|
Online edition of India's National Newspaper Wednesday, May 03, 2000 |
|
Front Page |
National |
International |
Regional |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Science & Tech |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home |
|
Opinion
| Previous
| Next
Motherhood and mercy
Sir, - I have read with interest your well-balanced Editorial
`Motherhood and mercy' (April 28) touching a highly delicate
socio-legal issue involved in commuting the death sentence
imposed on Nalini. There is some printing mistake in the legal
maxim quoted by you. The correct text is as follows: Justitia
(not `justica') non novit patrem nec matrem, solam veritatem
spectat justitia. The meaning is: Justice knows neither father
nor mother, but regards truth alone.
It is said that women who commit cold-blooded murder are
comparatively more hard-hearted, cruel and daring than men. The
plea of motherhood appears to be no ground for passing lesser
sentence in the case of woman. Where a man and a woman are
jointly charged with an offence, the court may often take the
view that the woman acted under the influence of the man. If both
parties are equally guilty the fact that one of them is a woman
is not an extenuating circumstance, especially when dealing with
an atrocious crime.
It is fundamental that the sex of the offender ought not to be
taken into account in passing the sentence. The only
justification of commutation of sentence passed on Nalini appears
to be that `she was brainwashed and sucked into conspiracy', a
theory which has not been accepted as an extenuating circumstance
by the majority of the Supreme Court Bench.
V. K. Sathyavan Nair,
Kottayam (Kerala)
Sir, - The Latin maxim quoted in the Editorial that ``justice
knows no mother or father'' is applicable only to the rendering
of justice and not to the grant of pardon (mercy). Your Editorial
misses the wood for trees. The right to pardon is derived from
the ``Divine right of Kings'', which is beyond the domain of
justice and truly belongs to the domain of mercy. Mercy is
weighed altogether on a different scale - the lawbooks have no
jurisdiction over it.
The prerogative of pardon conferred on the Governor or the
President in our Constitution is derived from ``the divine
right'' of monarchs and it is to be exercised solely by them. It
is a subjective privilege over which the Council of Ministers
(i.e. the executive) has no role to play. To what nobler cause
can this ``divine mercy' be used than saving an innocent child
from being dumped as an orphan due to the imperious operation of
man-made laws whose severity is being humanised?
A. Kalyanaraman,
Chennai
Sir, - The commutation of death sentence passed on Nalini is
purely a political decision and runs counter to justice. I
disagree with your perception that the issues involved are
complex and have a moral dimension. Criminals of ``an
unmistakably terrorist organisation'' killed Rajiv Gandhi and
others in ``an extraordinary depraved plot.''
The justice delivery system took an unreasonable time and finally
pronounced the verdict. Any misplaced sympathy thereafter would
only weaken the basic fabric of justice and help the anti-social
elements under the garb of politics.
The appeal by Ms. Sonia Gandhi is irrelevant. Motherhood and
mercy are only a mockery. If sympathy is to be extended to the
mother, the same analogy should be applied to the father also and
then extended to all the others. Capital punishment cannot be
dispensed with till the crime graph comes down drastically.
S. Srimoolanathan,
Madurai
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail
|
|
Section : Opinion Previous : Drought & deprivation Next : The Vedic homeland | |
|
Front Page |
National |
International |
Regional |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Science & Tech |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home | |
|
Copyright © 2000 The Hindu Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu |
|