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| Subject: Truth serum still an interrogation tool in India despite being labelled 'inhumane' Fri Jul 06, 2012 10:51 pm | |
| It is the sort of scene that belongs in a film noir: an unco-operative suspect being injected with a dose of ''truth serum'' in an attempt to elicit a confession. But some detectives in India still swear by so-called narcoanalysis despite India's highest court ruling that it was not only unreliable but also ''cruel, inhumane and degrading''.
The technique is back in the news after officers from India's Central Bureau of Investigation asked a judge for permission to administer sodium pentothal to a high-profile Indian politician and his financial adviser embroiled in a corruption case. The drug is a barbiturate that acts on the central nervous system, dissolving anxiety, inducing drowsiness and even unconsciousness.
CBI investigators made the application in order to try to prove embezzlement allegations against Jagan Mohan Reddy, the charismatic son of Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy, the former chief minister of Andhra Pradesh in southern India, who died in a mysterious helicopter crash in 2009. They argue that the technique is warranted because neither Mr Reddy nor his auditor are co-operating with the inquiry.
Mr Reddy has protested vehemently against the use of narcoanalysis on the grounds that a Supreme Court ruling in 2010 held that such tests are illegal without consent from the individuals. Advertisement
But the chairman of the Truth Lab, India's first independent forensic service, Gandhi P.C. Kaza, said that despite narcoanalysis being ''unscientific, undemocratic, illegal and inhumane'', it was still used with enthusiasm in certain Indian states - notably Gujarat and Karnataka. He condemned the practice, saying it had ''no place in the world's greatest democracy''.
There are no official figures for the number of suspects who have been subjected to narcoanalysis, but the deputy director at the Directorate of Forensic Sciences, Gandhinagar, in Gujarat, western India, V.H. Patel, said he had personally conducted narcoanalysis in nearly 100 cases. He insisted that the procedure was safe and ethical. ''There is no violence involved. It's a good methodology that helps the investigation,'' he said. ''After all, there has to be justice for the victims.''
Dr Patel said he worked with a team of three scientists to administer the tests, as well as a psychiatrist and an anaesthetist. ''It takes almost a week to test a single person. We conduct various medical tests and interviews with them,'' he said. ''It's an important methodology but we cannot say how accurate it is in the end.''
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/world/truth-serum-still-an-interrogation-tool-in-india-despite-being-labelled-inhumane-20120706-21mg5.html#ixzz1ztwuMRHQ
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