CAT finds illegality in law against sexual harassment at workplace
Recommends that the Union government take corrective measures
The manner of appointing members to the internal
committees to probe complaints under the Sexual Harassment of Women at
Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013, has been
termed “unconstitutional” by the Central Administrative Tribunal’s (CAT)
Bangalore Bench.
The tribunal said the appointment
process was “biased” as two members of such committees should be
“committed to the cause of women,” and hence “destroys the concept of
fairness” embedded in the process of adjudication.
However,
as tribunals have no power to strike down the law, it has recommended
to the Union government to look into Sections 4 and 7 of the Act, under
which committees are constituted to hear complaints of sexual
harassments, and take corrective steps in compliance with the
Constitution of India.
“If members of the
adjudicatory committee are to be committed to an ideology [cause of
women], their mental frame will be such that it would give an
opportunity for unwelcome bias and their finding also will be in
resonance of their personal commitment,” said a Bench comprising
judicial member K.B. Suresh (as he then was) and administrative member
P.K. Pradhan last week.
“Sections 4 and 7 of the Act
can be termed unconstitutional because once an adjudicatory body is to
be determined as slanted in its sway, it destroys the fairness concept
embedded in adjudication,” said the Bench while dealing with four cases
of dismissal of employees from service by different government agencies
based on the findings of committees on sexual harassment.
Erroneous
The
tribunal said that in all the four cases — related to KIOCL Ltd.,
National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences, Employees State
Insurance Corporation, and the Department of Posts — the employees were
erroneously found “guilty.”
In one of the cases, the
complainant had not even alleged sexual harassment, and in another, a
whistleblower was “targeted” through a few women employees to eliminate
him from service, the tribunal said while pointing at a series of flaws
in the conduct of inquiry proceedings and failure to give chance of
cross examination to the accused employees.
Apparently,
the climate of fear, caused due to public outcry on several incidents
of assault on women, had created a “terror situation’ among senior
echelons of administrative authorities of these agencies, leading to the
dismissal of employees, the tribunal said.
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