Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

India's Prevention of Torture Act addresses custodial violence legislatively, but structural gaps in implementation and institutional design suggest legal reform alone cannot eliminate systemic abuse in detention facilities. Independent oversight mechanisms and prosecutorial reform remain essential.
India’s approach to custodial violence has historically treated abuse in detention facilities as isolated incidents—failures of individual officers or temporary lapses in procedure. This analytical framework obscures a more troubling reality: custodial violence operates as a structural feature of India’s incarceration system rather than a deviation from it. The distinction carries significant implications for governance, human security, and India’s standing within the Indo-Pacific rules-based order that emphasizes democratic accountability and rule of law.
Custodial violence in India manifests not as occasional misconduct but as an embedded institutional practice. The Prevention of Torture Act, 2017, represents India’s primary legislative response to this challenge, yet its implementation reveals fundamental gaps between statutory intent and operational reality. Between 2017 and 2023, documented cases of custodial deaths and injuries continued at rates suggesting the legislation functions more as symbolic compliance than substantive deterrent.
The structural nature of this violence stems from several interconnected factors within India’s criminal justice architecture:
The Prevention of Torture Act, 2017 introduced explicit criminalization of torture with sentences up to seven years imprisonment and fines up to ₹500,000. On paper, this represents alignment with India’s international obligations under the Convention Against Torture. However, the legislation contains structural limitations that undermine its protective capacity.
First, the Act defines torture narrowly, requiring proof that violence was inflicted “intentionally” to extract information or confession. This definition excludes custodial violence motivated by punishment, intimidation, or disciplinary purposes—categories that account for substantial portions of documented abuse. Second, the requirement for government authorization before prosecution of police officers creates a gatekeeping mechanism that has demonstrably reduced case filings. Third, the Act does not establish independent custody monitoring mechanisms or mandatory medical examinations—preventive safeguards that exist in jurisdictions with lower custodial violence rates.
Between 2017 and 2023, fewer than 50 prosecutions under the Prevention of Torture Act were initiated nationally, despite documented cases numbering in the hundreds annually according to independent monitoring organizations. This implementation gap suggests legislative reform alone cannot address institutionally embedded practices.
India’s custodial violence problem becomes more analytically visible when compared to jurisdictions that have successfully reduced such abuse. Countries including Sri Lanka, the Philippines, and Indonesia—all facing similar investigative pressures and resource constraints—have implemented institutional mechanisms absent from India’s framework:
These mechanisms operate not as alternatives to investigation but as complementary safeguards that simultaneously enable investigation while constraining coercive practices. Their absence from India’s framework reflects institutional choices rather than resource inevitability.
India’s custodial violence challenge carries implications beyond domestic criminal justice. Within the Indo-Pacific strategic context, India positions itself as a democratic counterweight to authoritarian governance models, particularly within QUAD (Quadrilateral Security Dialogue) frameworks involving Australia, Japan, and the United States. This positioning depends on demonstrable commitment to rule of law, judicial independence, and protection of fundamental rights.
Persistent custodial violence—particularly when legislative responses prove inadequate—creates vulnerabilities in India’s soft power positioning. Peer democracies in the Indo-Pacific region increasingly scrutinize governance indicators beyond military capacity or economic growth. Australia’s own domestic debates regarding police accountability and detention practices reflect regional norms that treat custodial safeguards as markers of institutional legitimacy.
Additionally, custodial violence disproportionately affects marginalized communities—religious minorities, scheduled castes, and economically disadvantaged populations. When state violence concentrates on vulnerable groups, it generates grievances that can be exploited by non-state actors and creates internal security vulnerabilities that undermine broader strategic stability.
Addressing structural custodial violence requires institutional redesign rather than legislative amendment. India’s policymakers face a choice between incremental reform (expanding the Prevention of Torture Act’s definition, increasing penalties) and structural intervention (establishing independent custody oversight, implementing mandatory medical documentation, decentralizing prosecution authority).
Incremental approaches have demonstrably failed. Between 2010 and 2017, prior to the Prevention of Torture Act, numerous legislative proposals and Supreme Court directives attempted to constrain custodial abuse through procedural rules and guidelines. Documented custodial deaths continued at relatively consistent rates, suggesting that procedural rules without institutional enforcement mechanisms lack deterrent capacity.
Structural reform requires political will to redistribute power from executive police agencies to independent oversight bodies. This redistribution encounters institutional resistance because it constrains investigative discretion and creates accountability mechanisms that police departments have historically opposed. However, this resistance reflects institutional interest rather than operational necessity—jurisdictions implementing such mechanisms have not experienced investigative collapse or crime rate increases.
India’s custodial violence challenge will persist at current levels if policy responses remain confined to legislative amendment. The Prevention of Torture Act, 2017 represents acknowledgment of the problem but not its resolution. Structural custodial violence requires structural remedies: independent custody oversight, mandatory medical documentation, video recording of interrogations, and decentralized prosecution authority.
For Australia and other Indo-Pacific democracies engaged with India through strategic partnerships, this challenge presents both diplomatic complexity and opportunity. Publicly criticizing India’s human rights record risks damaging strategic relationships during a period when Indo-Pacific cooperation against geopolitical competitors requires cohesion. However, strategic partnerships between democracies lack credibility when underlying democratic institutions remain compromised.
The substantive question is whether India’s policymakers will implement institutional mechanisms that demonstrably reduce custodial violence, or whether legislative symbolism will substitute for institutional reform. The answer will reveal whether India’s democratic positioning in the Indo-Pacific reflects genuine institutional commitment or rhetorical alignment with democratic norms.