Tuesday, September 10, 2013

2012 Delhi gang rape medical student case

2012 Delhi gang rape case

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2012 Delhi gang rape case
Silent Protest at India Gate.jpg
Protesters at India Gate in Delhi demanding the government to take action after the gang rape
Date16 December 2012
Time9:54 pm IST (UTC+05:30)
LocationDelhi, India
Deaths(female victim) on 29 December 2012
Injuries(male victim)
AccusedRam Singh (committed suicide by hanging in prison cell)
Mukesh Saini
Vinay Sharma
Pawan Gupta
Akshay Thakur
an unnamed juvenile
ChargesRape, murder, kidnapping, robbery, assault[1]
The 2012 Delhi gang rape case involves a rape and murder that occurred on 16 December 2012 in Munirka, a neighbourhood located in the southern part of New Delhi, when a 23-year-old female physiotherapy intern[2] was beaten and gang rapedin a bus in which she was travelling with her male companion. There were six others in the bus, including the driver, all of whom raped the woman. The woman died from her injuries thirteen days later while undergoing emergency treatment in Singapore.[3][4] The incident generated widespread national and international coverage and was condemned by various women's groups, both in India and abroad. Subsequently, public protests against the Government of India and the Government of Delhi for not providing adequate security for women took place in New Delhi, where thousands of protesters clashed with security forces. Similar protests took place in major cities throughout the country.
All the accused were arrested and charged with sexual assault and murder. The accused driver, Ram Singh, died in police custody on 11 March 2013 in the Tihar Jail.[5] According to some published reports, the police say Ram Singh hanged himself, but defence lawyers and his family suspect he was murdered.[6] The rest of the accused went on trial in a fast-track court; the prosecution completed its evidence on 8 July.[7] The juvenile was convicted of rape and murder and given the maximum sentence of three years' imprisonment in a reform facility. On 10 September 2013, the four adult defendants were found guilty of rape and murder. All four men face the death penalty and sentencing is due to begin on 11 September 2013.[8]

Incident[edit source | editbeta]

The victims, a 23-year-old woman and a male friend, were on their way home on the night of 16 December 2012 after watching the filmLife of Pi in Saket in South Delhi.[9][10] They boarded a chartered bus at Munirka for Dwarka that was being driven by joyriders at about 9:30 pm (IST). There were only six others in the bus, including the driver. One of the men, a minor, had called for passengers telling them that the bus was going towards their destination.[3][11] The woman's friend became suspicious when the bus deviated from its normal route and its doors were shut. When he objected, the group of six men already on board, including the driver, taunted the couple, asking what they were doing alone at such a late hour.[12]
When the woman's friend tried to intervene, he was beaten, gagged and knocked unconscious with an iron rod. The men then dragged the woman to the rear of the bus, beating her with the rod and raping her while the bus driver continued to drive. Medical reports later said that the woman suffered serious injuries to her abdomen, intestines and genitals due to the assault, and doctors said that the damage indicated that a blunt object (suspected to be the iron rod) may have been used for penetration.[10] That rod was later described by police as being a rusted, L-shaped implement of the type used as a wheel jack handle.[13] According to the International Business Times, a police spokesman said that the minor was the most brutal attacker and had "sexually abused his victim twice and ripped out her intestines with his bare hands."[14] According to police reports the woman attempted to fight off her assailants, biting three of the attackers and leaving bite marks on the accused men.[15] After the beatings and rape ended, the attackers threw both the victims from the moving bus. Then the bus driver allegedly tried to drive the bus over the woman, but she was pulled aside by her male friend. One of the perpetrators later cleaned the vehicle to remove evidence. Police impounded it the next day.[15][16]
The partially clotheed victims were found on the road by a passerby at around 11 pm (IST). The passerby phoned the Delhi Police, who took the couple to Safdarjung Hospital, where the female victim was given emergency treatment and placed on mechanical ventilation.[17] She was found with injury marks all over her body, and only five percent of her intestines remaining inside of her abdomen. A doctor at the hospital later said that the "rod was inserted into her and it was pulled out with so much force that the act brought out her intestines also. That is probably the only thing that explains such severe damage to her intestines.”[18]

Victims[edit source | editbeta]

The female victim was born and raised in Delhi while her parents were from a small village in the Ballia district of Uttar Pradesh. Her father, who sold his agricultural land to educate her, works for a private company as a loader in Delhi.[19]
Complying with Indian law, the real name of the victim was initially not released to the media, so pseudonyms were used for her by various media houses instead, including Jagruti ("awareness"), Amanat ("treasure"), Nirbhaya ("fearless one"), Damini ("lightning", after the 1993 Hindi film) and Delhi braveheart.[20][21][22][23]
The male victim was 28 years old, from Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh, and lives in Ber Sarai, New Delhi.[24]
Delhi police registered a criminal case against the editor of a Delhi-based tabloid, Mail Today, for disclosing the female victim's identity, as such disclosure is an offence under section 228(A) of Indian Penal Code.[25] Shashi Tharoor, union minister, suggested that if the parents had no objection, her identity could be made public, with a view to showing respect for her courageous response by naming future laws after her, but Tharoor's remark created controversy.[26] Speaking to a British press reporter on 5 January, the victim's father was quoted as saying, “We want the world to know her real name. My daughter didn't do anything wrong, she died while protecting herself. I am proud of her. Revealing her name will give courage to other women who have survived these attacks. They will find strength from my daughter.”[27] The Indian law forbids revealing of the name of a rape victim unless the family agrees to it and following the news article which published the father's reported quote and the victim's name, some news outlets in India, Germany, Australia and the US also revealed her name. However, the following day Zee News quoted the father as saying, "I have only said we won't have any objection if the government uses my daughter's name for a new law for crime against women that is more stringent and better framed than the existing one."[28]

Treatment and death[edit source | editbeta]

On 19 December 2012, the woman underwent her fifth surgery, removing most of her remaining intestine. Doctors reported that she was in "stable but critical" condition.[29] On 21 December, the government appointed a committee of physicians to ensure she received the best medical care.[30] By 25 December, she remained intubated, on life support and in critical condition. Doctors stated that she was running a fever of 102 degrees to 103 degrees and internal bleeding due to sepsis, a severe blood infection that can lead to organ failure, was somewhat controlled. It was reported that she was "stable, conscious and meaningfully communicative".[31]
At a cabinet meeting chaired by Manmohan Singh on 26 December, the decision was made to fly her to Mount Elizabeth Hospital in Singapore for further care. Mount Elizabeth is a multi-organ transplant specialty hospital.[32][33] Some doctors criticized the decision as political, questioning the need to transfer an intensive care unit (ICU) patient for organ transplants that were not scheduled for weeks or even months later.[34][35] Government sources indicate that the Chief Minister of DelhiSheila Dikshit, was personally behind the decision.[36] Hours earlier, Union Minister P. Chidambaram had stated that the woman was not in a condition to move.[37]An anonymous source quoted by The Sunday Guardian stated that the decision to move her was taken "when it was already clear that she would not survive the next 48 hours".[38]
During the six-hour flight by air-ambulance to Singapore on 27 December, the woman suddenly went into a "near collapse", which a later report described as a cardiac arrest.[39] The doctors on the flight created an arterial line to stabilize her, but she had been without pulse and blood pressure for nearly three minutes and never regained consciousness in Singapore.[40]
On 28 December 2012, at 11 am (IST), her condition was "extremely critical". The chief executive officer of the Mount Elizabeth Hospital said that the woman suffered brain damage, pneumonia, and abdominal infection, and that she was "fighting for her life."[39]Her condition continued to deteriorate, and she died at 4:45 am on 29 December, Singapore Standard Time (2:15 am, 29 December,IST; 8:45 pm, 28 December, UTC).[41] Her body was cremated on 30 December in Delhi under high police security. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the country's main opposition party, criticized the high security levels, stating that they were reminiscent of theEmergency Era.[42]

Alleged perpetrators arrested[edit source | editbeta]

Police found and arrested some suspects within 24 hours.[43] From recordings made by a highway CCTV vehicle, a description of the bus, a white charter bus with a name written on it, was broadcast. Other operators identified it as being contracted by a South Delhi private school. They then traced it and found its driver, Ram Singh. Police obtained sketches of the assailants with the help of the male victim, and used a cell phone stolen from the two victims to find one of the assailants.[43]
Six men were arrested in connection with the incident. They included Ram Singh, the bus driver, and his brother, Mukesh Singh, who were both arrested in Rajasthan. Ram and Mukesh Singh lived in Ravidas camp, a slum in South Delhi.[44] Vinay Sharma, an assistant gym instructor, and Pawan Gupta, a fruit seller, were both arrested in Delhi.[45]a seventeen-year-old juvenile from Badayun, Uttar Pradesh,[46][47][48] was arrested at the Anand Vihar terminal in Delhi. The Juvenile had only met the others that day.[48] Akshay Thakur, who had come to Delhi seeking employment, was arrested in Aurangabad.[45][49]
According to reports, the group had been eating and drinking together and "having a party" earlier in the day.[3] Although the charter bus which Ram Singh drove on weekdays was not permitted to pick up public passengers[16] or even to operate in Delhi because of its tinted windows,[50] they decided to take it out "to have some fun".[3] With Mukesh Singh driving, they first picked up a carpenter who was charged Rs. 10 for a ticket and then robbed of Rs. 8,000 and ejected in South Delhi.[50] They then turned back, and a half hour later picked up the couple who were charged Rs. 10 each.
Shortly after the attacks, Gupta said he accepted his guilt and should be hanged.[51][52] Mukesh Singh, who was placed in Tihar Jailafter his arrest, was assaulted by other inmates and was kept in solitary confinement for his own protection.[53]
Ram Singh was presented before the Metropolitan Magistrate on 18 December 2012.[54] He refused to participate in an identification process.[50] On 11 March, Ram Singh was discovered hanging from a ventilator shaft in his cell at about 5:45 am.[55] Authorities said it was unclear whether it was a suicide or a murder.[56][57][58] Investigation revealed a history of frequent drinking that resulted in "blinding rage", "bad temper", and quarrels with employers, that had led friends to call him "mental".[59]

Prosecution[edit source | editbeta]

The male victim testified in court on 19 December 2012.[60] The female victim recorded her statement with a sub-divisional magistrate at the Safdarjung Hospital on 21 December, in the presence of the Deputy Commissioner of police.[61]
On 21 December, the government promised to file the charge sheet quickly and seek the maximum penalty of life imprisonment for the perpetrators.[62] Following public outrage and a demand for a speedy trial and prosecution, on 24 December, the police promised to file the charge sheet within one week.[63] The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs met on 27 December to discuss the issue, and Union Home Secretary R. K. Singh and Delhi Police Commissioner Neeraj Kumar were summoned to appear.[64] At the suggestion of the Delhi Chief Minister, the Delhi High Court approved the creation of five fast-track courts to try rape and sexual assault cases.[65] The first of the five approved fast-track courts was inaugurated on 2 January 2013 by Altamas Kabir, Chief Justice of India, in Saket court complex of South Delhi.[66]
On 21 December 2012, the Delhi High Court reprimanded the Delhi police for being "evasive" in a probe status report providing details of officers on patrol duty in the area covered by the bus route. A further court hearing on the matter was scheduled for 9 January 2013.[67] The following day, the Delhi Police initiated action against three Hauz Khas police station personnel for alleged inaction of an alleged robbery committed by the occupants of the bus in which the gang rape and assault occurred. Just before the gang rape, the accused had robbed a carpenter, Ramadhar, after picking him up in their area.[12] On 24 December, two Assistant Commissioners of Police were suspended for failing to prevent the gang rape incident.[68]

Adult defendants[edit source | editbeta]

Five days after the victim's death, on 3 January 2013, the police filed charges against the five adult men for rape, murder, kidnapping,[69][70] destruction of evidence, and the attempted murder of the woman's male companion.[1] Senior lawyer Dayan Krishnan has been appointed as the special public prosecutor.[71]
Mukesh Singh, Vinay Sharma, Akshay Thakur and Pawan Gupta denied the charges.[72][73] On 10 January, their lawyer, Manohar Lal Sharma, said that the victims are responsible for the assault because they should not have been using public transportation and, as an unmarried couple, they should not have been on the streets at night. He went on to say: "Until today I have not seen a single incident or example of rape with a respected lady. Even an underworld don would not like to touch a girl with respect."[74] He also called the male victim "wholly responsible" for the incident because he "failed in his duty to protect the woman".[74]
The four surviving adult defendants went on trial in a fast-track court. The prosecution presented evidence including witness statements, the victim's statement, fingerprints, DNA testing, and dental modelling. It completed its case on 8 July.[7][75]
On 10 September 2013, the four adult defendants were found guilty of rape, murder, unnatural offenses and destruction of evidence. All four men face the death penalty, and demonstrators outside the courthouse called for the hanging of the defendants.[8][72] The victim's father also called for the defendants to be hanged, stating, "We will get complete closure only if all the accused are wiped off from the face of the earth."[75] Sentencing arguments were scheduled to begin the following day. Lawyers for three of the four stated that their clients intended to appeal the verdict.[72] The lawyers for three of the convicted men[who?] said they would appeal against the convictions.[72]

Juvenile defendant[edit source | editbeta]

In the 33-page charge sheet, the Delhi Police described the juvenile as the most brutal of the six accused.[76][77][78][79] The accused was declared as 17 years and six months old on the day of the crime by the Juvenile Justice Board (JJB), which relied on his birth certificate and school documents. The JJB rejected a police request for a bone ossification (age determination) test for a positive documentation of his age.[80][81][82]
On 28 January, the juvenile was declared to be a juvenile by the JJB. A petition moved by Janata Party president Subramanian Swamy seeking the prosecution of the minor as an adult because of the ghastly nature of his alleged crime was rejected by the JJB.[83][84][85]
The minor was tried separately in a juvenile court. A verdict in the case was scheduled to be announced on 25 July 2013,[86] but was deferred until 5 August[87] and then deferred again to 19 August.[88] On 31 August, the juvenile was convicted of rape and murder under the Juvenile Justice Act and given the maximum sentence of three years' imprisonment in a reform facility which was inclusive of the eight months he spent in remand during the trial.[89]

Public protests[edit source | editbeta]

After the rape[edit source | editbeta]


Protests at Raisina Hill, Rajpath, New Delhi

Police used water cannon and teargas to try and break up the protestors.
Public protests took place in New Delhi on 21 December 2012 at India Gate and Raisina Hill, the latter being the location of both the Parliament of India and Rashtrapati Bhavan, the official residence of the President of India. Thousands of protesters clashed with police, overturned cars, and battled Rapid Action Force units.[90] Demonstrators were lathi charged,[91] shot with water cannon and tear gas shells, and arrested.[92]
Yoga guru Baba Ramdev and former Army chief General Vijay Kumar Singh were among the demonstrators who clashed with Delhi Police at Jantar Mantar.[93] Activist Rajesh Gangwar was on hunger strike for 16 days.[94] The Hindustan Times accused police of using excessive force against the protestors, reporting that 375 tear gas canisters were used at India Gate and elsewhere in Delhi to disperse the crowds.[95] Police stated that peaceful protests had been "hijacked" by hooligans and political activists.[96]
During one protest, a police constable named Subhash Tomar collapsed and later died in hospital.[97] Two witnesses claimed that Tomar collapsed without being hit by any protesters, while a third disputed this.[98] Hospital doctors and the post-mortem gave contradictory reports: he died due to cardiac arrest, but it is not known if the heart attack was caused by blunt-force injuries that he suffered to his chest and neck.[99] Some experts state that his chest injuries may have been a side effect of the administration ofCPR.[100][101] Delhi Police arrested 8 young men and charged them with Tomar's murder and rioting at India Gate. Later in March 2013, the police admitted in the High Court they had no evidence against the eight and gave them a clean chit.[102] Meanwhile the youths have intended they might move the court against the commissioner of police, seeking criminal proceedings against him for his 'irresponsible' move to book them on murder charges in the first place.[103]
Similar protests occurred throughout the country. More than 600 women belonging to various organisations demonstrated inBangalore.[104][105] Thousands of people silently marched in Kolkata.[106] Protests occurred online as well on the social networking sites Facebook and WhatsApp, with users replacing their profile images with a black dot symbol.[107] Tens of thousands signed an online petition protesting the incident.[108]
Protesters believed the Indian government failed to act positively or give credible assurances to the protesters, and instead used police force to stop the protests, resorting to lathi-charging, pushing the media out of the scene and shutting down metro rail stations.[109] Seven metro rail stations in New Delhi were closed on 22 December 2012 to discourage protesters from gathering at Raisina Hill.[110] On 24 December 2012, police blocked roads leading to India Gate and Raisina Hill to prevent possible mass protests, and closed nine metro stations, affecting thousands of transit patrons. News reporters were not allowed to reach India Gate and Raisina Hill. In addition to CrPC section 144, which disallows assembly of groups larger than five, curfew was imposed near the presidential residence.[111]
An author for the South Asia Analysis Group explained the protests as expressions of middle-class angst arising out of a collapse of a social contract between them and the liberal state.[112] Protestors specifically cited the sex crime rate statistics in Delhi, the highest among Indian cities, and more than the next five cities combined.[113] Police figures show a rape reported on average every 18 hours; reported rape cases rose by nearly 17 percent between 2007 and 2011.[114] Between 16 December and 4 January, 501 calls for harassment and 64 calls for rape were recorded by the Delhi Police, but only four were followed up by inquiries.[115] The regional program director for U.N. Women South Asia said, “There are rape cases in almost all cities and rural areas, where the victim dies immediately because of the brutality of the crime ... This time, it was like, 'Wake up.'"[116]
Demonstrations were also held in Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nepal and Sri Lanka. The protests there took inspiration from the Indian protests, but also focused on local issues about rape and domestic violence.[117]

After the death[edit source | editbeta]


People silently marching to protest with candlelight at Salt Lake City in Kolkata after the female victim's death on 29 December 2012.

People in Bangalore protesting outsideBangalore Town Hall on 30 December 2012 demanding justice for the 23-year-old student following her death on 29 December 2012.
After the woman's death on 29 December, protests were staged all over India, including Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore, HyderabadKochiThiruvananthapuramMumbai andVisakhapatnam. Many of the mourners carried candles and wore black dress; some pasted black cloth across their mouths.[118]
The following day a large number of people staged protests near Jantar Mantar, New Delhi.[119] There were minor clashes between some groups of protesters and the police; the police then removed some protesters from the area.[119] One group of protesters also observed a one-day hunger strike at Jantar Mantar.[119] All roads leading to India Gate were closed by police and areas where protesters had gathered during the previous week were out of bounds to the public.[119] Some of the protesters drew graffiti and slogans on papers spread on the road, condemning the incident and demanding stricter laws and speedy judgement.[120] The main opposition party of India, the BJP, renewed its demand for a special parliament session to discuss the case and to adopt stricter laws on crime against women.[42]
New Year's celebrations were scaled down to a large extent, with the Indian armed forces and some clubs and hotels in Delhi cancelling their New Year parties.[121]

Reactions[edit source | editbeta]


Google India's home page on 31 December with a virtual candle in memory of the victim.[122]
Members of the Indian parliament demanded severe punishment for the perpetrators. TheLeader of the Opposition in the Lok SabhaSushma Swaraj, stated: "The rapists should be hanged".[123] Sonia Gandhi visited the Safdarjang Hospital and met doctors on duty in the anaesthesia and surgery departments for an update on the woman's health.[124] Bahujan Samaj Party chief, Mayawati, said that proper investigation was required, and that "action should be so strict that no one should dare to act in such a manner again".[123] Jaya Bachchan said that she was "terribly disturbed" over the incident, and felt "ashamed" sitting in the House, feeling "helpless" for "not being able to do anything".[124] Meira Kumar, Speaker of the Lok Sabha, told reporters a "new law should be brought in and must get passed to ensure the safety of women." She went on to say: "The laws at present are not enough, we need stricter laws."[125][126]
Sheila Dikshit, Chief Minister of Delhi, said that she did not have the courage to meet the victim and described Delhi as a "rape capital" in interviews.[127] She said that senior police officials should be held accountable for the failure to take adequate measures to stop such incidents. Five fast-track courts have been established to process the current cases.[128]
On 24 December 2012, in his first official reaction after the incident, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh appealed for calm, stressing that "violence will serve no purpose". In a televised address, he assured that all possible efforts would be made to ensure the safety of women in India. Singh expressed empathy, saying: "As a father of three daughters I feel as strongly about the incident as each one of you".[129] As a tribute to the female victim, the prime minister cancelled all his official events to celebrate the new year.[130] The Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh, Akhilesh Yadav, announced a package of financial assistance INR2 million (US$31,000) to the family of the woman and offered a government job to a family member.[131] A cabinet meeting presided over by Chief Minister of Delhi, Sheila Dixit, decided to provide financial aid of INR1.5 million (US$23,000) and a government job to one member of the family.[132]
Speaking out against the protesters, president Pranab Mukherjee's son Abhijit Mukherjee argued that the women protesters did not appear to him to be students saying,"What's basically happening in Delhi is a lot like Egypt or elsewhere, where there's something called the Pink Revolution, which has very little connection with ground realities. In India, staging candle-lit marches, going to discotheques...I can see many beautiful women among them – highly dented-painted...[but] I have grave doubts whether they're students..."[133] Spiritual guru Asaram Bapu provoked criticism from the public[134] by saying that the victim was also to blame for her own assault because she could have stopped the attack if she had "chanted God's name and fallen at the feet of the attackers".[135]

International reaction[edit source | editbeta]

The American embassy released a statement on 29 December, offering their condolences to the woman's family and stating "we also recommit ourselves to changing attitudes and ending all forms of gender-based violence, which plagues every country in the world".[136] The female victim was posthumously awarded one of the 2013 International Women of Courage Award of the US State Department. The citation stated that "for millions of Indian women, her personal ordeal, perseverance to fight for justice, and her family’s continued bravery is helping to lift the stigma and vulnerability that drive violence against women."[137]
In Paris, people participated in a march to the Indian embassy where a petition was handed over asking for action to make India safer for women.[138]
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon stated, "Violence against women must never be accepted, never excused, never tolerated. Every girl and woman has the right to be respected, valued and protected".[139] UN Women called on the Government of India and theGovernment of Delhi "to do everything in their power to take up radical reforms, ensure justice and reach out with robust public services to make women's lives more safe and secure".[140]
In the wake of remarks against India in western media, Jessica Valenti, writing in The Nation, argued that such rapes are also common in the United States, but US commentators exhibit a double standard in denying or minimising their systemic nature while simultaneously attacking India for an alleged rape culture.[141] Author and activist Eve Ensler, who organised One Billion Rising, a global campaign to end violence against women and girls, said that the gang rape and murder was a turning point in India and around the world. Ensler said that she had travelled to India at the time of the rape and murder and that after
"having worked every day of my life for the last 15 years on sexual violence, I have never seen anything like that, where sexual violence broke through the consciousness and was on the front page, nine articles in every paper every day, in the center of every discourse, in the center of the college students’ discussions, in the center of any restaurant you went in. And I think what's happened in India, India is really leading the way for the world. It's really broken through. They are actually fast-tracking laws. They are looking at sexual education. They are looking at the bases of patriarchy and masculinity and how all that leads to sexual violence."[142]

Results of protests[edit source | editbeta]

In view of the widespread protests, governments at the centre and various states announced several steps to ensure the safety of women. The Government of Karnataka announced the launch of a 24/7 dedicated helpline (1091) to be operated by the state police to register sexual abuse complaints from women.[143] It also is checking the possibility of setting up fast-track courts to dispose of pending cases pertaining to crime against women.[144] The Government of Tamil Nadu also announced a 13-point action plan to ensure safety of women in Tamil Nadu and said that incidents of sexual assault would be treated as a grave crime and probes would be entrusted to top police officials. The chief minister also said that daily hearings would be conducted in all sexual abuse cases in the state for speedy trials at specially constituted fast-track courts and women prosecutors would be appointed as government counsels.[145] The Jammu and Kashmir government also announced plans to change the state's laws against sexual offences and gender crimes. The Himachal Pradesh government decided to set up state and district-level committees to review progress of all cases of crimes against women.[145]

J S Verma Committee and changes in law[edit source | editbeta]

On 22 December 2012, a judicial committee headed by J. S. Verma, a former Chief Justice of India, was appointed by the Central government to submit a report, within 30 days, to suggest amendments to criminal law to sternly deal with sexual assault cases. The committee urged the public in general and particularly eminent jurists, legal professionals, NGOs, women's groups and civil society to share "their views, knowledge and experience suggesting possible amendments in the criminal and other relevant laws to provide for quicker investigation, prosecution, and trial, and also enhanced punishment for criminals accused of committing sexual assault of an extreme nature against women.".[146] The Committee held its first meeting on 26 December 2012, and it had received more than 6000 emails with suggestions by then.[147] The Committee submitted its report after 29 days, after considering 80,000 suggestions received by them during the period. The report indicated that failures on the part of the government and police were the root cause behind crimes against women. Suggestions in the report included the need to review AFSPA in conflict areas, maximum punishment for rape as life imprisonment and not death penalty, and clear ambiguity over control of Delhi Police.[148][149]
On 26 December 2012, a one-person commission of inquiry headed by former Delhi High Court judge, Usha Mehra, was set up to identify lapses and determine responsibility in relation to the incident. It will also suggest measures to make Delhi and the widerNational Capital Region safer for women.[150] A 13-member special task force headed by Union Home Secretary was constituted on 1 January 2013 to look into safety issues of women in Delhi and review the functioning of the city police on a fortnightly basis.[151]
The Criminal Law (Amendment) Ordinance, 2013 was promulgated by President Pranab Mukherjee, on 3 February 2013 which provides for amendment of Indian Penal CodeIndian Evidence Act, and Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 on laws related to sexual offences.[152][153] The Ordinance provides for death penalty in case of rape. According to Minister of Law and Justice Ashwani Kumar, 90 percent of the suggestions given by the Verma Committee Report were incorporated into the Ordinance.[154]

See also[edit source | editbeta]

Rape cases:
General:

References[edit source | editbeta]

  1. a b Gardiner Harris (3 January 2013). "Murder Charges Are Filed Against 5 Men in New Delhi Gang Rape"The New York Times. Retrieved 3 January 2013.
  2. ^ "IAP condoles death of Delhi gang-rape victim". New Delhi: Zee News. Press Trust of India. 29 December 2012.Archived from the original on 30 December 2012. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  3. a b c d Mandhana, Nikarika; Trivedi, Anjani (18 December 2012). "Indians Outraged by Account of Gang Rape on a Bus"The New York TimesArchived from the original on 30 December 2012. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  4. ^ "Delhi gangrape: Chronology of events"New DelhiThe Hindu. August 31 2013. Retrieved 2 september 2013.
  5. ^ "Delhi gang-rape case accused commits 'suicide'"The Hindu. 11 March 2013. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
  6. ^ "Delhi rape accused found dead in prison". BBC. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
  7. a b "December 16 gang rape: Prosecution finishes evidence"Times of India. Indo-Asian News Service. 8 July 2013. Retrieved 10 July 2013.
  8. a b "Delhi gang-rape case: All four accused convicted, sentencing tomorrow"Times of India. Times of India. 10 September 2013. Retrieved 10 September 2013.
  9. ^ SUZANNAH HILLS (6 January 2013). "Judge bars Delhi gang rape defendants from chaotic courtroom after 150 people cram into space meant for 30". DailMail. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  10. a b "Delhi gangrape victim regains consciousness, next 48 hours critical". First Post. 18 December 2012. Archivedfrom the original on 30 December 2012. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  11. ^ "Delhi gangrape: Accused had tried to mow down braveheart under bus, male friend saved her". 1 January 2013.
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6 comments:

  1. Really very impressive post & glad to read this. Good luck & keep writing such awesome content.
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  2. Hey there, NinjaPundit! 🥷 Just finished diving into your article on the 2012 Delhi gang rape case, and I must say, your insights really got me thinking. Your ability to weave together the facts and emotions surrounding such a sensitive issue is commendable.

    First off, kudos for shedding light on the medical student's perspective. It's a heartbreaking story, and your empathetic approach made the narrative all the more powerful. I appreciated how you delved into the cultural and societal aspects, helping readers like me understand the broader context. It's not just a news piece; you've turned it into a window for us to glimpse into the human side of the tragedy.

    Moreover, your call to action at the end struck a chord with me. It's refreshing to see a writer not just presenting a problem but actively encouraging readers to be part of the solution. It adds a layer of responsibility that's often missing in discussions around such grim topics. Thanks for pushing us to think beyond the headlines and consider our roles in creating a safer, more compassionate world. Looking forward to more thought-provoking reads from you! 🌟certifiedtranslationservicesusa

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