Nirbhaya Fund was announced by the Centre in 2013 to support initiatives of the government and NGOs working towards protecting the dignity and ensuring safety of women.
A bench of Justices M B Lokur and P C Pant was told by amicus curiae Indira Jaising in a PIL that every year the government makes budgetary allocation to the fund but the money is hardly used for various schemes.
The counsel appearing for Centre, however, refuted the claim and gave last year's figures saying that out of the Rs 2,195 crore in the fund, 16 proposals amounting to Rs 2,187 crore have been recommended.
Jaising said that the Centre has to create human resource which was the key to the success of the various schemes started with the fund for women's security and to give relief to sexual assault victims.
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The senior advocate, who was appointed amicus curiae in 2015 in a batch of PILs relating to women's safety, said that it was suggested by various petitioners that a national register of sexual offenders should be maintained, but in her point of view it was not desirable as it will affect the right of privacy.
Six petitions were filed in the Supreme Court between 2012 and 2013 after the Nirbhaya gangrape in Delhi on December 16, 2012 raising concerns regarding safety and security of women.
Jaising said that there is no uniformity in victim
compensation among the states as some like Goa pay Rs 10 lakh as compensation while other pay only Rs 50,000.
"There should be a uniform policy by the states to give relief to the victims of sexual crime," she said, noting that in India, women hardly go for civil compensation for a criminal wrong done to them.
She said that some states though have schemes for victim compensation but the payment is not made due to shortage of funds or budgetary allocation.
With regard to criminal justice delivery to the victims of sexual crimes, she said that after December 16, 2012 gangrape case, there was rise in lodging of FIRs for sexual offences but there has been hardly any conviction.
Citing a book, she said, "All sorts of offensive questions are being put to victims during trial and in one case the presiding officer of a court asked the victim to enact the scene of crime committed on her before him.
She said that deterrent punishment needs to be given to sexual offenders and rapists should not be let off by lighter punishment.
"It not that women don't want justice for themself but the criminal justice system is not friendly to them. That's why they drop out of the trial and don't pursue cases," she added.
The apex court had on May 26, last year asked the Centre to formulate a national policy for providing adequate relief to rape survivors as setting up of a separate fund like the Nirbhaya FRund was not enough and amounted to "just a lip service".
It had sought response of the Centre and states on the effective implementation of Section 357(A) of CrPC and status of victim compensation schemes, along with the number of victims of rape who have been compensated.