The Herald (South Africa)

Delhi rapist puts blame on victim

‘Women must not fight back during rape’

- Colin Freeman

ONE of the group of Indian men convicted of the notorious Delhi gang rape of 2012 has prompted outrage by claiming that his victim was to blame for her brutal sexual assault and murder.

In an interview from jail, Mukesh Singh said that women who went out at night had only themselves to blame if they attracted the attention of gangs.

His victim, Jyoti Singh, 23, was returning from an evening at the cinema with a male friend when the sixstrong gang offered them a lift in a minibus they were driving.

She was raped and beaten with iron bars, prompting widespread demonstrat­ions for Indian women to have greater protection from sexual violence.

In an interview for a BBC documentar­y, Singh also claimed that had Jyoti and her friend not tried to fight back, the gang would not have inflicted the savage beating, which led her to die from her injuries two weeks later.

Describing the killing as an “accident”, he said: “When being raped, she should not fight back. She should just be silent and allow the rape. Then they’d have dropped her off after ‘doing her’, and only hit the boy.”

The interview will be seen by women’s rights groups as compelling evidence of the appalling attitudes shown by many Indian men towards women.

While the Indian courts made a harsh example of the gang, passing death sentences that are now rarely used, campaigner­s say that otherwise not enough has changed.

Singh, who was 26 at the time of the attack, was driving the bus when the abduction occurred.

He denied involvemen­t in the attack itself, but his claims were rejected by the court, which said there was strong DNA evidence against him, and that even if he had not taken part, he should have intervened.

But while the judge said the case had shocked the collective conscience of India, Singh appears to show little remorse.

“You can’t clap with one hand – it takes two hands,” he says in the interview.

“A decent girl won’t roam around at 9 o’clock at night. A girl is far more responsibl­e for rape than a boy.

“Boy and girl are not equal. Housework and housekeepi­ng is for girls, not roaming in discos and bars at night doing wrong things, wearing wrong clothes. About 20% of girls are good.”

Singh, whose death sentence is currently on appeal, also claims that executing him and the other convicted rapists will endanger future rape victims.

“The death penalty will make things even more dangerous for girls,” he says.

“Before, they would rape and say, ‘Leave her, she won’t tell anyone’. Now when they rape, especially the criminal types, they will just kill the girl.” – The Telegraph

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MUKESH SINGH

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