A bench of Justices Dipak Misra and A M Khanwilkar said the 35-year-old woman, being a rape victim, was eligible for compensation under the provision of CrPC and directed Bihar government to pay her Rs three lakh within four weeks.
The apex court also asked the state government to provide her all medical facilities at Patna's Indira Gandhi Institute of Medical Science (IGIMS) as per the treatment chart which would be given to her by the doctors of All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) here.
The report, which was placed before the court, also said that the woman has been advised antiretroviral therapy (ART) to reduce the risk of HIV transmission to the foetus.
"In view of the aforesaid opinion, it is an accepted position at the bar that there cannot be termination of pregnancy," the bench said.
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"The IGIMS shall work in coordination with AIIMS so that the health condition of the petitioner does not deteriorate further," the court said.
The counsel referred to the victim compensation scheme under section 357(A) of the CrPC and said the woman shall be entitled to compensation under the scheme as well.
"Needless to say, the petitioner (woman) is eligible to get compensation under the said scheme (section 357-A of CrPC) and therefore the petitioner shall be paid sum of Rs 3 lakh (by Bihar) as she has been a victim of rape," the bench said.
When Grover said that doctors at AIIMS should give an appropriate treatment graph to the woman, Mehta said it would be given to her by tomorrow.
The bench also granted liberty to the petitioner to file an additional affidavit with regard to other aspects of the compensation within four weeks and asked Bihar to respond to it as well as on the plea filed by her.
The apex court, which as an interim measure stayed the operation of the Patna High Court's order which has been under challenge before it, has fixed the matter for further hearing on August 9.
When the counsel said "yes", the bench shot back, "What right did you have?"
"The question is when the matter was listed before the high court, somebody should have opened the 1971 Act (Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act) and say this is the law," the bench observed.
The apex court had earlier said it would not go into the orders of the high court which had held that the medical board's report has stated that it would be unsafe for the life of the petitioner and there was a compelling responsibility of the state to keep the child alive.
The petitioner had told the apex court that high court had failed to appreciate that the woman was 35 years of age and completely fit to make her own reproductive choices without any interference.
In her plea, the woman said she was a destitute and had come to know about her pregnancy for the first time around the 13th week, and that too after she was rescued by Shanti Kutir, a Women's Rehabilitation Centre, and taken a pregnancy test on January 26.