Delhi HC grants bail in POCSO case saying accused ‘happily cohabiting’ with the alleged victim

New Delhi, November 4, 2021

THE Delhi High Court has granted bail to a man, accused under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, 2012, saying it is prima facie satisfied that the alleged victim was happily cohabiting with him and raising a family together.
Taking cognisance of the alleged victim’s statement, Justice Subramonium Prasad said she had voluntarily admitted that she had eloped with the accused on her own accord, married him, and has since been “peacefully living” with their two children.
The judge was of the opinion that keeping the accused in custody will drive the woman and the children to starvation and thus directed that the accused be released on bail on a personal bond of INR 5,000 and two sureties of the like amount.
It will not be in the interest of the children to keep the petitioner in custody. There is no danger of the petitioner fleeing from justice. The petitioner and the victim are happily married and they have two children and have been raising a family together is ground enough to release the petitioner on bail, the court said.
This court is prima facie satisfied that the petitioner and the victim were happily cohabiting with each other and raising their family, it noted. The court also considered that the custodial interrogation of the accused was no more required since the chargesheet had been filed and all evidence collected.
The woman’s father, based out of Delhi, had in early 2017 filed a police complaint that she had been kidnapped. She was then 17 years old. In December 2020, the woman telephoned her mother saying she had been married for the last four years and delivered a baby boy three months ago. The information was then passed on to the police, who traced her to Madhya Pradesh, and brought her back to Delhi.
The accused was thereafter arrested pursuant to an FIR for the alleged commission of offences under Sections 363 (punishment for kidnapping), 366 (kidnapping, abducting or inducing woman to compel her marriage, etc.), 376 (rape) of the Indian Penal Code, Sections 4 (punishment for penetrative sexual assault) and 6 (punishment for aggravated penetrative sexual assault) of the POCSO Act read with Section 10 (punishment for solemnising a child marriage) of the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act.