Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Will sleep peacefully tonight, says father

Parents of the victim welcome Supreme Court judgment, say it is gift to their daughter

- Prawesh Lama prawesh.lama@hindustant­imes.com

Asha Devi is happy that her daughter will rest in peace finally. And her husband, Badri Nath Singh, will sleep peacefully on Friday night — four years, four months and 18 days since an evening in 2012 that wrecked the couple’s world. Devi and Singh let out sighs and tears when the Supreme Court ruled on Friday afternoon that the four rapist-murderers of their daughter will hang to death.

NEW DELHI : At 2.20pm on Friday when the court upheld the death sentence of the four convicts in the Delhi 2012 gang-rape case, the mother of the 23-year-old victim said she was happy with the verdict.

“We have got justice,” said the mother.

Hours before the verdict, HT had spoken to the mother who demanded death penalty for the perpetrato­rs of the brutality on her daughter.

“The court must sentence them to death. We won’t settle for life imprisonme­nt. I am alive and kept myself strong only to see this day,” the mother had told HT over phone on Thursday night.

“No, I won’t visit any temple. My fight against them is my religion and duty. I will go to court and pray that they are hanged,” she had said.

The 23-year-old physiother­apy intern would have turned 28 on May 10.

On the evening of December 16, 2012, the young woman was returning home after watching a film — Life of Pi — with her friend when she was raped by six men and thrown off the bus.

The woman died of her injuries at a Singapore hospital on December 29.The SC announced the verdict exactly four years, four months and eighteen days since the evening of 2012.

The four convicts Pawan Gupta, Vinay Kumar, Akshay Thakur and Mukesh Singh had challenged the death sentence awarded to them by the Delhi high court.

The father of the young woman Badri Nath Singh said he will sleep peacefully tonight.

“She would have turned 28 on May 10 if she had lived. Today’s verdict is a gift for her,” Singh said.

He, however, rued the delay that the courts had taken in delivering justice, and wondered about the fate of other rape victims.

“What about justice for others whose cases are pending in courts,” Singh asked.

But the SC verdict, he added, would give a boost to rape survivors seeking justice.

The parents, who have started a “Nirbhaya Jyoti Trust” to help rape victims, also stressed that their daughter should be identified by her name. Sections of the media have called her Nirbhaya, as the law prohibits naming a rape victim.

“Those who commit such crimes should hang their heads, not us,” Singh said.

At times I would feel weak, wanting to give up the fight. But then my daughter’s face would flash in front of my eyes and I would pull myself up. ASHA DEVI, Victim’s mother

DCW welcomes the verdict. This verdict is compared to a tight slap to rapists who think that they can get off even after a heinous crime. SWATI MALIWAL, chairperso­n, Delhi Commission for Women

 ?? PTI ?? Nirbhaya's parents at the Supreme Court in New Delhi on Friday.
PTI Nirbhaya's parents at the Supreme Court in New Delhi on Friday.

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