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Tag: Gang Rape

  • India Gang Rape Convicts Sentenced to Death

    Friday’s decision is death for the four men—Pawan Gupta, Vinay Sharma, Mukesh Singh, Akshay Thakur—convicted of gang raping and murdering a young woman in December 2012 in New Delhi, India. NPR reporters say the announcement by the presiding judge, “took all of 90 seconds.” Reportedly, one of the four sentenced, 20-year-old Vinay Sharma, “shrieked and slumped,” and cheers were heard from those spectators waiting outside.

    The victim’s father stated, “I am very happy our girl has got justice.”

    The judge signed the sentence for the men and then broke the pen he used in half, “symbolizing the hope that he would not have to impose the death penalty again.” There are still appeals that are likely to be filed, and, according to the Associated Press, the Indian High Court has final say in confirming death sentences.

    Defense lawyer A.P. Singh, who has apparently worked with all of the defendants, shouted at the judge, “This is not the victory of truth. But it is the defeat of justice.”

    The other men deemed complicit in the crime are Ram Singh, who hanged himself in prison, and an 18-year-old man who is now serving three years in a reform home, the maximum punishment available as he was a juvenile at the time of the attacks. Ram Singh’s family suspects his death was in fact a murder.

    Though the plight of the victim and others like her is rightly what is calling most of the attention to this story, the convicts’ existence on the lowest rungs of society has also been repeatedly referenced. Mukesh Singh drove the bus where the attacks were committed at times and cleaned it, as did the 18-year-old convicted last August. Thakur also occasionally worked on the bus as a driver’s assistant. Sharma, who worked at a gym as an assistant, is the only one of the group to have a high school diploma.

    [Images via Times of India Facebook.]

  • Four Men Convicted in Rape Case in India

    Four Men Convicted in Rape Case in India

    Following a brutal gang rape and murder in New Delhi that shocked its nation and the world, an Indian court has found the four men accused of carrying out the horrific crimes guilty. Sentencing arguments begin Wednesday, and the four men could receive the death sentence.

    “I convict all of the accused. They have been found guilty of gang rape, unnatural offences, destruction of evidence…and for committing the murder of the helpless victim,” Judge Yogesh Khanna said.

    The gang rape occurred in December of 2012 on a bus in New Delhi. The four men convicted, Vinay Sharma, Akshay Thakur, Pawan Gupta and Mukesh Singh, plus the bus driver and a juvenile, all participated in the gang rape. The victim and her male friend were going to see a movie when the friend was knocked unconscious with an iron rod, and the female was beaten with the rod and repeatedly raped by the other men on the bus. The rapists threw the victim and her friend off the bus some time later, and they were subsequently taken to the hospital.

    The victim survived for 13 days in the hospital following the rape and beating. She was able to write a note to her mother at one point saying, “Mother, I want to live,” but her injuries were too severe. When the victim arrived at the hospital, she only had 5 percent of her intestines, which a doctor said was likely a result of being violated with the rod. Doctors removed the remaining intestines in an attempt to fight off infection. After nearly two weeks of surgeries and other treatments, the woman went into cardiac arrest and died.

    The sheer brutality of the case left New Delhi in an uproar. While the rapists were found and arrested within 24 hours, many are outraged with New Delhi police for not doing a better job of protecting its citizens. New Delhi is called the Rape Capital of the World, and rape occurs every 22 minutes in India.

    As one of the rapists was tried in juvenile court and another hanged himself in jail, only four of the men were convicted in the crimes. Families of the men plan to appeal the decision.

    Following public outrage and protests, India has revised its rape laws. The mandatory sentence for those found guilty of rape was increased from 10 years to 20 years, and if the rape victim dies, the death penalty can be issued. The father of the victim says that he hopes new law will apply here. “If all four are sentenced to death, I can’t imagine anything being better than that…We will get closure,” the father said.

    Image via YouTube

  • India Gang Rape Verdict Met With Outrage

    India Gang Rape Verdict Met With Outrage

    The first verdict in a gang rape trial in New Delhi sentenced a teenager to three years’ detention, and the reaction has been widespread outrage. Protestors outside the court, and the victim’s family, demanded the assailant be hanged.

    The case that resulted in the trial happened in December 2012, when a group of six attacked a 23-year-old female physiotherapy student on a moving bus. The defendant, sentenced Saturday, was 17 at the time of the attacks and was the only under-age member of the gang. The woman died two weeks after the rape from internal injuries inflicted by an iron bar the men wielded. She was accompanied by a male companion who was beaten as well.

    Political change has resulted from the December attacks, prompting nationwide protests that allowed for reforms and longer sentences for adult sex offenders. Now, Sushma Swaraj, who is part of the opposition in the lower house of parliament, is going to work on amending the law to apply to juveniles. Other lawmakers are also posting complaints and appeals.

    Broad Indian press voices the outrage felt by many of the people but three years was the maximum sentence allowable by law. Weekend headlines announced that December’s victim was, “denied justice,” and, “Travesty… ‘gets away’ with murder.”

    The man, who will now serve about 28 months in a juvenile detention center after his eight months served, was reportedly employed to clean the bus where the attack took place. A child rights activist says that he grew up poor and moved to Delhi at 11 years, by himself, gaining employment in menial labor. The remaining four defendants, currently being tried in adult courts, will learn their fate in the next few weeks. Sentences could involve the death penalty. The man believed to have initiated the attacks apparently killed himself in jail.

    While some change in legislation surrounding sex crimes suggests improvements in a country suffering from a violation that is shockingly common, attacks have not abated. Just Saturday evening, a 25-year-old woman was allegedly raped in a suburb of the capital; the perpetrators included two policemen among the total five rapists. Last month, it was a 22-year-old woman photographer on assignment who was gang raped in Mumbai, in an area labeled as upper scale.

    Modernization in the country is shedding light on a debate: are there actually more gang rapes being committed or are we just paying more attention? Experts assert that both are true.

    Women in the country are more independent, coming in increasing contact with male strangers; they are working and stepping out of subservience, to which they were traditionally relegated. Female family members are also more confident in reporting cases of rape.

    Numbers of gang rapes, a long-ignored crisis, are hard to quantify; no reliable statistics exist according to experts. Attacks on women are sadly common, happening often in their own homes, but it was the brutality and the publicizing of the December incident that drew out thousands in the streets of Delhi to express their outrage (as seen in the picture above).

    The attacks are not limited to Indian women, March brought the gang rape of a Swiss bicyclist in central India; in May, an American woman was gang raped in the northern town of Manali. These cases prompted the Tourism Ministry to start a campaign they called I Respect Women.

    A widening gulf between rich and poor is tied by some experts to the cause for the men’s violent acts. Young, poor, uneducated men are looking for a means by which they can prove their dominance in a rapidly changing environment. The men accused in the Mumbai gang rape lived in the slums near the scene of the attack and had little to no education.

    On the positive side, based on the numbers being reported, women are more comfortable speaking out about rape. Cultural stigmas, and apathy and incompetence by officers of the government, made it difficult to report rapes. Ranjana Kumari, a women’s activist with the Center for Social Research, says, “people have lost patience, especially when no justice is served.”

    The aftermath of the attacks for women, traditionally a serious taboo to even consider life afterward, is also changing. The photographer raped in Mumbai made a groundbreaking statement to local media: “rape is not the end of life.” Many rape victims are still considered defiled and are shunned from their homes and places of work. This attitude keeps many women silent, but middle class women are fed up with cases such as that of a 2012 gang rape of a 15-year-old girl by three men. The girl, whose family is among those considered outcasts, has been barred from her school, and her mother was killed because she refused to withdraw a police complaint about the attack.

    [Images via Wikimedia Commons and Twitter.]