Danish Tourist Gang-Raped in New Delhi
NEW DELHI—A 51-year old Danish tourist was gang-raped and robbed near a railway station in the Indian capital late Tuesday, police said, and the latest in a series of brutal sexual assaults in India that is focusing national and international attention on violence against women here.
Police on Wednesday said they had not made any arrests in connection to the attack, which authorities said happened after the woman got lost and stopped to ask directions when returning to her hotel from a museum visit. Indian law prohibits naming rape survivors without their permission. In her complaint, police said, the woman alleged that she was attacked by a group of eight men in central New Delhi.
A few men, who matched the description provided by the woman, were detained for interrogation early Wednesday, police said, but were later released after the woman said they weren't her attackers.
The December 2012 fatal gang rape of a 23-year-old student on a bus in Delhi led to mass protests and sparked an unprecedented reassessment of the treatment of women in the world's largest democracy, resulting in strengthened laws against sex crimes.
But attacks continue. More victims are coming forward to report such crimes, police and women's advocates say. The number of rape complaints filed in Delhi last year was more than double the number of such cases reported in 2012.
On Wednesday, police said the woman assaulted on Tuesday night had been treated at a local hospital and released. They added that she arrived in New Delhi on Monday after a visit to Agra, the home of the Taj Mahal, last week. Danish Ambassador to India, Freddy Svane, declined to comment on Wednesday.
Rapes of Indian women and foreign visitors have dented India's reputation abroad, tarnishing the image of the South Asian nation as a tourist destination.
International tourist arrivals to India last year grew at their slowest pace since the 2008 global economic downturn, rising just 3%, compared with a year earlier. That compares with a nearly 6% annual rise in arrivals in 2012 and a more than 9% jump in 2011.
Tourism is a major source of revenue for the Indian government, contributing about 6% to its economy, according to government for the year through Mar. 2012. A higher number of tourist arrivals would mean an increase in foreign exchange income for the county, which is reeling under a huge current-account deficit.
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NEW DELHI—A 51-year old Danish tourist was gang-raped and robbed near a railway station in the Indian capital late Tuesday, police said, and the latest in a series of brutal sexual assaults in India that is focusing national and international attention on violence against women here.
Police on Wednesday said they had not made any arrests in connection to the attack, which authorities said happened after the woman got lost and stopped to ask directions when returning to her hotel from a museum visit. Indian law prohibits naming rape survivors without their permission. In her complaint, police said, the woman alleged that she was attacked by a group of eight men in central New Delhi.
A few men, who matched the description provided by the woman, were detained for interrogation early Wednesday, police said, but were later released after the woman said they weren't her attackers.
The December 2012 fatal gang rape of a 23-year-old student on a bus in Delhi led to mass protests and sparked an unprecedented reassessment of the treatment of women in the world's largest democracy, resulting in strengthened laws against sex crimes.
But attacks continue. More victims are coming forward to report such crimes, police and women's advocates say. The number of rape complaints filed in Delhi last year was more than double the number of such cases reported in 2012.
On Wednesday, police said the woman assaulted on Tuesday night had been treated at a local hospital and released. They added that she arrived in New Delhi on Monday after a visit to Agra, the home of the Taj Mahal, last week. Danish Ambassador to India, Freddy Svane, declined to comment on Wednesday.
Rapes of Indian women and foreign visitors have dented India's reputation abroad, tarnishing the image of the South Asian nation as a tourist destination.
International tourist arrivals to India last year grew at their slowest pace since the 2008 global economic downturn, rising just 3%, compared with a year earlier. That compares with a nearly 6% annual rise in arrivals in 2012 and a more than 9% jump in 2011.
Tourism is a major source of revenue for the Indian government, contributing about 6% to its economy, according to government for the year through Mar. 2012. A higher number of tourist arrivals would mean an increase in foreign exchange income for the county, which is reeling under a huge current-account deficit.
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%2Fonline.wsj.com%2Farticle%2FSB10001424052702303819704579321604264280912.html