132 CI-ll.,.PTJ;;R VI CASE STUDIES Sex delinquency isLpfOduct of several factors. Various forces play their part in making a person commit a sex crime. Sex delinquents are a diverse loto There are some who are victims of circumstances. There are others who are constantly involved in sex offences because ot their being emotionally sick. There are some whose sexual activity is more thim t.he normal and who satisfy their sex urge in 2 way that amounts to breach of the laws. Such people find themselves unable to control their impulses. In some case we notice that the motivating factor is an ' effort to compensate for a deficiency through dramatic and violent p=of of one's potency. Lack of ··virility rather than a surplus of it makes such people abnormally obsessed with sex. Thus in order to study the causes, consequences and cures of sex of-i'ences -.,.,e have to understand the various social and personal factors, the cumulative influences of 1-rhich makes a person what he or she is. For this, a number o-: representiltive case histori<cs of different categories of crime have been chosen. As this is mainly a qualitative study, illustrative case histories ot the persons involved hG.·Je been pn,sented in order to comnunicat:e the in<:ormation et, ._,tively and to explain the findings of the study.
104
Embed
132 - Shodhgangashodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/31249/12/12_chapter 6.pdf · She hardly saves any thing. Whatever she earns she spends. She wants to save something for
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
132
CI-ll.,.PTJ;;R VI
CASE STUDIES
Sex delinquency isLpfOduct of several factors.
Various forces play their part in making a person commit
a sex crime. Sex delinquents are a diverse loto There
are some who are victims of circumstances. There are
others who are constantly involved in sex offences because
ot their being emotionally sick. There are some whose
sexual activity is more thim t.he normal and who satisfy
their sex urge in 2 way that amounts to breach of the laws.
Such people find themselves unable to control their impulses.
In some case we notice that the motivating factor is an '
effort to compensate for a deficiency through dramatic and r:::Ji-:~:'
violent p=of of one's potency. Lack of ··virility rather than
a surplus of it makes such people abnormally obsessed with
sex. Thus in order to study the causes, consequences and
cures of sex of-i'ences -.,.,e have to understand the various
social and personal factors, the cumulative influences of
1-rhich makes a person what he or she is. For this, a number
o-: representiltive case histori<cs of different categories of
crime have been chosen. As this is mainly a qualitative
study, illustrative case histories ot the persons involved
hG.·Je been pn,sented in order to comnunicat:e the in<:ormation
et, ._,tively and to explain the findings of the study.
(A) PROSTITUTION
CA.SE STUDY N0.1
'P' is a young girl of about tvrenty three years. She
is wheuti.sh in complexion, medium in height and thin in built•
She is very well behaved and is always neatly and cleanly
drec;sed. She is illiterate. She has been practising prosti-
tution in the Dal Gali of Raipur city for the last seven years.
Here she sits along other pan-chewing, theatrically made-up
women in tche foul smelling passage. She is Stnami by caste
and hales from a farmer's family of village Borwa of district
Du::-g. Be~ mother had married an outsider by name 'R.L' at
Nugpur. She is the product of this union. Her father forsoqk
hc;r mo·ther after a few years of marriage and went away to U .P. ,
In fact, she has never seen her father. later hel'mother
married one 'J.S' with whom she continues to live. In her
looks, she gives an impression of coming from a non-Chhatisgarhi
family. Slrprisingly she uses proverbs and common sayings in
her speech. While speaking she often uses English words like
'mentality',. 'habit', 'character', etc. This is surprising
coming as it does from a prosti·tute. It is learnt that she
being young in age and good in looks, is visited by people of
some good families. A number of representative of medical
comoanies and other firms who are highly paid have been seen.
As staced, she belongs to a farmer's family. She has.
two sisters o.nd one brother. The two sis',»rs are married.-•
The brother is small an~ is being supported by her. He learns
a$ motor mechanic's job in a local Garage. Every late night
he comes to her place and sleeps in her house. He keeps away.
during the day. She is being looked after by an old Satnami
turned Muslim woman who was herself a p=stitute about twenty
years ago but later married and has now children also.
As a young girl in the village, 'P' had an affair with
'K' of the same village. She was deeply infatuated with him.
But he went a>vay from the village and joined the Army. Her
mother then got her married in the village to a person who in
his appearance and manners vas no comparison to her lover.
Before joining the profession she was married to one
'H.S' 1flho was a farmer. She started having hatred for her
husband since on the very first night her husband ordered her
harshly to undress and abruptly indulged in sexual union with
hrr v:ithout caring about her feelings. She was a sensitive
l·nman and nseded affection and not simply mechanical sex whict
'lilS never satisfying. She stayed with him for two years.
J.Ir:Cng this period, remembrance of her lover also troubled
her. For these two years she had quite an unhappy life as
this 'l~.s· >-:ould not also give her sufficient food and clothes.
He would often beat her. He >vas very nuch given to drinking
and gambling. Fed up with all this, she gave up her house
hold ,nd one day c«me to Dal Gali of her own accord. No one
asked her to come here. She knew that there was a place like
D'l Gali in Raipur where young women could sell flesh and
make a good living.
13 .. ~ ' .
She is now happy as she earns about two hundred to
three hundred rupees every month. Every day two to four
persons visit her. Each person pays trom Rupees three to
Rupees five as per bargain. Each man is with her for about
ten minutes. If any one insists for a longer time without ·
extra payment, he is turned out. She is visited by all
sorts of people -local, outsiders, old and young, Hindus
and Muslims. Some times foreigners from Bhilai also visit
her and they pay a little extra. Fifty per cent of the
people who visit her are drunkards. Some times they do
misbehave but there are very fe<v cases of 1marpit 1 or man-
handling by them. SUrely the Sikh truck-drivers are not
v:elcome as they misbehave and harass a lot. Some of the
cus,:.omers are given to perversions and they insist on the
fulfilment. of tre se perversions but she does not accede to
tchem. She particularly mentions two medical firm represen
tatives who are highly educuted and al1r1ays smartly dressed.; i
They bring tape-recorders to record the lewd talk of a
sex session and insist on her to relate her sex experiences
with different types ot people. One of these brought a
camera and took her photographs in nude in different poses
and in two of these, he also posed with her in nude. For
such acts, she charges more.
She has contacted veneral disease and spends about
tHenty to thirty rupees on her medical treatment every month.
She practises profession even in the monthly menstruation days
b0cause she cannot afford to los" the earnings on these days.
She has not yet borne a child but has had one abortion.
She hardly saves any thing. Whatever she earns she
spends. She wants to save something for her old age. Out
of the earnings she would like to purchase some land to live
on in her old age or she might work as a keeper of young girls
and thus support herself.
She believes in God but does not pray. She has no
hobbies. She some times goes to pictures. Mostly she keeps
at home. She does not drink liquor or smoke. Like all
Ch11atisgarhis, rice is her staple food. She takes bath daily.
She has no connections with he'r family and does not
visit her tamily members. At the moment, she does not want
to leave the profession anu she is happy. She is able to eat
and Hear vihat she likes. She is independent of the control
ot her husband. So at the moment she .vould not like to leave
the profession or do any job. In her old age ho•iever she might
consider such a proposal if it is then forthcoming. But even
then it is doubtful if she would accept it because the society
would always look down at her with a feeling of hatred. If a
daughter is born to her, she would get her married rather
than join this profession which she does believe is an evil one.'
Analysing the case, it can be concluded that 'P' came •
in 1:o the profession as a matter ot necessity to make a living.
In view of her tamily back ground in which the mother had
married an outsider, who '"hen forsook her, she married a·;ain
there was in 'P's mind no sanctity of the marriage bond.
And·so when she found difficult to live with her husband,
she gave him up und became a prostitute. Possibly by giving
up her husband she was trying to take revenge on mankind
since her tather after having brought her in the world had
given up her mother kc:~.d later not even shown his face.
Having joined the profession, there is now no going
bC!ck for her in the society and as per her present lot she
has learned to be happy in her circumstances. Legally
prostitution by itself is not an offence. It may be an
anti-social occupation at which the society does not look
vlith a good eye. She is in this evil trade because of her
circumstances. She doe not commit any legal offence because
she does not live on the earnings of others. There are no
touts in her profession. Thece is no question of soliciting
in a public place because she is practising her prof~sion
in a house which has been kept apart for this purpose. There
are about hundred prostitutes in her locality - a narrow,
·J.irty, dingy and stinking lane by the side of Babulal Talkies.
Anybody going through this lane can see the prostitutes, young
and old, dark and fair complexioned, charming and repulsive,
:=itting on the thresholc, of rooms rented for a monthly rent
of rupees fifty to eighty liesurely looking at the passers by
in the hope that they might get a customer.
CASE STUDY NO.2
'G' is a t:all dnd fair -::omplrcxioned woman.
nnatly drr-ssed and takes special care of her looks.
She is al1.;ays
She often
does her hair in 1 Sadhana 1 style. She is uneducated. She,
is aged about thirty 'five years and has been practising
prosti'tution since last ten to twelve years. She has three
children - two daughtc~rs and one son aged eight, five and
two respec'l:ively. A brother aged about fifteen also stays
Hith her. He does odd jobs and is mostly looked after by her.
She has also an old maid-servant to look after her children.
She livc"s in a two-1.--oom tenement in the Dal Gali.
She belongs to a farmer's family. She has only one
youncJer sister \vho has been l<ept by a Sardar truck-driver.
He has onJ.y one brother \vho lives with her. Her father died
when she '~s a child. Then her mother married another person
by \'lhom her younger brother and sister were born. Her mother,
died about ten years ago. She has nO\"f no connection with her
mother's sr"cond husband but she does look after her younger
brother and sistera
Before j ::>ining prostitution she used to make 'Bidis'
in Dhamtari. She hud married also but within a few months she
gave up her husband. Being good looking and fair in complexion
and uttractive in figure she won the attention of a number of
people who showe>red their affection on her and also paid her
money. She Has fond o£ using cosmetics and wearing ornaments
• \'lhich her lovers guve her. She also started drinking with
them c::, th'Y insisted on her drinking. Thus she was lead
:c1-1uy to ~h" easy ways of life. Seeking independence from her
lYmsehold, she cam,-" a\lay from iJhamtari and st::1rted living
She is quite happy in her profession and would not
like to leave it. She is particularly proud of her inde-
pendence from the slavery of men. She has no in·tention of
going back to married life even if an opportunity is offered
to her. Till a few years ago, she used to be very sexy. She,\ j
I used to invi·tc handsome men to sleep with her even free of
charge.
She makes about rupees thirty per day. THo to three
persons visit her c:.very day. Besides she has two other girls
staying with her who pay her a part of their earnings in lieu
of sharing i:he house which has been rented by her for Thlpe_es
eighty per a month. Practically, she acts as their keeper
though for ,P.ear ot law she would not say it. She has been
able to s<;ve rupees six to seven thousands and has purchc.sed
u. piece' o:':: land in Dhamtari.
Being older in profession and yet active, 'G' relates
the ciif.terent ·tastes and traits of her customers. Boys from
the School and the College visit her to have the first lesson
in sex. They have to be told h0\•1 to do it. Some of them
bring 'Kok Shastras' with pictures of different poses of sex
which they try. 'rhere are perverts who get pleasure only
in seeing others in sexual intercourse. So, they are kept in
another room to watch from the peep-hole the next customer
in intercourse lvith her.or with one of her t~to girls. Some
of the old people love to hear stories of sex·as a sort of
pr<'!lu•te to sex int""rcourse. 'G' also sells obscene photographs
140 ' ,, ',
of women and men in the ~ct of copulation. She gets these
through her customer who brings these from Bombay. She makes
good profit in this side-business.
'G' is particularly not unhappy about the lot of a
prostitute. She does not complain of any maltreatment from
her customers though some times some people under the in
fluence of drinks have slapped her particularly when she had
not obliged them in the manner that they had desired, for
example doing 'fellatio' or keeping the legs on the man's
shoulders during the act, etc. She is visited by al~ sorts
of people including foreigners from Bhilai. She does not
like the Sikhs who are known for misbehaving, beating, etc.
the prostituteo;. She practises the profession even in the
menstrual period and keeps the lights off so that this is not
detected by the customers. She does not allow any one for '
more than ten to fifteen minutes. If one is not able to
complete his act within this period, he is physically thrown
out by her. Her normal charge for her visit is rupees five
to rupeces ten. In a few cases, some people who pay rupees
fifty to sixty are allo\ied for the whole day. Slch people
<J.re generally outsiders. No one is allov1ed to stay in her
house -during the night because police generally check in
night. Normally, she does not allow any physical touching
abov·~ the waist.
Though- she is not unhappy '.-lith her lot, she S:.ill
would not like her daughtc:rs to join the orofession because
.t4t .
inwardly she does realise ·thut this is not a· respectable
protession. She would like her daughters to marry and live
a respectable life.
She has contacted disease and spends about rupees
twenty to thirty every month of her treatment. She takes
periodical injections.
There are no touts in her profession. There is also
. ..
no 1 Pahal~van 1 or strong man in her locality to get protection,
?here is only one lady 'J .B 1 who is an old inveterate prosti-
tute of the area aged about sixty. she has built up a three
storied house in the locality where a number of rooms are
rented to the proSitutes. She has been a criminal herself.
Her sons are also 'goondas •. She provides some protection
to the prostitutes whenever necessary.
1 G 1 has no hobbies. She does not pray. She drinks
occasionally but does not smoke. Rice is her staple food.
She takes bath once a day in the afternoon before starting
the evening.
Obviously from 'G's case v1e find that she has joined
the profession just to have an easy and comfortable life and ...
not simply out of necessity. EVen prior to her joining the
pro=ession, she was making 1bidis' and making her living but
::l1e chose this easier v1ay o:: life and has been in it for the
last so many years. For her old age, she has no worries
since she has accumulate>d some Droperty in Dhamtari. Further
she has already taken steps in the direction of being a
'Ghanvali' since two young girls are staying in her rooms
142
and paying her partially ou·t of her income. With the further
advancement of age, she will give up doing prostitution her
self end live on the earning of otherso
CASE STUDY No.3
'H' is aged thirty five and a mother of three children
all three sons aged ten, seven and two. She is thin, tall and
durk in complexion, Due to mal-nutrition she is rather ariemic
in appearance and in dress she is quite dirty. She is illi-
terate.
'H' s mother died when she was about four years old. , She
knows nothing abou·t her fath<'r, She has no brothers or sisters.
Till age of t>·lelve, she was looked after by a cousin of her
mother. Thereafter she has been earning her own living by
doing ode jobs. Her mother's cousin then went away to calcutta
=or making a living and has since then been never heard of.
Hcer first sex-experience -.ru.s with an old man when she \vas too
young to know \Vhat it meant.
She has changed husbands about four times. From these
husbands she has three children. In between the period when
she hilS left one and has yet to find the other, she takes to
prostitution. For this purpose she has rented a small room
in Ram Nagar at the rent of rupees ten per month. She has
chosen Ulis area because in this locality are situated a
number of dens 1t1here Homen are supplied on money by three
143
persons namely 'A', 1 G' and 'B'. She does not pay commission
to any one ilnd works independently.
'11' hc1s no hobbies. To be able to live with her
children is her greates·t concern. She drinks and smdlkes in
the company of her male customers. She eats rice which is
her staple food. She does not kno"l anything about religion.
She hccs never prayed and none has taught her to pray.
She makes about four to six rup·ees per day. With this, '\.
she looks after her children. Her charges are low and her
customers are poor people like rickshaw walas, labourers and
hawkers whose age VLlries between twenty to fifty years. They
had relations with her only for sex and behaved like beasts.
She takes customers from the roa.dside to her house or
the customers pick her up from the Railway station or Motor
• Stand or from the Bazar and take her to places like Ghhokranalla
on the Mahasamund road, the Open Ground behind the Jail and
even to private houses. Some times, her customers after having
consumed opium, or 'madak' harass her a lot and continue in
the act for hours together. In need of money, as she is1 she
bPa rs 1~ith them.
She consider this profession a dirty one. Had she got
h·~r husband to supoort her and her children, she would not have
been on the road. She does a little labour or some time
sells 'chana' but this does not bring her sufficient money
to make a living.
1 4.<1
'H' s case is the case of dire "necessity and one feels
pity on her. Her family life has been a frustrated one and
in fact she has experienced no filial affections. All the
same, one feels pity on the patrons of such >vomen vJho are
unc:ttn.ct:ive, diseased, dirty in appearance and dress and
simply human forms for the mechanical sex act.
Ci\.SE STUDY N0.4
'R. B • aged about thirty is a dark middle sized woman.
There is hardly any physical appeal in her. She belongs to
Satnami caste. She has not rceceived any education. Before
marriage she used to do 1 rej a 1 (casual labour) 1,o10rk until
she married one 'A' and herself became a M.l slim. She has two
children both girls aged four and one, both by 'A'. Her other
relations are in the village and are doing farming.
1 R.B 1 s father who \vas a ricksha>valla died while she
uas young. Her mother married another person who did not look
after properly the children by the previous husband. She had
on,-, sis·ter and onP brother 1-1ho both later died. There used to
br' c.,uarrels in the house every day. At this stage, she came in
contact with 'A' who was elder to her by about twenty years •
.3hf! at the age o': fifteen left her house and came to 'A'.
'A' was himself ronning a se:x:-den in Pandri where
he used to get commission from women for utilizing his house
for prostitution before the police intensified its drive
against such prostitution dens of which there were a number
in Pundri at the houses of 'K', •s• and 'A'. Her husband's
den was one of that type. Some times she used to offer
herself to customers in the knowledge of her husband.
The dens having been removed by constant raids by the
police, she had taken to street walking and she frequented
such public places like Railwuy Station, Motor Stand, Station
'Chowraha •, etc. from 1vhe re she was picked up by persons
desirous of sex to places of their choice. She makes about
rupees five to six per day and some times she makes nothing
2.t allo
She does street walking only for the sake of money.
She has no interest in it. She experiences lots ot hardsh:i:ps
in the profession. Some times people take her and do not pay
her aft';'r having had her intimate physical company. For
example two Ghorkhas took her to Katora Talab and after having
done v1it.h hcor they threvl hc,r out withou·t making any payment.
Likewise one day a number ot grown up school boys took her
in a rickshaw to a nearby tarm and having done with her in
the ciurkness, they sent her av:ay lvithout making payment of
r~ven a pie.
In short, her case is the case ot dire necessity and
the bad fate ot having an evil husband. Her husband is a
146.
brothel keeper. P.e is a ,criminal and a history sheeter 'ot
the police. He has been to jail thrice, twice for stealing
and once for possession of liquor. She has taken to street
walking to earn money to support her household. Her husband
is also an active participant in the above since he forces
her to do this to bring money. Occasionally she does 'mazdoori'
but sev<'ral times she is not able to get it and as such she
has to do prostitut-ion. Besides prostitution brings compa
ratively more money per day as compared to labour or hard
work put in.
CASE STUDY NO.5
'B.B' is a tall, slightly heavy, fair complexioned
young girl who moves through out the day and night at odd
places, soliciting visitors and taking them for a spree. There
are no fixed timings for her to go to her parents. Some times
she uoes not go home for days and nights together. Her parents
also do not bother about her. She has never been to the school
and is uneducated. Having no fixed abode, she is irregular in
her food, dress and personal cleanliness habits. She is like
a 1 Tomboy 1• For fun sake, she cycles a ricksav; some times.
::>he indul<JeS in le\'id jokes with people at motor stand, rickshaw
s::anc<s and vegetable market. Some times in the night she wears
mcJlP attire anci visits some boys who live together in a private
ho:;~el type building but in a respectable locu.lity. This she
does at the instance ot boys who c:lo not want people to know
that a prostitute visits them.
1.f7
Her mother who is a satnarni by caste was kept by a
Sind hi Goonda by name . s. s 1 • After partition, he had come
to Rccipur and started a small hotel at the Raipur Motor Stand.
It was during this time that he kept 'H.B's mother as a maid
servant for washing utensils at the hotel. He got into inti-
macy with her and from this union, was born 1H.B'. Fortune .
went on smiling on •s.s•. His daily income went on increasing
From a small hotel, he made a big one. As money starting
:pouring, he started purchasing property. Thus he acquired a
status in society. With this acquisition of status, he started
to live respectably in Sindhi community for the betterment
of the prospects ot the children of his married wife. And
thus as a first stage towards respectability he threw out
'M.B's mother. Soon she contacted a constable barber in the
Railway Police who kept her.
'H.B' >·Jas initiated in prostitution by her own mother.
She used to bring customers for her. Novl she does not need her
mother's help as she is already well known and can be easily
contacted by those who desire her. Her second sister is also
of the same type. A little time ago she was caught by sarsiwa
Police \·Thile going with a Sikh in a truck. The police thought
t1>c.t she \~as being kidnapped and so detained her under suspicion.
2Ut soon cum<" the mother of the girl alleging that the police
vJas unnecessarily harossing her daughter and her son-in-law,
the Sardar. The fact VTas that the mother had sent a.way her
younger daughter with the aged Sardar to give him sex-company
"or a fet• days in return for two hundred ropecs which she had
r·?ceived.
14.8'
1 ~1.B 1 s case is an instance of a girl inheriting un
consciously the evil traits of her mother. Having received
no education nor having lived in any intelligent society,
she has ncover bothGred as to what she is doing is right or
wrong. B0ing young in age and in the full bloom ot her youth, ·
she loves free life and experiences with different types of
men. She is fond of pictures and often imitates the gait
and dialogues ot film actresses which her patrons very much
liked. She is often seen in the second show of pictures where
she along with other girls of her type is taken out by men,.
Some times alone, some times in pair and .somet.imes in group
to spend the night in an orgy of sex, nornial and perverted.
OC.SE STUDY N0.6 ·
'E' is a young girl of about eighteen. she is wheatish
in complexion, medium built and sweet and smiling in her dis
position. Generally finely dressed and walking Hith a made
up gait, she \vould' pasc as a college girl. But the things are
otherwise. She is illiterate. She is born of a Brahmin father
u.nd a Sc1tnami mother. The father runs a hotel in Raj nandgaon.
She has a brother who studies in the matriculation class and
stays \vith the father at Raj nandgaon. About seven years ago,
her Satnami mother left her Hindu husband who had kept her at
Rd nandgaon and came a1·1ay to Ru ipur along with the little
girl '!1 1 u.nd started selling vegetables at the Gole Bazar.
Here she came in con~act with a Muslim young man by name 'R'
who hc..d been a previous convict and a known railway thief.
She married this Muslim man and started living with him a~blJ!:\Y• '.'"
with the little girl. In due course, the girl flowered into
youth where-upon the mother of the girl and her muslim·husband_
started thinking how to make the most of it;
A mention \·lill not be out of place regarding the mother
of the girl, who seems to have no inhibitions about sex and
considers it as any human activity like drinking, eating, etc.
Her physical features and particularly her facial wrinkles
give her out as a woman of vrcry cheap and mean morality. At
a very early age, 'H' developed consciousness about the sale
of sex and knev< what v<as seYll.al intercourse. Probably she
heed seen her mother and her visitors in compromising posture
and engaged in intimate talk, vulgar and passionate language.
For defloring the maiden hood of her daughter, she
started bargaining with a fe\v Hell-to-do lovers of female
flesh and ultimately struck the bargain with a Bohra Muslim
Seth. On the appointed day and time, she took her daughter
in a ricksha,.,, dressed in the nicest clothes to a room at the
back o:': the shop of the seth. She sat out while her daughter
had the first and the devastating sex assault amid shrieks
and cries to be foll01ved by a prcosentation ot rupees one :-
thou8and. This •vas the beginning and there were many repeti;.
tions of that. With the help ot hotel bearers she started
visiting hotels and lod9es like 'P.L', 's.L', 'V.L' and would
get a sum of rup<.~es fifty to hundred in return of a few minutes'
com~any provided to the highly paid representatives of medical
ilnd other companies who stayed in the hotels while on tour.
The passengers in the hotel paid more as they got the girls
in their rooms without fear of being cheated or swindled by
primpB and middlemen or losing their reputation by visiting
a common brothel. With her earnings her mother was able to
build a house. She and her husband would sit in the front
running a 'pan' shopR while 'M' would sit inside and enter-
tain the visitor whom they would send in after having obtainec
·the money in advance.
When the police raids on such prostitution dens got
intensified, her fetther and mother took her to Calcutta w~th
a viev< to selling her for a heuvy sum in the prostitution
area. But this could not ma-terialise as before the deal could
be struck, the vigilance vTing o:' Calcutta Police caught the
father and the mother along '•lith the girl suspecting that they
had kidnapped and brought the girl for immoral purposes as by
features, looks, and complexion, she did not appear to be their
daughter. Hoviever on the entreaties of the girl, her father
and mother were let off and all the three come back to Raipur.
The Police onslaught was continuing at Raipur and so they took
the girl to Bombay. They came back after a few weeks staying '
that they had married their daughter to a Muslim who owned a
number of taxis. The fact however is that she is working as
a call girl in Bombay. Every month she sends a substantial sum
'co her mother and father. Now her mother and father do nothing
c;nd are day after day purchasing more aRd more lands and property.
1~1
'M' s case is an instance o:E: :1;ial~l.' int-\ the evil way • '' ' ··.~~ ·: ' Y,:, ~
due to the family back ground and at the active instance of.
the mother who wanted her daughter ·to earn easy money by
selling her body. Regarding her owh s~l.f slte is little
concerned. Being uneducated and having had no intellig~nt
company she has never bothered about the. correctness or
otherwise of her v;ay of life or what .. wil,.l pappen to her when ''1'<''-", : - ,J." '", 'I
she grows old. At the moment, she' El~~$s·t6 .~njoy her life. ':<~!". .
in the company of her patrons, Indian and.lforeign in the poshi
hotels of Bombay, drinks the best wine, eats the best food,
wears tne latest type of clothes and being young enjoys sex
in the company some times of young people v;ho take drugs and
use artificial aids for increased sex pleasure.
CASE STUDY NO.7
studies 7 to 9 are a result of interrogation by a police
party when the subjects were found in the rooms of prostitutes
of Dal Gali area of Raipur. The police had gone there for
usual combing operations during which visitors to prostitutes
who were o:= suspicious nature \'/ere interrogated. aJ.ch raids
are often organised by the local police. · Dlring these a number
of previous convicts and fug·itives from law. are caught. This
is so because, criminals hardly lead a normal life and are ' fl'"• ·l- \, ·--:
often found in the company of prostitut~ beca.se 9ft only that
they satisfy their biological n'-'cessity .of sex ~,.$;,flso provide
them shelter and hiding place from eyes of the police·and
arrange the disposal of stolen property through other persons
who are of dubious character and visit the prostitutes.
A roddsLie Dhaba . lbt(...-.ls o c tris ty·)e RD r on th- na-tional hi?hway from Bombay to Calcutta whic gh Rui~ur. b'Clc h hotels cater r.1ostly to th ... rockwallas th the day and niqht. ~hey Sll')r>ly JTI als, tea and cold drinl':s . ':..'hore are al\vays som~'-' cot., lying in the op""D for customers to r:-.st a'i:tor meals bt=>fore they continue tb~:i.c omvard journey .. Som• times liquor is S':rv~=>d i n the inside rooms as also some \.rom..;n w'lo re ready to give sex company for a little mon~yo
'L.S' aged forty is a truck driver by profession •.
He is illiterate and hales from district Patiala, ~;l~b~ ,. {'- ''
He is married and has thref? children. His family stays in
the village. He is employed in the service of a Motor t
Transport Firm at j3ombay. Through out, he is on the move
while on his job as a truck driver. His work carries him
all over India wherever he is sent with goods. He is a hefty,
tall, young man of thirty five. He drinks cotitry liquor
daily. He also takes opium which according to him helps
him in long distance driving. He has no fixed places for
fooding. He eats food at way-side hotels and has a good
meal every time.
'L.S' feels absolutely no scruples about visiting
prostitutes. He finds no harm in it. He takes no precaution
against disease except that he tries to pass urine soon after
the act. As per his own statement, he has not yet got any
infection of Venereal disease though he has visited prosti-
tutes all over India for example Faras Road of Bombay, G.B.
Road of Delhi, Sonagacchi and Khidirpura of Calcutta, Mahboob-.
ki-Hehandi of Hyderabad, Ganga Jamuna of Nagpur, Ghawri Bazar
of Gwalior, Kinari Bazar of Agra, Chm·tk of ll.Icknow, Howrah
Bridge of Vishakapatnam, BasQri near Taj Mahal at Agra,
Machhli Tola at Kanpur, Kath Bazar at Delhi, Parena in Pathankot
and other such red light areas. Apart from visiting these
known red light are>as, he has haJ affairs with several women
who are provided on the national high ways for little amounts
by the small road side hotelwallas.
153
1L.S' feels somewhat justified in visiting-prostitutes.
He says to enjoy sex is a human necessity and it must be en~
joyed whenever opportuni·ties are available. He says ·that he
is able to visit his wife only once in six months and that
also for a few days and has therefore always to look for other
women for plP.asure. Accordina to 'L.S' the al~ve is the lot -of' ninety five percent of truc'e;: drivers. The truck drivers
eat well, drink well, work well, earn well and so they must
also enjoy well.
If sex satisfaction was available at the house, he and
most of the people of this type would not go to prostitutes.
Hco does feel that prostitution is a dirty thing and bad in
all respects. But he has to resort to it, to keep his nervous
tension relieved. It he do<cs not go to a prostitute for some
time, he feels highly unhappy, heavy in body and heavy in
mind and grows irritant in nature. He hu.s no particular pre-
fc=rence for any particular type of women. Slrely he prefers
fair looking healthy and young l·lOmen.
'L.3 1 s case is a·case of necessity. He goes to prosti-
tut-2s to fulfil his biological needs. It has been seen that
the majority of visitors to prostitutes belong to such types
ot peo,ole like truck drivers, tntck cleam~rs, agents of com-
mc:rciiil firms, etc. who by n,1ture of their occupation have to
be on the move ahmys and as such visit red light areas for
:::;,<tisfaction of their sex n-~eds. Since they have no local
uc(ruaintanc''' and as such no local reputation, there is no danger
:'or th,?m for lov:ering themselves socially in the.;yes of the peopl~
O,SE S~'UDY N0.8
'H.D' caste Sindhi is wor~dng at a shop in Ganj area.
He has been educated upto matriculation. He is aged about
eighteen. He is a young man vlith fairly good looks. He lives
in a joint family and has two elder brothers who are married
and also live \•lith him in the same house. He, his father and
his brothers all,are employed at the shops of others. They
go to the shops in the morning at about eight O'clock and
return at about nine O'clock in the night. During the noon
time, they come home for tvlo hours for lunch and rest.
\.fhen detected by the police in the room of a prostitute
'H.LJ' Has highly nervous. He was shaking and tremblin:g·too
much and begged to be excused and allowed to be left lest any
one came to know of the fact of his having visited a prostitute.
},or 'H.D' this was his first visit to a prostitute.
He never had any sex experience any where. He belongs to a
middle class family of a fairly good social repu·tation. He
was already engaged to a girl of his parent's choice and was
going to be married 1·1ithin about a month 1 s time. He had tried
to learn knowledJe about sex from his friends and some cheap
toot path Hindi Books. Talking to friends and reading the
books made him all the more nervous and have doubts about his
sex ;,:Jotency as he had brcen indulging in self-abuse since
l .. :~t few y·.:ars. 1-i:' i'hld come to .U;:l Ga.li after a lot of de
hlting in his mind anci aftr;r having taken nccessacy precautions
to hide this fact.
155
'H.D's case is a very common ·case amon'g young visitors
to prostitutes. This is possibly uue to the fact that ·there
is no provision for sex education and marriage c(ll!1selling· in
India. l1any young boys like 'H.D' visit prostitutes to have
sex knowledge. l1ore often than not, ·they get infected with
a vile disease. Some times after having succeeded with a
prostitute in the sex act, they are failures on the bridal
!:light since a prostitute si:ands no comparison with a maiden
girl of no previous experience and with all the shyness of a
young bride. In the red light C~rea, the sex act has absolutely
no personal or sentimen·tal back ground. It is only a mechanical
act, done in haste to minimise stay in a prostitute's house
und :run lesser risk of detection. Besides the prostitute
herself is in a hurry to have more customers in little time.
such a sex act thus becomes responsible for maladjustment in
actual life. Thus visit to a prostitute instead of helping
young men towards happy home life results in the opposite of it.
C.:,. SE STUDY NO. 9
•c.K' is a resident of Hodhapara, Raipur. He sells
children's toys m<J.cie o:' paper and clay and thus makes about
four to five rupess per day. <>.
He is married man and has three
children. He is aged about thirty five and knov1s only little
Urdu. He is a previous convict o: five timr-•s. He has been a
pick pocket of the town. As pr=r his own statement, he has
given up criminal life and is now·living honestly.
:t-56
Since his very young boy-hood he had been in bad
company. With his companions he used to do thieving and
picking pockets at railway stations, motor stands, running
trains, 'melas',etc. He learned this trade from his friends.
With his companions he used to move all over the area near
about R;lipur, Nagpur, and Bilaspur. With his friends, he
uo;ed to visit liquor shops and 'madak addas'. From there he
learned all bad hnbits. Even these days he can not live
vlithout having taken some quantity of 'madak' every day.
Along with his friends he also lParned to visit prostitutes.
He has thus been visiting prostitutes for the last t~fifteen
years. After marriage however he has been visiting them less
frequently. But he does visit them off and on. He has old
con'cacts among them. Some times he does not even pay ·them
for an act. He suffers from venereal disease.
'CK' s case is a case o:': a number of such criminals
of dubious character who hover around the red light area.
'rhey com!':lit crimes and either share the booty with prostitutes
for their having given some useful infonnation or for their
help in disposing off the stolen property. such people also
work as touts and bring customers to prostitutes and get
commission from the prostitutes and some times from the
customer also. such people are ahrays found in localities of
ill fame. They stand in readiness to cone to the help of
prostitu::e if any customer mis-behaves or assaults them.
Some time they do the blackmail when they find any person of
157 ...
good reputation visiting a prostitute. Immediately on his
coming out or while he is in the room ·they would accost him
and threaten him ·to part with whatever he has or else they
would tell people in the town about his having come in the
red light area. Some times they vJould cleverly take well-
to-do men to lonely areas or houses in the~ope of getting
them younger and better stuff and there loot them. Persons
of sound reputation like the theif bitten by a serpent while
stealing would not even report the matter to the police out
of shame and thus such a criminal will be further encouraged
in his anti-social activities.
c.;o,SE STUDY NO.lO
'R.L 1 is a Baniya by caste. He is aged about forty.
He is married. for the last twen·ty years. He has three sons
and two daughters. One of his daughters is going to be married
shortly. He has a good business and makes about four to five
thousand rupees a month and some times even rrore. 1 R.L 1 is a ·
very well-to-do man and is a graduate in Commerce.
1 R.L 1 goes to 1 tawaifs 1 who generally sing and dance.
Comparatively, they are better stuff in looks and youth. They
are comparatively cleaner also. 'rhey charge not less than
thirty to forty rupees for a sex act, which they indulge in
after the evening's 'mujra'.
1 H.L' always goes to prostitutPs for sake of variety
in sex enjoymr~nt. The money that he has mak,:s it possible
158
for him to enjoy like this. Even on business when he goes
to places like Bombay, he makes it a point to visit prosti
tutes of all.types and of all communities for the sake of
enjoyment. He has not yet contacted disease.
'R. L 1 s case is a common case of well-to-do persons
v-iith easy money who go to prostitutes for the same of enjoy-:
ment and variety in sex. According to 1 R.L 1 s statement he
enjoys sex more ou·tside his home because his wife who is a
mother of five children has ceased to have sex appeal, is not
prepared to allmv him his sex perversions, and above all, each
time he goes to her, he undergoes the risk of the sixth child
vJhich neither he nor she. wants not due to any financial dif-
ficulties but they do not Hant to shoulder any additional
responsibility and neither are ready for any family planning
precaustionso
C!'.SE STUDY NO.ll
1 P.21 is a lecturer in Physics in a private college of
N2gpur. He is aged thirty five, married since last twelve a.r~d.
years, has three children. His wife who is younger than him
by five years, is quite good looking and an M. sc. His fir&t
sex experience was with a prostitute at the age of twcntytwo,
onP year before marriage. He had gone to a prostitute to
t••st his manlinP.ss since hP. had been given to masturbation
since the age of sixteen. He failed in his attempt \-lith the
prostitute but still then he married. He had failed with his
wife also in the first two attempts but ~ater on succeeded.
He suffers from no perversions. His monthly income is about
Rs. 700/- per month. He has suffered from no specific diseases.
By habit, he is shy and reserved, given to study. Ever since
his first contact with a prostitute at the age of twenty two,
he must have contacted prostitutes about 25 times though
succeeded in having a full act v1ith only one.
He visi-ts prostitutes once in a year or once in many
years since he cannot go to red light area at the place of
his work for loss of social reputation. He visits them only
when he goes out and that also vrhen safe opportunities are
available.
He visits prostitutes for the sake of variety and fur
ther because he is not happy at home. His wife is an over bea
ring type and quarrelsome. There is a quarrel in the house
practically every day. Their natures are not compatible. He
is an introvert, reserved and shy; she is extrovert, social
and mixing. He is not economically Hell off Hhereas she Hants
all the money for her fashionable needs. He is not Hell placed
in society whereas she alv1ays \vants status. She is sexy and
given to self-abu·se. He is not able to bring her to climax
and there is ill feelin<J after each coitus. Thus sex has lost
its >:>lace in their marriage.
OB::it:RVAT10NS
From our study, we fincl that women tum prostitutes to
earn a living, to escape from the domination o: man, to enjoy
.160
sex, to have luxuric=s of life with little labour,· and to
break avray from unhappy homes. On the other hand the persons.
who p<1tronise prostitu·tG .. can 'be divided into three categories~
(a) Men of neurotic or other disturbed personality, who,.are
able to obtain satisfaction only in the particular sexual re
lationshdJp they can have with prostitutes. In this are inclu
ded the possibility of satisfaction of sexual perversions,
having sex without responsibility of giving pleasure to the j
other partner and without incurring the risk of bringing burden
of another child in the family.
(b) Men who are lonely or who are away from hol!le etc. Most
of them want no more·than temporary companionshlp.
\ (c) The acfcrlescents who visit prostitutes to learn the:,~rt;
of sex-technique and to test their manhood. The association
with prostitutes is mc1rked firstly by anonymity since these·
girls have no faces to be recognised and no social st~tus to
be connected. Secondly, association with a prostitute is
only momentary with no future. It i·s like a time-gap cut O'L\t
o:E a man's life in whi,ch nothing haupened. Thirdly, the
association is without significance. The man after the act.
forgets the -vroman and the woman forgets the man, no responsi-
bility attaching to any out-come of the act either in the
torm ot in"':E",ction of disease that u man might get or a child
that the woman might bear. '
RAPIST ANJ? THE RAPED
The accused, a Village Panchayat Munshi working in 2outh Raipur (right ) o.gP-d Sixty, hims 1£ d rand -
father, raped a young woman (1 ft) aq d twenty 4=i e .
Even old uge is no guarunt e -or not commit in s x
(B)~
CASE; .::iTUlJ X NU .J.
.. 61 '1, :.
'B' religion Hindu, aged 16 years, 'das raped on 8th
February 1960. She is medium sized, wheatish in complexion
and has well modulated features. She belonged to a middle
class family, her father was a farrmer and her husband also
is a farmer. She is fair in her looks and has a medium built.
She has studied upto 5th Hindi. She was reped by accused 'HR'.
aged 40 while she was returning after answering call of nature
in the evening time in the lonely farm. She said that the
accused caught hold of her hands, threw her on the ground and
inspite of her cries he climbed over her breast, pulled up her
sari, and then committed sexual intercourse by inserting his
organ in her vagina and she went on crying during the whole
time till he finished in her and left her. During the course
of the act, the accused kept on pressing her mouth with one
of' his hands. He threatened to press her neck if she resisted.
The accused is also of the same caste as the girl and is father
ot tou.r children. He too is afarmer and has a small piece· of
land. He is uneducated. He has no hobbies except his work.
He 'drinks very occasionally. Atter the incident she immediately
reported the matter to the village people who held the Panchayat
and when the accused was not ready to pay the fine of rupees
two thousand which the village panchayat imposed on him, the
' matter was reported to the pol:ice. TJ;lis took tl-to day's time. • 4
The village is situ<ot•"d i•.i: '' :.!i,;l::,nc'· of ten miles. At the
police station Cr.No.12/376 IPc'wa~ registered. The gi~l
was referred _to the medical expert who found no marks of
injuries on her body. There were no eye witnesses. HovJever
on the evidence of the prosecutrix alone the case was chal
laned and in the covrt of law for ''ant of evidence it failed.
The accused on retrospection does feel ·that what he did
,-;as not correct. He feels sorry that he could not control his
desire when he found a highly seductive girl in lonely sur-
roundings. He suddenly lost control and raped her. The
accused is not a previous convict. According to him, he had
no extra-marital sex relations with any one. Be.fore marriage
however like all young men, as he says, he did have sex three,
or four times with a village girl. He has no history of
veneral disease. The incident initially put him in a bad way
with his wife and other relations and villagers. But this is
now a forgot-Een story and his reputcc.tion has no more remained
affected by the above incident. He is leading a normal li~e
both in the family and the village.
The girl felt quite miserable after the incident and -'
remained in a state of shock for days together after the
incident. But this did not and has not aftected her reputa
tion or name as she was innocent and that she had reported
the incident herself even though she wa's not seen by any one.
The above is a common example in the rural ·areas. The
animal sex desire is the motivating facto~. The loneliness
provided by the village environment fa~~iitates the act.
This is a practice of the villagers to refer the case to
Panchayat. The delay so caused results in· obliteration of
whatever circumstantial and medical evidence that can be
available since panchayats take atleast two days and even
more to decide the case. The distance of the Police station
further results in delayed reporting. This leads to further
destruction of evidence and contradictions in the statements
of ·the persons concerned due to the passage of time. The
over-all result is that the police is not able to collect the
cogent evidence to bring the culprit to book. Even when the
case is challaned in the court of law it fails. 'rhe net result
is that the accused and the people of the like-mind further
get encouraged to do such acts.
C.'~SE STUDY NO.2
1 s. B 1 aged 12 years was alleged to have been raped by
one 'P 1 caste satnami aged tv1entyeight years. He gave bventy-
five paisa to her to bring ground nuts and after purchasing.
ground nuts '"hen she brought in, he forifefully dragged her to
the 1 Kabha 1 and after closing the door, he raped her. The
incident took place during evening time. The village is at
the distance of about ten miles from the police station with
a good road. The girl complained of bleeding and physical•
injury. The report having been made within about three hours
of the occurrence, a case was registered at PS Kurud. The girl .~
i
\vas n;ferred to the doctor immedidc:·,ly who found no marks on
the p.d.vate paris nor on any other place of her body.
· .. rt4
D.lring investigation it was found that the report was
a false one. The father of the girl had a quarrel with the
accused over a land diE:pute. The police had alr,~ady filed
complaint against both the parties in the court of SDM Dhamari
for binding them over for maintaining peace. These cases were
under consideration of &tb Divisional Magistrate. The father
had concocted the case by tutoring cleverly his daughter.
The above is not an uncommon case which often fails.
Charges are brought to harass persons for obvious reasons.
In this case the father of the girl being no·t a very clever
man had not gon~ too far. A clever man would have even mana-
ged swelling and physical injuries on the private parts of ;
the girl.
One po·int is made out in this case. In higher commu-
nities, the fact of rape or even an assault is hidden by the
parents as such a case dooms the fate of the girl and no one
\·muld come forward to marry her. But this is not so here.
It can sometimes be concocted here. A rape on a \voman, here
does not essentially bring upon her a stigma to affect her fate
c~sE STUDY NO.3
•s• aged forty five years was raped by Constable 'B' •
's• is married since last t1.>>enty two years. • Her husband is
' older than her by about ten years. She bore two children long
ago and both died in their infancy. She is uneducated. She ' . doe~•not go to temple and does not pray. She has only heard
(
of Ramayan but not known the details. She is well built,
dark in complexion and has a good height.
The incident happened at the house of the complainant
in village Bhalesur. The husband of the woman who was a
village Kotwar had been out of the village for night patro
lling vJhcn ·the constable who happened to visit the village
came to her house and finding her sleeping alone in the dark
nesfl, he raped her. At this juncture, the brother of the
woman happened to come to the house and finding a stranger
on the cot of his si~er, shouted "who was that"'? At this she
cried that she had been raped by the Constable \¥hose name she
did not know. But she could identify him. The matter was
reported at Police Station Kharora. During investigation, it
came out that the woman was already in illegal intimacy \vith
the accused who was young and healthy dnd much younger to her.
On the other hand, her husband •ras her senior by ten years and
due to this, there was not proper compatibility betvreen the
two. She had deliberately not mentioned his name and in t·he
identification parade she very cleverly identified a different
person other than the accused. The result was that the accused
could not be challaned.
The accused denied having comrnitted the crime at all
and alleged that he was falsely implicated because he had
earlier pulled up her Kot<Iar husband for not doing his duties
properly. His statement does not deserve any credence. After
the incident, people in the department have known him to be
a chai-acterless person.
161' ,,
The above case brin'gs out a very clear characteristic
point. Most of the Constables in Chhatisgarh are from U.P.,
Bihar and Rewa side. ~l'his is also true of the other depart-
ments whose members have to live in and visit villages on
government job like a school master, veterinary assistant,
gram sevak, etc. Such employees mostly do not keep their
families with them. Their families are generally left at
their homes to look after their aged parent:s and also to work,
in the fields, Keeping the family away from the place of
vmrk, makes them' sex-hungry. Besides being better bodied,
and more neat and clean in comparison to local people, the
local women also feel attracted towards them, It is heartening
to note that since some years the government have declared a
policy to recruit people of the local area. Besides more
schools and colleges have come up and are still coming up
af,ter the independence of the country, After some time it is
likely that there ,,Jill be no outsiders in the local government
posts, This might help to some extent in minimising the sex
offences,
CriSE STUDY N0,4
'D' aged thirty two years was raped by one 'JL' aged
thirty years resident of Rajnandgaon.
is a healthy woman with a good height and dark complexion and
c,Jrries iS herself straight and broad shouldr:red. She has married
for the third time, Her only sistP.r has married for the second
t67
time. She is fond of seeing pictures. She has not hean!any . . religious discourses. She does not pray. The incident happene(i .
on the night of 6-1-73 in a Dharmashala at Bagbehra. On the
night of occurrence, the accused came to the verandah of
Dnaramshala where she was sleeping Hi·th her husband. The
accused engaged himself in talking 1vith her husband. Her hu.stand
woke up. The accused gave Rs. seven to her husband. Then the
husband continued to sleep in v~randah and the accused took
her in a room of Dharamshala and after ha..:ring clo.sed the door,
he raped her. The chowkidar seeing some mischief raised a ·
cry vlhere upon she gave out a case of rape. Offence was re-
gistered at Police Station Bagbehra. Investigation revealed
that the woman was of loose character and it 1vas a case of
con sen to
The accused is a merchant vJho has a flourishing business.
Be is a married man since last ten years and has two children.
;-Ic is a matricul,'•.V". He often goes for sex-satisfaction out-
side his house for the sake of variety. 1-E finds himself safe
with st-teet walkers rather than going to red-light area where
there is every possibility of being seen by known people who
can spoil his name in the community. Besides, there in the
red-light area, there is the danger 9f being harassed by police
and being looted by goondas and pimps who frequenti~visit such
"laces. 'JL' has visited women for extra-marital relations
so many times. But it is for the first tim<e that he had
bern caught.
The above is a typical case particularly in lower
communities where some husbands though extremely few do not
mind their wives being enjoyed by some other men in return
for some money. The woman has also no objection. It is
well known that a number of women are taken by. some husbands
and relatives to 1 Red;..light areas' of Calcutta and other
places and made to work as prostitutes. These husbands and
relatives live on the earnings of these women. The whole day.
they are away from houses and loiter around, It is only late
in night that they retire to their wife 1 s apartment to leave
again the next morning. In such marriages, there is hardly
anything sacred, living together is only an arrangement of
convenience without any inner feelings of love, affection
or devo·tion. When the women become .. independent and well
settled in their new surroundings, they throw out the hubands
who come back to Chhattisgarh and cany some more women to
the red light area and so the chain conthmc~s. This is how
the immoral traffic in women takes 8lace. Some times for
holidays these women visit their houses and when they are found
at·tired in good clothes and ornaments 'che other girls get
attracted tov;ards their way of lite and also accompany ~hem
to join their protession.
CASE STUDY N0,5
1 K1 aged thirty five was raped by six persons on the
night of 9-4-63, These six persons named 1 B1 , 1 K1 , 1 JKI, 1J3'
I r I I I s I ed hi were ag t rty one, twenty five, thirty, twenty eigh1
thirty and twenty six years respectively. 1 K1 is uneducated;
medium sized, dark complexioned and healthy. She has left
husbands twice in.the past. She has not heard any religious
discourses,
On the night of occurrence, she was sleeping in ·the
house of her husband when one o:t the accused 1SK 1 called her
husband und said ·that Kotwar of 1 Muhalla 1 was calling him·
immediately. Under this pretext,· they brought he·r husband
from the house at a distance from the 1 i3asti 1 • Her husband
was 1 ghe.caoc'd 1 ilnd she was forcibly tal<en away to a lonely
pl0ce Hhereupon she Has raped one after the o·ther. The
of 'ence tvas registered at Police citation Ganj. On investi-
gation of ~he case, it was found to be a true case. The
accllsed tvere challaned in the court of latv and sentenced to
two years 1 rigorous imprisonment. Pach.
':Che above is a c0se of sex crime due to buse animal
cesire. .9.lch accused are ruffians anci men of no means. They
have no fixed vocations in life. They have little attachment
to their families, They are knovm pick 1JOCkets und ar8 of·ten
movin'} from place to ·>lace for plying their trade, They all
are uneducat"cd. They all are previous convicts of theft
cases. All of them are suffering from v. :o. C_I1hrel~ of them are
married but have little attachment for their tvives or children.
They all are given to drinking. I'hey have had innumerable sex
experiences mostly with prostitutes and cheap women. They
have no s+cake in society. They do not care for any bad name
for rape act. They do not feel sorry for "SUCh a behaviour
as ·they claim, they had often been enjoying tli.e company of
:1 7 0 ~'I,
.the woman concerned. Lately however, she had been avoiding
them with a view ·to livi!lg a devoted life with her new hus
band. Once a v1oman has fallen from Virtue, her· former patrons
ulways consider her to be a readily available commodity for
all _times.
CASE STUDY N0.6
'I' aged nine years was raped by one 'M' aged twenty
t>-ro years of the same village. The accused is um,ducated. He
is a farmer by profession. He belongs to a poor family and
ha::; tv1o brothers and two sisters. All ot them are married.
At ·this time of o.:fence, he, the youngest in the family was
not man·ied as his parents vlere not able to pay 'che bride-
price anc; stand the expenditure ot the marriage feast. Being
nut able to marr.!, he was given to visi·ting village prostitutes.
He visited them in a nearby village occasionally and paid
R.,·.two or so for each visit. He had not committed any crime
previously.
On the day of the incident the accused found the girl
alone in the adjacent house. He rap•ed her. On her r·.'eoort the
case was registered at Police Station Dharsiwa. On investi-
gation it was found to be a true case. Medical evidence was
suf:'icient. The case v1as challaned in th,, court of law and
the accused wcs sentenc<~u to tive yPars' rigorous imprisonment.
t7l
on retrospection, the accused seems, sor;rj tor the act.
He had commit·ted rape on a virgin in the belief that this . t .
could cure his veneral disease which he contaced from a loose
'.-loman of <.he village, The incident now forgotten by people
has not aftected the man's reputation in the village. After
relnase trom jail, he came back to village in 1969, married
and hces by now three children, His wife kno\JS the above inci-
dent and his past life. According to him, he is leading a
happy married life.
· Ci\SE STUDY NO, 7
1 G1 aged twenty five was raped by one 'V' resident of
place not knoHn. The incident took place near railway line
by ·the side of ~ Raipur city. As per statement of
the girl she had gone to see a picture in the second show alone
in Raj Kamal Talkies. At the end of the show the culprit took
her forcibly in a 'rickshaw' to a lonely olace by the side of'
Raj a Talab near the railway line.
The girl gave a detailed description of the sex act whicr
-...,omen elsewhec-e _generally cio not give out of shame. She went
to '~he extent of describing how the culprit strretched her legs
~nd forcibly tri~d to insert his urinary orgaon into her urinary
organ and when it could not enter in, he applied saliva to his
organ, 'G' though black in colour has an attractive appearance.
She is uneducated. She is V<!ry much fond of pictures. She
some times drinks. She lost her p~rents in early childhood and
,f1f;2 . ' ~
was later brought up by her mcither1 s sister. Sbe has never. beeh
to school. At the age of sixteen, she was married but soon she~
left her husband as she did not like him.
The husband of her mother's sister was a sweeper by
occupation. They had a one-room hut in Purani Basti. There
was no other child in the house except her since her guardian
bore no children. According to her, she be>came conscious of
sex quite early in life as she had on so many occasions seen
her guardian indulging in it. The husband of her mother's
sister used to drink daily and in drunkness he did not mind
doing any thing. I.E in between if she happened to open her
eyes, her 'mausi 1 would rebuke her and ask her to sleep with
face to the wall. But she got curious and would love to see
everything. This kindled desire in her. And at the age of
t•tJelve, she had her sex experience Hith a sweeper boy behind
the 'nalla' where she had gone for answering call of nature.
The report of the incident having been made, the case
was registered at Police Station Kotwali. On investigation it
1o1as found that the girl was of loose character. Dis-satisfied
hrith her married life, she had left her husband and taken to
street walking for pleasure and profit. ImmC>diacely a::ter her
marriage, she found that her husband's sex u~ges lasted very
li :tle whereas she had enjoyed long >vith ·h=r previous contacts.
He was too hurried and too quick in the sexual act to be sdtis
::ying for her. She had reported the offence after the act
when the culprit had not paid her the bargained amount and had
not even reached her to h<:>r place and ran away. The ace::used
could no·t be traced by the police anel his whereabputs remained. -.'"
unknown and as such he could not be interrogated for the preserit
work.
No respec·table girl would visit: a cinema hall alone in
th~-, second show which is over at midnight. The above is a
typical case o E street walking which a number of girls do both
for pleasure and profit. The customers put them in the cinema
house after having bought them the tickets anci. at the end of
the shmv, take them to some lonely spot. Lack of proper guar-
dianship and opportunity to see sex '"hen she was very young
seems to be responsible for 'G' s free se;{ morals. The multiple
sex exp<eriences she had made her make invidious comparisons and
ruined her marital life.
ChSE S'rUDY N0.8
One '~,, aged thirty years, resident o E Amapara, Ril.ipur
was raped by one 'N' Sindhi of Khopapara. The inci~ent took
plc.1ce in the house of the accused. The accused is aged thirty
years and the woman is twenty five years. She is short sized
and is healthy and has a clean complsxion. Th•~ a-:::cused plies
his trade as a pedlar in the Gol Bazar. He makes about rupees
ten per day o He m~grated from Sind to Rainur in 1947 . . He is
a married man and has three children. The above incident has
v~ry f1l!Ch adversely aHected his name in h.is comnl.lnity. Accor-
ding to him, his comf1llnity people will not fonive him for
years together and he will find it difficult to get a match
for his children when they grew up as they will be known as the
chiJ.dren of a characterless father. He fe<~ls 'sorw and re-..~ '
pentant for his shameless act. 'F' is a labour woman who
s·tands daily at Golebazar and goes along with others for
daily labour for building work, casual labour, etc. There iE
a fixed place at Golebazar where men and wdmen stand to be
engaged to be ·::aken away as labourers. &:>me women apparent"ly
stand for Jabour bu~ actually they sell their flesh. The
accused vJaS allegGd to have taken her to his house under the
pretext of getting his house cleaned but· ins·tead raped her.
He never had any extra-marital affairs earlier. His wife had
gone to her parent:s at Baroda and to:ilcen the children also along.
He felt ·that this \·las the correct timP to hG.ve a spree and so
-took 1 F • home. 'F' is uneducated. She is fond o£ drinl<:s and
good clothes. Her husband is a drunkard and a weaklin0. Though
married for the:> last fifteen years, she had borne no children.
He is a ·~anja' -addict and after years of this addiction, is
now a physL~al vJreck.
She having reported the matter at Police Station Kotwali
an of'ence \'las registered at Crime No,460/376 IPC, On investi-
gation, it was found to be a case of consent in D'oturn for
some money. The woman had reported the case as she h::!-.:1 not
been Daid the full amount as bargainPd, The above is a common
case, Such cases are often reporced by women of loose chara-
cter for obvious reG.sons.
'F' is not concerned about her repu::ation. She has to mak::
money like this for hr.:r livel chood since her husband who is a
casual labourer hardly gives her any money. Whatever he earns.
he spends on smoking . 1 ganj a 1 ••
t75
CASE STUDY NO.9
'C.B' agcod twenty:Eive years residen·t of Jodha para
Dhamtari was raped by two Scrdars. 'CB' is illiterate. She
is tall and hefty, is dark complexioned and dresses herself
neatly. She is fond of films. Her husband is a drunkard
'"nd also goes to other women. The girl was twenty years of
age and the accused Sikhs 1 GS' und 'KS' were aged thirty five
and forty years respectively. On the evenin::; of occurrence
vlhen the woman was returning from work one Sl.rdar forcibly
took her from behind to motor garage where the other Sardar
was ulso waiting. The sardar forcibly thre1v her on ground and
tried to insert forcibly his urinary organ into her urinary
or9an and when he could not succeed in doing so, he tried to
in ·cert his organ in her anus_~ the pain of 1r1hich she could not
bear and so cried bitterly and loudly. There upon oth2 r
people came to the spot £or h!"r c scue. On neoori: having been
made, the offence 1r1as regis·tered at Police Station Dhamtari
and the case was challaned. The case :tailc'd in the court as
the court found it to be not a case of rape but considered it
to be a case o:t ::onsent in lieu of money rec"ived u.nd that r.oport
had been made because the accused was causing her physical pain
during the act. The ac::usf>d are truck drivers. They origi
nally belonged to diso:rict Amritsar in Punjab 1·1hec' they had
their tamilies. Due to the natut:-e of their job, they move all
over India and obviously look for sex-satis'"ac:tion with cheap
money. Since they arr:) moving always ~rom olace to place, they
have no social reput:.tion ate any ;>~rticular place. l'heir
176
present whereabouts being not known, they could not be inter-
roguted for ·the present work.
'CB' mukros her living by making 'bidis'. Her husband
hardly gives her any tl1ing for clothes or food. He is a
drunkurd and a dc,bauch. Whatever he earns, he spends a\vay
on wini! and wom<en. He makes no secret o:E his connection with
other womt::n. •cr-;' fes:ls justified in leading a free life be-
cause in ·this she not only gets easy.money but also enjoys
varied experiences in an advantugeous manner. Her husband
enjoys and gives money; she enjoys and gets money. She urgues
Hhy should she not do it; when her husbund does it. Obviously,
this s•2ems ·to be case of taking rrevenge on her husband.
O~SE STUDY l-JO.lO
1 R.K 1 Hindu aged twenty tvJo an.J a ma-c.riculate H::___ls rc.p~d
by one 'H.J' Mohammedart aged twenty five 1·Iith the activo help
of 'K.IC' daughter ot 'U' serving as a nurse at Saraipalli
. Dispensary.
The incident took place during noon ~t Saraiualli in
the quarter of 'K.K'. The victim 'R.K' had re·ceived training
along >-Jith 'K.K' as a nurse at D.K.Hospital, Rlic;ur. wring
holidays she had come to see her :::riend at Sarui:1al~ i. on
the date of ofEence, the culprit uho <;a:-• ·the brothPr--in-low
of th" locC<l .P.anger wus ::lso tound .o.t tho house ot 'K.K'. They
h-.:.d mr:,uls tog·2the_r. :...c'--~r t'J1<s 'h y I' ~ 1 i i ,.,_,_,_ •. , ~ e ·.e.~ seep ng none
ro:.>m and 'K.K' cJ.os· d the room ::rom all the sides an:J · _ a-:: :usea
177
closed ·the door from inside and raped her. The report having
been made an offence was registered at Police Station Sarai
palli. On investigation the case was challaned in the court·
of law against accused 1 MJ 1 and against abettor 1 ~c•. Both
the accused were convicted, 1 ~1T 1 got four years rigorous·
imprisonment and 1 KK' one year rigorous imp-risonment. On en-
~~iry it was found that 1 KI<' was given to perversions and'
h 1 d h f ' th t When 'R.I<' was s e ove to see ot ers per ormJ.ng e sex ac •
being raped, she was wa·lching from a hole. 1 KIC 1 had known of
this perversion from some hot novels but, had had never earlier
an occusion to see it in actuality. With 1 RK 1 s coming and
1 HJ 1 s presence, she materialised her dream.
'JVD' is a matriculate and a bachelor young man. Being
the only brother of a sister whose husband was posted as a
Ranger, he had received a lot of freedom at Saraipalli where .
he had come in search of a job,
The above is a strange case in which a girl helped in
raping of the other girl, Truth is said to be stranger than
fiction. The author is aware of a case in which the wife
helped her l:)usband to rape· a young girl in her 0\vn presence
because she was carrying and wanted to avoid physical trouble
to herself, This hapDened in Police Station Chunderi of
district Gma where the author was the Slperintendent of Police
CASE SWDY NO,ll
'R' aged about sixteen years caste Raut resident of
vill~ge Kanker was raped by 1UB' constable of PS Kotwali.
The incident took place in the night between 1.00 to
2.00 A.M. The constable who was on patrolling duty saw the
girl standing alone at the motor stand. She had come alone
from Kcinker. Under the pretext of taking her to Kotv1ali for
interrogation, he took her to the lady-talab. On the way he
raped her in a lonely 'Maidan'. The matter was reported and
offence v1as registered at Police Station Kotwali. The accu
sed was challaned but the girl having changed'her statement,
the constable was a::!quitted. The girl had been won over either'
due to threats or lure. The Constable denies having committed
the act but he is obviously telling a lie. He is a person
hailing from district Partabgarh in U.P. The incident has
given him a bad name in the department and the fact of his
being involved in a rape case finds place in his service records.
The above case is a very poor reflection on the conduct
of the police force. ·Such cases often take place and bring a
bad name to the force. Somehow the constable ac·.cused won over
the lvitnesses and the complainant and got the case acquitted.
The author is aware of a case which happened in Police Station
Mahasamund. There was a woman under trj_al who vras alleged to
have a~•cempted to kill hr>r husband. The constable -,;ho was on
sentry duty at the 1 H3.1valat' raped the l>oman insicie. The other
ctccused who '"ere in the at:j<J.cent 1 h<J.~-o•alat 1 hc>cri.n'} some whispers
suggestive" ot sex raised a cry. The offf>nce \vas registered and
che cons•-.able was challaned. The case :.,ilcd in the court of
law. Thereaf~er departmental proceedings were drawn against
constable. These could not make progr·•ss as the woman was
; 179
and inspite of the best efforts of the police to search her,
she could not be contacted.
In view of the above, it is necessary that there
should be more women police in the police force, so that
the women pris~ners and under trials could well be guarded,
so as to avoid incidents of the above type. Even in big
districts as Paipur of thirty two Police stations, there are
only five \vomen police and all of them are posted in the
headquarters in the Reserve Lines, They are rrostly used
at headquarters, and sent out only on requisition from out
side police stations which takes a long time to come and
longer time is further required to comply \-Jith these. There
is one thing more to be seen with regard to women police.
Host of the women police are recruited on compassionate
grounds, being either the widows of police men or the
dependants of the deceased staff, Consequently, their
qualifications or fitness for the post of women constables
is not seen. Obyiously the standard of women-police suffers.
CI\.SE STUDY NO, 12
•c• Telugu and wife of 'N' was raped by the 'L' of
twenty eight years with the active assistance of 'B' wife
of 'J' resident of Bhanpara. 1 C' is the fifth daughter of a
South Indian washerman. She has three brothers. All except
one are married. She is aged sixteen. Her father being old
does not get much work. The brother earns little and lives
separately and gives nothing to the father.
The incident happened at about 10 P.M.in the night.It
180
\voman was coming from cinema on foot, two men follovJed her
dnd forcibly put hElr in a 1 riksha 1 and took hr'r to the house
of th<: main accused. There they tried to rape her. They
drank liquor and wu.nted to rape her and \vhen they rould not
do the act by forcing her, they bit her cheeks with teeth and
even causced burns on her breasts with a hot iron rod. Conse
quently she fell unconscious.
The rr:lport having been made a case \•Jas registered at
Police Station Glnj and both accused were challaned and
convic·t,,d. '.rhe third accused could not be known.
Th'" accused 1 L 1 is a healthy and well-to-do milk man.
He h<-Js nev\~~r been to school. He is fond of good clothes and
drinks. A9ed abou"c thirty, he has not marriea but has fallen
in love \vith a number of Homen, each of 1:Jhom in turn u.fter
having depriv•'d him of a few hundred rupc,es hu::; j iltccd and
left him. He has therefore. developed sadistic ·tendencies
and consicers every women to be wic:i<:e5 who must be chastised.
He some times also suspects his comuarativ'' virility as to ~ -
\•'hy women leave him. And so each tim= vlith a dif.c·.'·rent vroman
he attempts to exhibit his potency.
'rhe o·ther co-accuso'ld woman 1 3 1 in 'tchoce house the
crime took place is an ex-prostitute. H'lving gone old a.nd
unable to c-:>ractise the profession herself, she> lives on th··
·~arnj.ngs of young girls •1hom shQ en;:ices in hc,r house for
nrostitution c'nd tak'S the commission.
The above is a cuse o~ stre<=t v!dlkin] Homan \·:ho hal
willfully accompani-=u the accused. In the ·-irst. ;JL .:e, no ..
181
respectable girl will visit a picture house in the night
alone. Secondly it can not be understood how in busy places
like cinema houses where so many people are around, now can
one threaten a girl to get in a 1 ricksha 1 against her will.
The offence was reported probably because the woman could not
satisfy and bear the perverted sex desires of her customers,
OBSERVATIONS
During the period of ten years i.e. 1960 to 1970 there
were in all one hundred sixty nine cases of rape. This figure
does not really represent the situation and the quantum of
rape-crime. l'lany more rape cases really take place than what
comes to the notice of the police. Se:xual intercourse with
a minor girl with or without her consent, if she is below
sixteen years is also rape. A husband also commits rape on
his wife if she is below fifteen years of age. Such sexual
assaults on wcmen take place frequently in Raipur and else
where in Chhatisgarh. Two conditions facilitate the commission
of rape cases. Firstly,there is the poverty of the people.
When a se:xually aggressive man sees a seductive woman in lonely
surroundings, he lures or forces her into a sexual union. &lch a
sexual union which takes place between a man and wor.1an general!~
is not of woman's free will.But the woman by her ci~stances
virtually forced into it because if she were not to oblige the
man in question who might be her employer either on the field.o:
in the Rice Mill or in the Shop or in GJvt. or Semi-GJvemmental
182
work or in the house hold, she might lose her employment ,, . '
which dUe to her poverty she cam not a·fford to lose. There
are ~~~any unreported cases where the land owner who employs
labour on the field also indulges in sex relations with
the woman labourer as per <Dppertunity either in the field
or in the Godowns where grain stock is kept or at any other
convenient place. The mill owners and their managers are
also known to enjoy sex liberties with the woman-workers
while they work in the mills. The mates, time keepers and
overseers of PWD both in the Buildings and Roads and Irri-
gation are also known to be have sex affairs with the em
ployees at work site or at other convenient places of whieh
there is no dearth. In return of sex, these employers give
concessions to women overlooking their faults just as coming
late for work, leaving early from work, doing work lazily,
etc. More often than not, the employers also pay some thing
in kind or cash to the woman labourer to ensure her silence
and also that she continues to oblige in future. such laisions
though not reported to the police are in fact rape cases as
the consent of women is obtained by putting women in fear or
lure. All these are rape cases though the legal machinery:
cannot take cognizance of it as these cases are not reported
by the women concerned. The second factor which facilitates
the rape case is the ava:llability of the women outside uheir • .. .
houses and their proximity to the men. As stated earlier•
very few women in the lower classes in Ra.ipur district keep
inside homes busying theaselves only in bouse-hold chores.
They work with the -n side by side and 11ake the•selves
YUlnerable fer sex assaults by me.
The second observation we have,,..to ma:ke about rape . . '
oases in Raipur district is tjqe fact that rape cases ·falsify ,.
the notion that lQcal men have weak sex desire. Rape case
is committed by a man who qeaerally has an excess of sex
desire and is n~t able to control himself. Therefore the
rape cases which have been committed by local people show
that they too have a strong animal sex desire. As we have
elsewhere seen, the involvement of outsiders in sex offenceas
is not much.
" The following instances of multiple sex assaults over
helpless women further show the limits of brutal and sensaal
animalism to which the local men of aaipur can also go_ to
satisfy their sex urge •. This also disproves the mischievous
propaganda that women here are over-sexed and available for
the asking. Were it so. why should there have been these
incidents:-
1. crime No.252/1963 u/s 376 1 366 IFC of P.s.Ganj.
On 9-4-1963 at 1015 P.M. a woman aged twenty five years
while she was goiag along with her husband to her home from
the Cinema House six !)ersons got hold of l:ler and took her and "~r
husband in the loaely '.aidan' behind the Central Jail. Five·
of the accused persons ·each tille got hold of her wsband wlaile
the sixth one f&rcibly raped her amidst her cries and shreiks
right in the presence of her bllsband. liar clothes were ton
into shreds and at the end of the bRtal rape by six persons
she was left une0nsciousJ absolllltely naked~ blee:dil!lg from
her private parts and with several injuries aad scratches
all over ner b0dy particularly tne cheeks, the breasts and
the buttocks. Inspite of all efforts of the accused and
the tactics of the defence ·lawyer the case was fully proved
in the Court of Law and all the accused were sentenced to
two years' rigorous imprisonment.
2. Crime No.192/193/1963_ U/s 376 IPC of PS Basna.
On 28-9-1963 at about 2 P.M. two girls aged sixteen
and nineteen respectively were got hold of by two accused
persons aged 30 and 35 respectively. The girls were re
turning rrom the field. The accused persons forcibly.drag
them to the nearby 1Nala 1 and taking off their saris they
tied their hands and put cloth in their mouths so that they
were not able to cry and forcibly committed rape on them.
Unfortunately because of lack of witnesses and contradictions
in the statements of the girls in the face of a_ harassin(jJ
cross examination in the Court of Law the case ended ill the
acquittal and the accused were set free.
3o Cr~ No.13,/1964 U/s 376 IPC of PS Mahasamnnd.
On 28-6-1964 at 10 A.M. a woman while she was returnin9
from the village pond was fercibly taken to a lonely 1 Nala'
and2ped forcibly one after the other by two persons aged
twenty four and twenty fiYe respectively._ Tlaey tltreateaeq
the woman with a 1 !ars&w• and kept the weapoa by the side
while cOIIIlldtting forcible intercourse on her. TJafortunately
l
on accaunt af contradic '_tions in the statements of th!i! woman
in the face of defence lawyer's tactics and due to the abseD<;~: ·
of witnesses, the case ended in acquittal.
4. Crime No.210/1965 U/s 3761 324 IPC of P.S.Bhatapara.
On 20-10-1965 at about 7.30 P.M. a girl aged sixteen
years was raped by fcour persons. The girl who was returning
from a Matinee-Show was waylaid in a lonely hcouse where behind
the closed door and by showiag Rampuri knife each of the
accused committed rape on her one after the other. Here too
the case failed in the Court of Law and the accused were
acquitted due to the lack of sufficient evidence and the
failure of the woman to give cogent and correct statement
in the face of the defence lawyer's harassing tactics.
5. Crime No. 76/1966 U/s 376 IPC of PS Ganj.
On 24-2-1~66 at night a girl aged 12 years only was raped
by four persons named 'R','J','L' and 'D' aged twenty four,
twenty four, twenty three and seventeen respectively. The
girl being so young could not be a willing party to a sex
affair. She was _lured in a lonely house and raped. At the
end of the incident she was found bleeding and unconscious.
Here too the case ended in the acquittal from the Court of
Law as fool proof evidence could not be put up before the
Court to prove guilt of the accused.
6. Crime No.BS/1967 U/s 376 IPC of PS Dhaatari.
On 26-4-1967 at 2 A.M. in the night a wOIIIln while was
sleeping alone in her house. Her l:usband had gone to another
village. She was .raped by four persons. These four perS~ons
effected entry into her house by jumping over the wall and
then forcibly got hold of her and shut her mouth with cloth
and tied her hands with 'gamchha 1 and forcibly committed
rape on her. Early in the morning the neighbours discovered
that she was bleeding and lying unconscious in her room. Her
too the case ended in the acquittal as it was learnt that She
was threatened to give a damaging statement in the Court of
Law and the doctor too in his examination could not give a
clear statement and so the court could not be satisfied aboat
the guilt of the accused.
7. Crime No.75/1967 U/s 376,366,511 IPC of PS Baloda Bazar
On 23-8-1967, one girl who had come from Raipur to go
to her village was waylaid by four persons from the 1Dharmshala 1
where she was staying to go to her village. Four persons aged
40, 34, 25 and 25 respectively forcibly took her to a lonely
field, took otf her clothes and showing her a knife, forcibly
raped her. The case was a very brutal one and in the morning
the girl was lying unconscious in the field with clothes torn
and body nude and scratched. In the Court of Law all the
accused were sentenced to five years• rigorous imprisonment each.
8o Crime No.2/1968 U/s 376 IPC of PS Arang.
On 17-1-1968, at about six P.M. a girl aged 13 years
while she was going for call of nature in the 'Maidan' was
waylaid by two persons aged 16 and 17 years respectively.
She was torcibly tlung on the ground and a piece of cloth
'1:87
put in her mouth lest she cried and both ef the accused
forcibly committed rape on her. In the Court of Law both
the accused persons were only fined Rs.12m/- each and in
·default to go for three months rigorous imprisonment.
9. Crime No.787/1968 u;s 376 1 366, J42 and 304 IPC of PS Ganj,
On 3-11-1968 at about 11 in the night a girl aged
19 years was raped by three persons aged 30, 20 and 25 res
pectively. The girl when she had come out rrom her house
for urination, the accused persons who were standing nearby
got hold or her forcibly and carried her towards a dark
place by the side of the Tank and forcibly committed rape
on her. From the Court of Law all the accused were sentenced
to rigorous imprisonment for four years each.
10. Crime No.827/1968 U/s 3761 342 IPC of PS Ganj.
On 2-11-1968 at 8 P.M. a girl aged 18 years was forcibly
raped by five persons aged 35, 32, 30 1 28 and 25 years respe
ctively. The girl while she was returning trom the second
show was forcibly taken in a 'rickshaw' and taken towards the
Ara:ng Road and on the pond near Shukha Nala she was forcibly
raped by all the five accused persons named above. She had
injuries all over her body. All the accused were convicted
t rom the Court of Law and were sentenced to four years rigo