. The Convention expresses that to safeguard the social – reintegration of adolescents, there will be no legal action and court preliminaries against them. The Convention drove the Indian Legislation to nullify the Juvenile Justice Act, of 1986 and to make another regulation. Consequently, Indian Legislation concocted another demonstration which was called “The Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2000.”

The Juvenile Justice, 1986 which revoked the previous Children Act, 1960, pointed toward giving impact to the rules contained in the Standard Minimum Rules for the Administration of Juvenile Justice embraced by the U.N. nations in November 1985. The previously mentioned Act comprised 63 Sections, and 7 Chapters and is stretched out to the whole of India, except for the State of Jammu and Kashmir. The basic role of the Act was to give care and insurance, treatment, improvement and recovery to the ignored juvenile delinquents. The principal goals of the Act were:

a. The demonstration essentially set down a uniform structure for adolescent equity in the country so that it safeguards the right and interests of adolescents.

b. It discusses the apparatus and infrastructure for the consideration, insurance treatment, advancement and recovery of the adolescent wrongdoers.

c. It set out the fundamental arrangements for the appropriate and fair organization of law enforcement in the event of horrifying wrongdoing done by adolescent guilty parties.

The Indian Juvenile Justice Policy is created around the Constitution. Articles 15 (3), 21, 24, 39 (e) and (f), 45 and 47 of the constitution, in addition to different worldwide Covenants, remembering the UN Convention for the Rights of the Child (CRC) as well as the UN Standard Minimum Rules for Juvenile Justice Administration (Beijing Rules). The United Nations General Assembly passed the Convention on the Rights of the Child on November 20, 1989, which incorporates arrangements to protect the right of young wrongdoers. This exhibit additional safeguards the social breaking down of juveniles by expressing that no legal activities or court preliminaries would be held against juveniles. The Indian Parliament was pushed to invalidate the Juvenile Justice Act of 1986 and substitute it with the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act of 2000, which is an improved and essentially better version. Moreover, the Juvenile Justice Act of 1986 replaced the Children Act of 1960 to take on the United Nations General Assembly’s Standard Minimum Rules for the Administration of Juvenile Justice, which was passed in November 1985. Except for Jammu and Kashmir, the law laid out a public starting point for the insurance of the privileges and interests of juveniles. It also covered a few major requirements for the organization of equity as well as the game-plan to be taken when teens commit shocking offences.

The Juvenile Justice Act of 2000 was enacted with the United Nations General Assembly’s 1989 in mind. Its object was to consolidate and amend the law relating to juveniles in conflict with the law and children in need of care and protection, by providing for proper care, protection and treatment by catering to their development needs, and by adopting a child-friendly approach. Albeit it was amended twice in 2006 and 2011, it was insufficient in shutting out the defect and incompetency. To counter the advancement of juvenile offenders in India, the regulation was cancelled and replaced with The Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection) Act, 2015, which is presently the key rule controlling India’s juvenile equity framework.

The “case of immaturity,” which implies to concluding who might request the freedoms of an adolescent or who can be considered an adolescent, is the first and foremost question that needs to be answered. In India, the Juvenile Justice Board leads a case of immaturity as per Rule 12 of the Juvenile Justice Rules, 2007. The board must decide the case of immaturity under the steady gaze of the court procedure, nonetheless, the case might be raised anytime, even after the case has been chosen. The Court deduced on account of Kulai Ibrahim v. Territory of Coimbatore[iv] that under Section 9 of the Juvenile Justice Act of 2015, a charge has the privilege to document a case of immaturity anytime all through the preliminary or even after the issue has been settled. The Supreme Court administered in Deoki Nandan Dayma v. Province of Uttar Pradesh[v] that an understudy’s date of birth expressed in school records is OK proof for deciding an adolescent’s age.

India has laid out a regulation that tends to juvenile offenders’ privileges, interests, and security. This is an endeavour to resolve the issues connected with adolescent misconduct. The three mainstays of India’s adolescent equity framework are as per the following: The three mainstays of India’s adolescent equity framework are as per the following:

Youthful guilty parties ought not to be arraigned in courts; all things being equal, they ought to be given the most ideal recovery. Rather than being rebuffed by the courts, they ought to be offered reformative changes. A youngster disregarding the law ought to get non-reformatory consideration while on trial[vi], in light of the local area’s social control organizations, like Observation Homes[vii] and Special Homes[viii].

A consequence of the Nirbhaya Case[ix]

Today (After the Nirbhaya case) many individuals know that a different Justice System exists for Juveniles. Many people are not yet aware of how JJS functions. After the episode of Nirbhaya, individuals turned resentful and communicated their antagonistic mentality towards the decision of the court. They requested a capital punishment for the juvenile convicted in the Nirbhaya case. There was thundering in parliament and the new regulation (Juvenile Justice Care and security of youngsters 2015) was enacted in India. It is an extensive arrangement for youngsters claimed and regarded to be in trouble with the law. It additionally manages juveniles needing care and assurance. This regulation is instituted thinking about the Rights of the Child and other related worldwide instruments. The administration of India consented to the show of Rights of the Child (CRC) on 11 Dec.1992. As per the global deals and established boundaries, it is the obligation of the state to treat the juveniles with all delicateness and see to their well-being. In any case, there are major areas of strength for the interest of crueller discipline for young people who carry out heinous offences. For example, offences like homicide, assault, burglary, dacoit and so on. Such juvenile offenders ought to be rebuffed like grown-ups.

Obviously, there is an incendiary manner of speaking about youth violations and there is expanded public scepticism about the present JJS. Since the reception of our constitution a lot of endeavours were made to comprehend the way of thinking of the JJS and as needed by different regulations were sanctioned. However, every one of the endeavours is apathetic and needs serious thought. The partners of the Juvenile Justice Administration should observe the difficult circumstances that win in our JJS. Learned people condemn misguided strategies and waste of enormous valuable assets.

CONCLUSION

The Juvenile Justice System depends on the rule of social government assistance and privileges of the kid. The focal point of the JJS is reorganization and recovery. It sets out to open doors for the youngster to foster his character. The objective, all things considered, is to continue ahead to make a populist society of high request. Youngsters are the future assets of the country. They should be nurtured from negative to positive characters. Nonetheless, shifting focus over to the previous experience, we need to connect the wide hole between hypothesis and practice. In this cycle, we need to construct a decent framework and productive Juvenile Justice Administration. The new regulation conveys the fantasies, however, what we really want is to make the fantasy, a reality.

This article is written by Arpita Kaushal of UILS, PUSSGRC , HOSHIARPUR.


[i] https://www.juscorpus.com/the-role-of-the-juvenile-justice-system-in-india/ ( Last accessed on 17 June, 2022 )

[ii] https://blog.ipleaders.in/juvenile-justice-system-india/  ( Last accessed on 17 June, 2022 )

[iii] https://www.legalserviceindia.com/legal/article-6794-juvenile-justice-system-in-india.html ( Last accessed on 17 June, 2022 )

[iv] Kulai Ibrahim v. State Rep. by the Inspector of Police B-1, Bazaar Police Station, Coimbatore [2014] (142) AIC 144

[v] Deokinandan And Ors. vs State Of U.P. And Ors. [1995]  1996 CriLJ 61

[vi] Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection) Act, 2015. Section 2 (13)

[vii] Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection) Act, 2015 Section 47

[viii] Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection) Act, 2015. Section 48

[ix] Mukesh & Anr v. State For NCT of Delhi & Ors. (2017) 6 SCC 1

About the Company

Hemant Singh, the managing and founding partner of INTTL ADVOCARE, as well as a top IPR lawyer based in New Delhi with a branch office in Mumbai, founded the firm in 1991. Hemant Singh has handled over 2000 IP matters involving trademarks, copyrights, industrial designs, and patents, among other things. In the sphere of intellectual property, the business has been involved in a number of significant decisions handed down by Indian courts. The business has a workforce of 85 people (45 professionals and 40 technical/paralegal/secretarial personnel) who help their clients in India with IPR prosecution and enforcement. Foods and Beverages, Liquor, Garments, Cosmetics, FMCG, Fashion Accessories, Computer Software, Telecommunication, Media, Electronics, Telemarketing Industry, Pharmaceuticals, Automobiles, Biotechnology, and other industries have all been represented by INTTL ADVOCARE.

About the Responsibilities

For an evaluation internship, Inttl Advocare is seeking for long-term interns. Final-year law students who are interested in research, knowledge management, and content production can join our research team, which is responsible for knowledge dissemination and internal knowledge sharing efforts at the firm. This is a unique opportunity for law students who want to tap into their creative side while also contributing to the firm’s thought leadership activities. Because this is an assessment internship, the interns’ ability to learn and adapt to the firm’s writing style and material distribution forms will be an important skill to improve. After qualifying as a lawyer, the candidates have a chance to be hired by the firm. Lawyers interested in pursuing a career in research, writing, or creative should apply.

As an intern you are required to:-

  • Support lawyers and knowledge management teams with legal and economic research.
  • Researching and synthesising the most recent legislative developments, judgments, and economic indicators in the fields of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) and Information Technology (IT).
  • Creating initial draughts of articles, blogs, and write-ups
  • Assist the knowledge management and social media teams in keeping the post/update schedule on track.

Location

B-36, Sector – 132, Express Trade Tower, Noida Expressway, Noida 201303, National Capital Region of Delhi

Stipend

₹5,000 per month

Eligibility

  • Mindset that is focused on research.
  • You must be in your final year
  • A keen sense of observation.
  • The ability to keep track of and stay up to date on the newest legal and economic changes, particularly in the practise areas of the firm.
  • Passion for content production and flair for writing.

How to Apply?

Interested candidates may apply from here:- hr@inttladvocare.com.

Disclaimer: All information posted by us on Lexpeeps is true to our knowledge. But still, it is suggested that you check and confirm things on your level.

For regular updates, we can catchup at-

WhatsApp Group:

https://chat.whatsapp.com/GRdQLsHRwmB7QVRmS3WK

Telegram:

https://t.me/lexpeeps

LinkedIn:

https://www.linkedin.com/company/lexpeeps-in-lexpeeps-pvt-ltd

Harvard International Law Journal is accepting submissions on a rolling basis for three of its online sections: Perspectives, essays, and case notes.

CATEGORIES

  1. PERSPECTIVES: Commentary and analysis of the most recent developments in international laws. No more than 2500 words. Citations should be done by hyperlinking wherever necessary.
  2. ESSAYS: Topics of public international laws, private international laws, and comparative laws. No more than 5000-7000 words. Citations: The bluebook
  3. CASE NOTES: Criticism, additional context to situations. No more than 5000 words. There should be a proposal.

SUBMISSIONS PROCESS

  1. Perspectives must be submitted with resume to iljonline@mail.law.harvard.edu with Perspectives submission in the Subject line.
  2. Essays must be submitted with resume to iljonline@mail.law.harvard.edu with Essay submission in the Subject line.
  3. Proposal must be submitted with resume to iljonline@mail.law.harvard.edu with Proposal submission in the Subject line.

CONTACT DETAILS

iljonline@mail.law.harvard.edu

https://harvardilj.org/submissions/online-submissions/

Disclaimer: All information posted by us on Lexpeeps is true to our knowledge. But still, it is suggested that you check and confirm things on your level.

WhatsApp Group:

https://chat.whatsapp.com/GRdQLsHRwmB7QVRmS3WK

Telegram:

https://t.me/lexpeeps

LinkedIn:

https://www.linkedin.com/company/lexpeeps-in-lexpeeps-pvt-ltd

Utrecht Journal on European and International law is inviting a call for papers from the legal fraternity on the GENERAL ISSUES theme.

ABOUT

Utrecht Journal on European and International law is open access, a peer-reviewed, student-led journal affiliated with Utrecht university

THEME

  1. The second volume of the GENERAL ISSUE in the fall of 2022 is on GENERAL ISSUES within international and European laws.
  2. Students are invited to address questions and issues arising from the specific area of laws relating to the topic.
  3. All kinds of manuscripts will be considered for publication.
  4. International and European legal dimension is imperative.

TYPES

  1. CASE NOTES
  2. CONFERENCE PAPERS

SUBMISSIONS GUIDELINES

  1. CITATIONS: OSCOLA
  2. Word limit: 10000
  3. The board of editors will review the papers.
  4. The novelty of the academic contribution is also an essential requirement.

SUBMISSIONS DEADLINE

MAY 31, 2022

https://utrechtjournal.org/author/login/?submit=True

Disclaimer: All information posted by us on Lexpeeps is true to our knowledge. But still, it is suggested that you check and confirm things on your level.

WhatsApp Group:

https://chat.whatsapp.com/GRdQLsHRwmB7QVRmS3WK

Telegram:

https://t.me/lexpeeps

LinkedIn:

https://www.linkedin.com/company/lexpeeps-in-lexpeeps-pvt-ltd

Environmental policy and law are inviting a call for blogs for their news and a blog section for his website.

ABOUT

Environmental Policy and Law (EPL) is an international, interdisciplinary journal that provides a platform to facilitate an ideational understanding of international environmental policy, law, and institutional issues. The journal provides an exchange of information and experience on all legal, administrative, and policy matters relevant to the human and natural environment in its widest sense. It covers all aspects included in the concept of sustainable development. 

THEME

ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND LAWS

SUBMISSIONS GUIDELINES

  1. The blogs would be reviewed by a journal editor and staff.
  2. No more than 20 citations are allowed.
  3. Blogs may not be defamatory.
  4. The word limit is 1500 words.

HOW TO SUBMIT BLOGS

c.mcnamara@iospress.nl

https://environmentalpolicyandlaw.com/contribute

Disclaimer: All information posted by us on Lexpeeps is true to our knowledge. But still, it is suggested that you check and confirm things on your level.

WhatsApp Group:

https://chat.whatsapp.com/GRdQLsHRwmB7QVRmS3WK

Telegram:

https://t.me/lexpeeps

LinkedIn:

https://www.linkedin.com/company/lexpeeps-in-lexpeeps-pvt-ltd

According to NDTV, Retired Supreme Court judge Ranjana Prakash Desai is the New Chairperson of the Press Council of India. She is also the first woman to become the chairperson of the PCI. The government announced her appointment on Friday.

She completed her law at Government Law College Mumbai and got enrolled in the BAR in the year of 1973. She was appointed as a judge in the Bombay High Court in 1996 where she used to practice. She was appointed as a judge of the Supreme Court in 2011. She even headed the Delimitation Commission on Jammu and Kashmir.

Last November, Justice Chandramauli Kumar Prasad (retd) had completed his term and the office has been vacant since then. Her name was selected by a committee that included the Vice President (M Venkaiah Naidu), the speaker of the Lok Sabha (Om Birla) and a member of the PCI (Prakash Dubey).

A notification was released by the government informing the same.

An FIR was registered under Sections 13(1) and 13(3) of the Haryana Gauvansh Sanrakshan and Gausamvardhan Act, 2015 and Section 11 of the Prevention of Animals of Cruelty Act, 1959. Later the sections 120-B of the IPC and
181/192 of Motor Vehicle Act, 1988 were added. The petitioner had filed a pre-arrest bail application under Section 483 of the Cr.P.C which was denied by the sessions court.

An appeal was then filed before the Hon’ble High Court of Punjab and Haryana. The court denied the bail and upheld the decision of the sessions court. The sessions court had denied the bail because the petitioner had concealed the fact that no other application is pending or decided by the court, whereas his first application bail was dismissed as withdrawn.

The petitioners contended that this reason was insufficient to deny the bail. The High Court relied on the decision of the Apex Court in the case of Hari Narain vs. Badri Dass, AIR 1963 S.C. 1558 and Welcome Hotel vs. State of Andhra Pradesh, (1983) 4 SCC 575, wherein it has been held that a party who has mislead the court should not receive any consideration by the court. It was observed:

“The law is well settled that where a process is “ex debito justitiae” the Court would refuse to exercise its discretion in
favour of the applicant where the application is found to be wanting in bona fides.”

Hence, the bail was denied as the petitioner did not approach the court with clean hands.

case: Deen Mohd. vs. State of Haryana

“I think those who have a terminal illness and are in great pain should have the right to
choose to end their own life, and those that help them should be free from prosecution.”

Stephen Hawking

INTRODUCTION

While survival is unquestionably important, life may also be unpleasant and terrifying at times under certain circumstances. Euthanasia is nothing more than permission or license given to a medical provider to end the life of a person. Though the Constitution of India allows a feasible way of living a healthy and dignified life, it does not allow for voluntary death. The practice of euthanasia raises complex questions of legal and execution conformity in countries all over the world. Every individual wishes to live and enjoy life till the end of his or her days. However, there are certain instances when a man wants to end his life on his own volition, no matter how strange it is to end one’s life in such an unconventional way.

The phrases ‘euthanasia‘ and ‘thanatos’ are derived from the Greek words ‘eu’ and ‘thanatos,’ which mean ‘happy death’ or ‘easy death,’ respectively. When a person takes his or her own life, we call it “suicide,” but when others take a person’s life at the desire of the dead, we call it “euthanasia” or “mercy killing”. It is the physician’s painless end of the life of an acutely suffering patient at the patient’s request1.

As a corollary, euthanasia is identified with those who are suffering from a fatal disease or incapacitation and refuse to live the remainder of their lives in misery and suffering. A terminally sick or disabled individual should be able to choose whether or not to live. Euthanasia is a divisive topic that touches on a society’s ethics, integrity, and principles.

TYPES OF EUTHANASIA

Euthanasia is usually performed when a person wants and requests relief; however, When a person is unable to make such a request, euthanasia is employed as a last resort.

On the basis of informed consent:

  1. Voluntary Euthanasia
  2. Non-Voluntary Euthanasia
  3. Involuntary Euthanasia

On the basis of its manner:

  1. Active Euthanasia
  2. Passive Euthanasia

â—Ź Voluntary Euthanasia: Euthanasia is deemed voluntary when it is carried out with the patient’s expressed wish and agreement. The ability of the terminally ill patient to choose whether or not to end his or her life, a choice that serves his or her best interests as well as the interests of others, is at the heart of voluntary euthanasia. In this circumstance, it can be demonstrated that the permission given should be free of any sense of obligation, i.e., the decision to utilize Euthanasia was an example of unconstrained self-determination. This is the most widely accepted form of euthanasia on a global scale.

â—Ź Involuntary Euthanasia: Involuntary euthanasia is euthanasia that occurs against a person’s will and is frequently seen as murder. As a result, involuntary euthanasia happens when the patient has refused to consent to the surgery and is an unwilling participant. During World War II, Nazi Germany carried out similar executions in gas chambers involving physically disabled or mentally handicapped persons. It appears to be immoral and brutal.

â—Ź Non-Voluntary Euthanasia: It refers to the death of someone who is not psychologically capable of making an informed death request, such as a comatose patient. The patient has not left a living will or provided any prior directives in non-voluntary euthanasia because he may not have had the opportunity to do so or may not have foreseen any such catastrophe or scenario. Family members are frequently the ones who make the choice in circumstances of non-voluntary euthanasia. This includes cases where a person is in a coma/ too young/ absent-minded/ mentally challenged/ severely brain-damaged.

â—Ź Active Euthanasia: The act of intentionally reducing one’s life is known as ‘active’ Euthanasia. Active Euthanasia is the practice of putting people to death without suffering for compassionate reasons, such as when a doctor gives a patient a deadly amount of medicine. In this instance, a person cannot inflict his own death and must rely on the assistance of someone else to administer a lethal prescription. Active euthanasia is banned in India and is a crime under sec. 302 of Indian Penal ode, 1860 or at the very least section 304 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860.

â—Ź Passive Euthanasia: Postponing medical care in order to prolong life, such as withholding antibiotics when a patient is likely to die if they are not provided, or removing the heart-lung machine from a coma patient, are examples of passive euthanasia. Passive Euthanasia is the purposeful absence of a life-prolonging act. It entails failing to take action to avoid death, such as when a doctor refuses to use a device that would keep a terminally sick patient or a patient in a persistent vegetative condition alive. In India, passive euthanasia is the sole legal manner to administer euthanasia. The physicians are not intentionally murdering somebody in “passive euthanasia,” they are just not rescuing him.

JUDICIAL VIEW OF EUTHANASIA

The subject of whether or not to allow a person to die has been debated by Indian courts on several occasions. State v Sanjay Kumar2 was the first case in which such an issue was raised before an Indian court. The Indian Penal Code, 1860, Section 309, is outdated and unfit for Indian society.

In Maruti S. Dubal v State of Maharashtra3, the Bombay High Court found Section 309 to be unconstitutional because it violated Article 21 of the Indian Constitution’s right to life, whereas the Andhra Pradesh High Court found Section 309 to be constitutionally valid in Chhena Jagadesswer v State of Andhra Pradesh4. The Bombay High Court observed in Naresh Marotrao Sakhre’s5 case that suicide is, by its very nature, an act of self-killing or self-destruction, an act of ending one’s own life without the help or support of any other human agent. On the other hand, euthanasia, often known as mercy killing, refers to and implies the use of another human agency to end a person’s life. As a result, mercy killing is not the same as suicide. Both legally and factually, the two notions are separate. Whatever the circumstances, euthanasia or mercy killing is nothing more than homicide.

The Supreme Court declared Provision 309 of the Indian Penal Code to be legally legitimate in Gian Kaur v. the State of Punjab6, however in the current situation, even though this section is constitutional, it is time for the Indian government to repeal it because it is outdated.

196th REPORT OF LAW COMMISSION

The Law Commission of India’s 196th report went into great detail on the subject. The main question before the Law Commission was whether or not terminally sick individuals should be denied or denied medical treatment (including artificial nourishment and hydration).

The Law Commission addressed a number of issues, including who are competent and incompetent patients, what constitutes an informed decision, what constitutes a patient’s best interests, and whether patients, their relatives, or doctors can petition a court of law for a declaration that a doctor’s act or omission, or a proposed act or omission, is lawful, and, if so, whether such a decision will be binding on the parties and doctors in future civil and criminal proceedings. The Law Commission suggested enacting legislation to safeguard terminally ill individuals who refuse medical care, such as artificial nourishment and hydration.

The Law Commission further stated that, while medical practitioners will contact the patients’ parents or close relatives, it is the doctor’s right to make a clinical choice based on professional medical opinion and the doctor’s decision should be based on the Medical Council of India’s norms. The treating physician was not given the option of selecting an expert of his own choosing.

CONCLUSION

Euthanasia is an intensely stressful and sensitive topic that sometimes leads to disagreements and misconceptions. Given its wide use in the media and scholarly research, it lacks a consistent set of ideas and meanings. Euthanasia dialogues are frequently ill-informed and ineffective, resulting in more frustration than answers. The debate over good death is an existential, emotionally charged, and ethically controversial discourse that will almost certainly continue to be a severe social and legal burden.

The crux of the problem is that individual autonomy and rights must be fostered in order for an individual to make decisions about his or her own life and death, but the right to life must be vigorously safeguarded. Suicide has become criminal in general as a result of the Gian Kaur case, but euthanasia has not. In Aruna Ramchandra Shanbaug v. Union of India, our Supreme Court has recognized passive euthanasia, stating that while passive euthanasia is admissible under the law in rare situations, active euthanasia is not. When legislation on the subject is drafted to avoid euthanasia malpractices and misuse, the suggestions made in the Law Commission of India’s Reports and the directions offered in the Aruna case must be taken into account. Furthermore, if the aforementioned proposals are adopted, the risks of euthanasia being misused would be considerably decreased.

Aside from religious and moral considerations, the ideas of life and death have been altered as a result of the expansion and development of science and technology. Medical science has advanced to the point that it is now possible to prolong both life and death. This knowledge makes it possible to prevent death in those who are in excruciating agony to a substantial extent.

CITATIONS:

  1. Brody Baruch, Life and Death Decision Making, NewYork: Oxford University Press, 1988.
  2. 1985 Cr.L.J.931
  3. 1987 Cr.L.J.743
  4. 1988 Cr.L.J.549
  5. Naresh Marotrao Sakhre v. UoI; 1995 Cr.L.J.95 (Bomb)
  6. 1996(2) SCC 648; AIR 1996 SC 946

This article is written by Sanskar Garg of the School of Law, Devi Ahilya University, Indore.