Indian gang-rape victim’s family want killers hanged
INDIA: The family of an Indian gang-rape victim said they
would not rest until her killers are hanged as they spoke of their own
pain and trauma over a crime that has united the country in grief.
As the ruling Congress party reportedly pushed for tougher
punishments for sex crimes, including chemical castration, authorities
in New Delhi launched a hotline to improve safety for women in a city
dubbed “India’s rape capital”.
And while the country returned to work after a weekend marked by
candlelit vigils and street protests following the 23-year-old’s death,
few people were in the mood to celebrate New Year. Even the army ordered
a halt to its festivities.
The woman, whom friends say was planning to marry in February, died
of her injuries on Saturday in a Singapore hospital, nearly two weeks
after being savagely attacked by a group of men on a bus in New Delhi.
She was cremated on Sunday.
In an interview published Monday, her brother said that although the
unidentified medical student could now rest in peace, the family would
not relent in their fight for justice.
“The fight has just begun. We want all the accused hanged and we will
fight for that, till the end,” he told The Indian Express.
Six men are facing murder charges after allegedly luring the woman
onto a bus in New Delhi on December 16, and then taking it in turns to
rape her and assault her with an iron bar before throwing her out of the
moving vehicle.
The man whom she was hoping to marry was also left with serious
injuries after he too was attacked and dumped on the roadside. His
father told the same newspaper that his son would be “in pain throughout
his life”.
The 28-year-old attended the cremation on Sunday and has taken part
in an identification parade for suspects at New Delhi’s Tihar jail,
relatives said.
The young woman’s father also spoke of the impact of the tragedy on
the family, saying her mother was consumed by grief.
“My wife had hardly eaten in the last two weeks,” the father told the
newspaper. AFP
“She was exhausted... I think she was not ready to face the shock of
our daughter’s death, despite doctors always telling us that she was
serious.
She cried intermittently all of Saturday, but it got worse on the
flight back home.” The father, who was also at his daughter’s bedside
when she was pronounced dead in Singapore, said he too was struggling to
accept the news.
“It is too painful. I have not gone inside her room. She was born in
this house. Her books, clothes, they are all here,” he said.
The attack has led to widespread calls for rapists to be executed in
a country where the crime is so commonplace that it rarely gets a
mention in the papers.
India does have the death penalty on its statute book for “the rarest
of rare” crimes although executions are only occasionally carried out.
Mohammed Ajmal Kasab, the only surviving gunman of the 2008 Mumbai
attacks, was hanged last month but it was the first execution for eight
years.
AFP |