The Independent on Saturday

Fury over rapes grips India

Ministers struggle to quell unrest

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MOUNTING outrage over two rapes, one in the disputed region of Kashmir and another allegedly involving a politician from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s party, gripped India yesterday, with government ministers struggling to dampen political fires.

Opposition leader Rahul Gandhi held a candlelit vigil at India Gate in New Delhi, the site where thousands of people demonstrat­ed in 2012 against a brutal gang rape in the capital.

“Like millions of Indians, my heart hurts tonight,” Gandhi wrote on Twitter after addressing an estimated 5000 people at Thursday’s midnight vigil. “India simply cannot continue to treat its women the way it does.”

Modi has yet to speak out on the rapes, which have drawn conflicted responses among the lower ranks of his own Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Horrifying details of the alleged gang rape and murder of an 8-year-old Muslim girl, Asifa, in a Hindu-dominated area of Jammu and Kashmir in January, emerged this week from a police charge sheet.

The BJP shares power in the state, where party members joined a rally to show support for eight Hindu men accused of the crime, including a former bureaucrat and four police officers.

“Yet again we’ve failed as a society,” Bollywood actor Akshay Kumar said on Twitter.

“Can’t think straight as more chilling details on little Asifa’s case emerge… her innocent face refuses to leave me. Justice must be served, hard and fast.”

Amid fears the case could escalate unrest in a region where security forces are battling separatist militants, separatist leader Mirwaiz Umar Farooq vowed to launch a protest if any attempt was made to shield culprits.

“It is a criminal act and perpetrato­rs of the crime should be punished,” he added.

Thousands of Kashmiris joined street protests in Srinagar this week, following the death of four protesters in a clash with security forces.

In the crime-ridden northern state of Uttar Pradesh, federal police yesterday began questionin­g a BJP member of the state legislatur­e who is accused of raping a teenage woman in June.

Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, a rising star in the party, asked the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) to take over the case this week after the state’s police were heavily criticised for not acting sooner on the victim’s complaint.

A CBI spokespers­on said the politician, Kuldeep Singh Sengar, was being questioned yesterday, but had not been arrested.

Sengar’s lawyer has said his client was innocent and the case was a conspiracy to harm his political career.

Ministers have insisted that justice will be done no matter who committed the crime, while defending the government’s record on fighting violence against women.

“We are here to safeguard the interest of our daughters, they are the daughters of the nation,” federal minister Mahesh Sharma told reporters on Thursday.

Maneka Gandhi, the minister for women and child developmen­t, said her ministry planned to propose the death penalty for the rape of children younger than 12. The maximum punishment now is life imprisonme­nt.

Responding to the outpouring of national shame and anger after the 2012 New Delhi case, the then Congress-led government tightened laws on crimes against women.

India registered about 40 000 rape cases in 2016, up from 25 000 in 2012, the latest data show. Rights activists say thousands more go unreported because of a perceived stigma.

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? OUTRAGE: A woman wears a bandana with a message, during a protest yesterday organised by the Delhi Commission for Women against the rape of an 8-year-old girl in Kathua, near Jammu, and a teenager in Unnao, Uttar Pradesh state, in New Delhi.
PICTURE: REUTERS OUTRAGE: A woman wears a bandana with a message, during a protest yesterday organised by the Delhi Commission for Women against the rape of an 8-year-old girl in Kathua, near Jammu, and a teenager in Unnao, Uttar Pradesh state, in New Delhi.
 ?? PICTURE: EPA-EFE ?? UNITY: Indian activists show support yesterday for the chairperso­n of the Delhi Commission for Women, Swati Maliwal, who is on a hunger strike against the rapes in Uttar Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, in New Delhi, India.
PICTURE: EPA-EFE UNITY: Indian activists show support yesterday for the chairperso­n of the Delhi Commission for Women, Swati Maliwal, who is on a hunger strike against the rapes in Uttar Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, in New Delhi, India.

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