DECRIMINALIZATION OF ATTEMPT TO SUICIDE IN INDIA

Authors

  • Purusothaman G 3rd year BA LLB student, School of Excellence in law Author

Downloads

PlumX DOI based Article Level Metrics

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55662/

Abstract

 In India, attempt to suicide is made punishable under section 309 of Indian Penal Code, 1860. There is always conficts because of judgments given by our Courts about whether right to life includes right to die within the meaning of article 21 of the Constitution of India.There is two kinds of opinion by people  that Article 21 of the Constitution of India is a provision providing Right to life  and personal liberty.  By declaring an attempt to commit suicide a crime, the Indian Penal Code upholds the dignity of human life, because human life is as precious to the State as it is, to its holder and the State cannot turn a blind eye to a person in attempting to kill himself. Another set of people are of the opinion that the Section 309 of Indian Penal Code is cruel and irrational because it provides double punishment for a troubled individual whose deep unhappiness had caused him to try and end his life. It is cruel to inflict additional legal punishment on a person who has already suffered agony and ignominy in his failure to commit suicide.

Readership Data

🌐

Refreshing Cached Analytics Data

The cached analytics data has become stale and journal.thelawbrigade.com is making a fresh request to fetch the latest data from Google Analytics. This may take 20-30 seconds depending on the server response time from Google Analytics. Please do not close the browser during this time. We appreciate your patience.

Citation Metrics

Published

30-04-2018

License

Copyright © 2026 by Purusothaman G

The copyright and license terms mentioned on this page take precedence over any other license terms mentioned on the article full text PDF or any other material associated with the article.

How to Cite

Purusothaman G. “DECRIMINALIZATION OF ATTEMPT TO SUICIDE IN INDIA”. International Journal of Legal Developments & Allied Issues, vol. 4, no. 2, Apr. 2018, pp. 277-85, https://doi.org/10.55662/.

Citations List