According to the Death Penalty in India: Annual Statistics 2020 Report by Project 39A of the National Law University, Delhi, of the total death penalties given in 2020, about 65 per cent involved matters of sexual violence. Out of all the “pro-death penalty” arguments, the death penalty advocates find it suitable to legitimize executions to solve sexual violence against women. However, the call for the death penalty in cases of sexual violence against women comes from the realm of political narratives. Time and again, politicians have found it convenient to demand execution for crimes that naturally outrage people. However, nothing solid has been done through the political will to stop these offences. Radhika Radhakrishanan, a women’s rights activist, has previously argued that the State has failed to provide necessities, including public sex education, sensitisation to police officers, and judicial reforms. At the same time, the State has reinforced its patriarchal attitude by taking away life at will. Further, the desperation to hang till death only accounts for the ‘individual failure’ of the rapist and turns a blind eye on the ‘societal failures’. Through the political will of executing a rapist, the onus of making society safer for women is shifted upon individuals, and society is let free of its responsibilities.
The popular belief that the death penalty would cause deterrence and initiate the elimination of rapists from society might not be as simple as it seems. On the contrary, the data from across the world could not conclusively prove that the death penalty does reduce the crime rate, especially rape. However, it does more harm; for instance, the report of 2018 by the National Crime Record Bureau suggests that in rape cases reported, most offenders were known to the victim. According to the data, in around 93.9 per cent of cases of rape, the offenders were known to the victim. At the same time, approximately 56.21 per cent of the total offenders were either family members or friends. This data brings a critical point for consideration — what if a family member commits the rape? The death penalty would be a hurdle in reporting such cases with increased family pressure on the victim. Also, it raises the possibility of increased violence and even murder — as once the offenders anticipate the death penalty as a probable punishment — they may try to avoid themselves getting identified or reported by murdering the victim. Therefore, it seems clear that the death penalty as a punishment may have repercussions and would eventually endanger the idea of victim protection. However, the debate is not limited to the reporting, victim protection, and patriarchal attitude of the State but also encapsulates the agony of the accused and the fallacies of the justice administration system.