Why in News? / Context
- In January 2026, the Supreme Court of India urged the Union Government to consider introducing a “Romeo and Juliet” clause in the POCSO Act, 2012, exempting consensual close-in-age adolescent relationships.
- Courts increasingly confront cases where POCSO is invoked by families opposing inter-caste or inter-faith relationships, transforming consensual adolescent intimacy into statutory rape prosecutions.
- A 2022 Enfold study analysing 7,064 POCSO judgments (2016–2020) found 24.3% cases involved romantic relationships, with 80.2% complaints filed by parents, revealing systemic misuse concerns.
Relevance
GS Paper II – Governance & Social Justice
- POCSO Act, 2012 (strict liability; age <18).
- Section 19 mandatory reporting.
- Intersection with MTP Act, 2021.
GS Paper II – Polity
- Article 21: Privacy & sexual autonomy (Puttaswamy, Navtej).
- Articles 14 & 15: Indirect discrimination concerns.
Mains Practice Question (15 Marks)
- The POCSO Act’s strict age-of-consent framework aims to protect minors but has triggered concerns regarding adolescent autonomy and misuse. Critically examine the need for a “close-in-age” exception in India.
Legal Background
Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, 2012
- Enacted to provide a comprehensive, gender-neutral framework addressing child sexual abuse, pornography, and aggravated penetrative assault, ensuring child-friendly procedures and special courts.
- Defines a “child” as any person below 18 years, criminalising all sexual acts involving minors irrespective of consent, thereby creating strict liability statutory rape framework.
- Provides mandatory minimum sentence of seven years, extendable to life imprisonment for penetrative sexual assault, reflecting zero-tolerance legislative intent.
Age of Consent in India
- For over 70 years, age of consent under IPC was 16 years; raised to 18 years in 2012 with POCSO enactment.
- The Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2013, post-Nirbhaya reforms, retained 18 years as uniform age of consent, consolidating statutory rape doctrine.
- Current framework treats consensual adolescent intimacy identically to exploitative abuse, creating doctrinal tension between protection and autonomy.
Mandatory Reporting under Section 19 POCSO
- Section 19 mandates any person or institution with knowledge of a POCSO offence to report to police; failure punishable with up to six months’ imprisonment, one year for institutional heads.
- Doctors and counsellors legally obligated to report minor sexual activity, even if consensual, creating ethical conflict between confidentiality and legal compliance.
- In September 2022, Supreme Court relaxed disclosure norms, allowing doctors to protect minor’s identity if confidentiality requested, but FIR registration remains mandatory.
Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act, 1971 (Amended 2021)
- Permits termination up to 24 weeks in specified categories, including minors; however, reporting obligations under POCSO complicate confidential reproductive healthcare access.
- Conflict between reproductive rights jurisprudence (Article 21 – dignity and privacy) and mandatory criminal reporting regime creates systemic tension.
Constitutional Dimensions
Right to Privacy and Sexual Autonomy
- In Puttaswamy (2017), Supreme Court recognised privacy as fundamental right under Article 21, encompassing decisional autonomy in intimate matters.
- Navtej Johar (2018) affirmed sexual autonomy and dignity as constitutional values; yet minors remain excluded from consensual autonomy under statutory rape framework.
Equality and Non-Discrimination
- Blanket criminalisation disproportionately affects inter-caste and inter-faith couples, implicating Articles 14 and 15 concerns of indirect discrimination.
- Evidence suggests male adolescents often prosecuted, while female minors categorised as victims, reinforcing gender stereotypes.
Empirical Trends and Social Impact
Romantic Relationship Cases
- Enfold’s 7,064-judgment analysis revealed 24.3% cases were romantic, with 80.2% parental complaints, indicating weaponisation to enforce social conformity.
- High acquittal rates reflect breakdown of prosecution when complainants retract statements, suggesting misuse rather than genuine abuse cases.
Rural and Social Context
- POCSO often invoked in inter-caste relationships, reinforcing entrenched social hierarchies and honour-based familial resistance.
- Adolescents from marginalised backgrounds face greater vulnerability due to limited legal literacy and access to legal representation.
Challenges
- Over-Criminalisation: Age of consent at 18 years criminalises consensual 16–17-year-old relationships, ignoring developmental psychology and normative adolescent behaviour.
- Mandatory Reporting Conflict: Section 19 reporting leads to FIR registration even in consensual cases, undermining confidentiality in reproductive healthcare.
- High Romantic Case Share (24.3%) burdens Special Courts, diverting resources from genuine abuse prosecution.
- Socio-Cultural Weaponisation: 80.2% parental complaints reflect caste and religious opposition rather than child protection imperatives.
- Ambiguity in Close-in-Age Proposal: Supreme Court’s “Romeo and Juliet” suggestion lacks definitional clarity, risking inconsistent interpretation and litigation overload.
Way Forward
- Introduce Statutory Close-in-Age Exception: Exempt consensual relationships where age difference ≤3–5 years and both parties above 16, modelled on comparative jurisdictions.
- Amend Section 19 Reporting Norms: Create conditional reporting exemption for consensual adolescent cases certified by Child Welfare Committees.
- Judicial Screening Mechanism: Mandate preliminary inquiry by Special Courts to distinguish exploitative abuse from consensual relationships before framing charges.
- Strengthen Comprehensive Sexuality Education (CSE) aligned with National Education Policy to equip adolescents with consent literacy and risk awareness.
- Data Transparency Dashboard: Annual publication of POCSO case typology (romantic vs exploitative) to guide evidence-based legislative reform.
Prelims Pointers
- POCSO Act, 2012: Child defined as below 18 years; mandatory reporting under Section 19.
- Age of consent raised to 18 in 2012, retained in Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2013.
- MTP Act 1971 (Amended 2021): Termination permitted up to 24 weeks in specified cases.


