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Lalsuonglien and Ors. v. State of Manipur
RatioProvisions of the POCSO reiterated by the court: The child may have a parent or other trusted person present at the time of testifying and can call for assistance from an interpreter, special educator, or other professional while giving evidence; further, the child is not to be called repeatedly to testify in Court and may…
PincitesPara 2, 15, 17, 19, 22; Page 1, 3, 4
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Sanjay vs. State of Haryana
RatioOnce a child witness, if found competent to depose to the facts and reliable one such evidence could be the basis of conviction. In other words even in the absence of oath, the evidence of a child witness can be considered under Section 118 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 provided that such witness is…
PincitesPara 8, 10, 18, 19, 21-24; Page 3, 8, 10
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Raju Roy vs. State of West Bengal
RatioTestimony of a child can only be relied on if it is intelligible. A testimony is intelligible based on (a) the ability to understand questions put to the witness and (b) give answers to those questions that can be understood. If evidence is in the favour of the victim, mere lapses in the victim's statement…
PincitesPara 29-31, 34-37, 39-41, 42-44, 50, 61, 72-75; Page 5-8, 11, 14
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Ranjit Rajbanshi v. The State of West Bengal and Ors.
RatioWhen the prosecution fails to establish a strong preponderance of probability sufficient to raise a presumption under Section 29 POCSO, the negative burden to prove their innocence will not shift to the accused if the defence effectively discredits the prosecution's case, the accused will be discharged of their onus under Section 29 POCSO.
PincitesPara 43, 50, 52, 53; Page 5, 6, 7