PETA urges Env Ministry to include bestiality as cognisable offence

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

An body has asked the to amend the Prevention of (PCA) Act, 1960 to include "bestiality" as a cognisable offence and introduce stronger penalties for

Bestiality refers to sexual intercourse between a person and an animal.

The demand by comes in the backdrop of recent reports which claimed that eight men gang raped a pregnant goat to death in Mewat town of Nuh in

PETA has shot off a letter to Harsh Vardhan, asking him to amend the PCA Act, 1960 to include bestiality as a cognisable offence.

It has also urged the and the to retain criminalisation of bestiality sexual assault of an animal by a human being under Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) while amending the current wording to decriminalise sexual acts between same-sex partners and between other consenting adults.

Recently, PETA had worked with of Police and station's to get an FIR registered against the eight men.

"The fear and pain this goat must have felt during this horrific, depraved assault is hard to comprehend. According to the mental health and law enforcement authorities, people who commit acts of often move on to hurting humans.

"is demanding that animals remain protected from sexual assault for their sake and for the sake of the community at large," said

In the letter, the body said many recent cases of sexual abuse of animals by humans for which the accused were charged under Section 377 (unnatural offences) of the IPC signified the need for harsher penalties under the PCA Act, 1960.

It said the recent cases include arrest of a man in for allegedly dragging a stray dog into his house and raping it, a caught for regularly raping a resident female stray dog in a washroom, a video footage of a murder accused committing sexual assault on a goat and a arrested by police sexually abusing a dog in

It said in in separate incidents two men, aged 25 years and 50 years, were arrested and charged for raping a cow, and an 18-year-old boy from was charged for committing bestiality with a calf.

In a study of domestic violence victims, 60 per cent of the women said their abusive partners had harmed or killed their dogs or other animals, the added.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, August 01 2018. 17:35 IST