Goat rape in Haryana prompts PETA India appeal to include bestiality under Sec 377

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A pregnant goat is believed to have been raped by eight drunken men in Haryana on July 25
A pregnant goat is believed to have been raped by eight drunken men in Haryana on July 25

Haryana : Following the reports that eight men allegedly gang-raped a pregnant goat to death in the Mewat town of Nuh in Haryana on July 25, ‘People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals’ (PETA) India has written a letter to Dr Harsh Vardhan, the Minister of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, requesting him to modify The Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (PCA) Act, 1960 and to include bestiality as a legal offence and to introduce stronger penalties for such cruelty to animals.

PETA India has also urged that the Ministry of Home Affairs and the Ministry of Law and Justice retain the criminalisation of beastiality, the sexual assault of an animal by a human being under Section 377 of The Indian Penal Code (IPC) while amending the current wording to decriminalise sexual acts between same-sex partners and between other consenting adults.

Lately, PETA India also worked with Nuh's Superintendent of Police and the Nagina Police Station's Station House Officer to have an FIR registered under Sections 377 and 429 of the IPC and Sections 11(1)(a) and 11(1)(l) of The PCA Act, 1960, against the eight men accused of gang-raping and killing the pregnant goat.

"The fear and pain this goat must have felt during this horrific, depraved assault is hard to comprehend," says PETA India CEO Dr Manilal Valliyate.

He further added, "According to mental-health and law-enforcement authorities, people who commit acts of cruelty to animals often move on to hurting humans. PETA India is demanding that animals remain protected from sexual assault for their sake and for the sake of the community at large."

As PETA India notes in its letter, several recent cases of sexual abuse of animals by humans for which the accused were charged under Section 377 of the IPC signify the need for harsher penalties under The PCA Act, 1960, including the following:

A man in West Bengal was arrested for pulling a stray dog into his house and raping the animal

A security guard was caught for regularly raping a resident female stray dog in a washroom,

Police found video footage of an accused murderer in Kerala committing sexual assault on a goat,

A carpenter in Kerala was arrested by the police for sexually exploiting a dog.

In Madhya Pradesh, two men, ages 25 and 50, were arrested and charged for raping a cow

18-year-old boy from Delhi was charged for committing bestiality with a calf.

PETA India has long struggled to strengthen India's PCA Act, 1960, which contains obsolete penalties, such as a maximum fine of only Rs 50 for first-time offenders.