Published on: January 13, 2026

FASTER IS NOT FAIRER IN POCSO CASE CLEARANCE NUMBERS

FASTER IS NOT FAIRER IN POCSO CASE CLEARANCE NUMBERS

NEWS: India has recently achieved a numerical milestone under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act: Fast-track courts disposed of more cases than were registered in a year (109% disposal rate in 2025)

POCSO

  • Enacted in 2012
  • Enacted to protect children (below 18 years) from sexual assault, sexual harassment, and pornography.
  • Defines a child as any person below 18 years and applies irrespective of the gender of the child or offender.

What do the latest numbers show?

Disposal rates have increased

  • Fast-track special courts introduced in 2019
  • Funded via Nirbhaya Fund
  • 5 lakh cases disposed
  • Average 9.5 cases/month per court

Conviction rates have fallen

  • Convictions: 35% (2019) → 29% (2023), Fast-track courts: ~19%

Why are convictions falling despite faster trials?

  • Weak investigations– Rushed police work
  • Overburdened court-High caseloads
  • Lack of child-centric support

Para-Legal Volunteers

  • Act as bridge between: Police, Courts, Child and family
  • PLVs must be appointed at every police station for POCSO cases

systemic problems

  • “Marriage to survivor” logic-Despite Section 6 (aggravated POCSO) being non-compoundable. Leads to forced lifelong abuse and normalisation of sexual violence
  • Delayed compensation: courts usually wait for final verdicts, survivors receive money years later
  • Central argument –Speed without support, investigation quality, and child protection turns justice into paperwork.

What should be done?

  • Strengthen investigation & forensics
  • Ensure PLVs in every police station
  • Appoint and train support persons under Section 39
  • Time-bound forensic lab reporting
  • Shift focus from disposal numbers to justice outcomes