The apex court said that administration of justice has to protect the society and it cannot altogether ignore the victim "who has died and cannot cry before it".
The observations came from a bench comprising Justices N V Ramana and P C Pant which partly set aside a Calcutta High Court verdict acquitting a man of the charges of murder in an acid attack case of 1998.
"Usually vitriolage or acid attack has transformed itself as gender based violence. Acid attacks not only cause damage to the physical appearance of its victims but also cause immense psychological trauma, thereby becoming a hurdle in their overall development. Although we have acknowledged the seriousness of the acid attack when we amended our laws in 2013, yet the number of acid attacks are on the rise," Justice Ramana said in his separate judgement.
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Justice Pant, writing the judgement for the bench, said it was almost impossible to come across a single case where the probe was "completely flawless or absolutely foolproof".
"The function of the criminal court is to find out the truth and it is not the correct approach to simply pick up the minor lapses of the investigation and acquit the accused, particularly when the ring of truth is undisturbed," the bench said.
According to the prosecution, Patra had thrown acid on a woman for filing a rape case against him and another co- accused. The woman had succumbed to the burn injuries during her treatment in November 1998.