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India's gang rape problem: A scourge reflecting the country's immense cultural divide

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The vows for change came quickly after the young Indian woman was beaten, gang-raped on a moving bus and finally died in a faraway hospital. No longer, politicians promised, would rape victims be shamed by police. No longer, the judicial system said, would rapists be able to blame their victims.

Thousands of people swept through the streets of New Delhi in spontaneous protests after the December 2012 bus rape, demanding protection for women. The victim became “the daughter of the entire nation,” said Sushma Swaraj, now the country's foreign minister.

Much has changed in the 18 months since then — harsher laws against rape, increased media focus on sexual violence, new police units dedicated to helping women. But a gang rape last week that left two teenage cousins dead, their corpses hanging from a village mango tree, has revealed the immense gulf that remains in India. In a nation that can at times appear convulsed with outrage over a culture of sexual violence, there are plenty of occasions when it seems little has changed at all.

Prominent politicians have been largely silent since last week's rapes, and there have been only a handful of protests, most attracting just a few dozen demonstrators. The largest protest, with about 200 women, occurred Monday, six days after the girls were first reported missing. The case dominated TV news for a day or so, but soon slipped from view.

AN44723204epa04231992%20A%20pic.jpg

Villagers and policemen gathered where two teenage cousins were found hanging from a mango tree in Katra villageThe attack happened in Uttar Pradesh, a sprawling north Indian state with nearly 200 million residents. But when the state's top politician was asked about it, he ridiculed the journalists questioning him.

“Aren't you safe?” Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav demanded of the reporters. “Then why are you worried? What's it to you?”

The comment aroused only a brief flurry of headlines. After all, Yadav's father — Uttar Pradesh's former chief minister, and now head of the state's ruling party — made far blunter comments about gang-rapists last month, arguing against the death penalty for convicted attackers by saying “boys will be boys.”

Some see the lack of anger rooted in the victims' caste. The girls attacked last week were dalits, from the group long known in India as “untouchables,” an overwhelmingly poor and ill-educated community which still faces daily discrimination.

27-IndiaWaterCannon-Reuters.jpg

Supporters of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) protest against the rape and hanging of two girls (REUTERS)While the men accused in the attack were also low-caste, their community — the Yadavs — is politically powerful in Uttar Pradesh.

“It's not a coincidence that the children who were raped and hanged were dalits,” said Ranjana Kumari, one of India's most prominent women's activists and director of the New Delhi-based Center for Social Research.

She believes the rapes may have been political revenge, since few dalits support the ruling party, which is headed by Yadavs. The rapists could have been “attacking the pride of the dalit community.”

But if the response to the rape has been muted, the crime has not been ignored. Amid the brief flurry of media attention, officials arrested two police officers and fired two more for failing to investigate when the father of one victim reported the girls missing. Three suspects, all from an extended family, have been arrested, and police are searching for two more suspects.
india8AP.jpg

And not long after mocking the journalists, the chief minister called on the federal government to have the Central Bureau of Investigation, India's FBI, investigate the attack. He also urged that the suspects be tried in special fast-track courts, bypassing the normal Indian court system, which can take years to issue verdicts in the simplest cases.

His ambivalence, in many ways, reflects the country around him.

A few decades ago, a brutal crime against a pair of dalit girls might never have been investigated, and probably would not make newspaper headlines at all. Until recently rape was widely ignored in India — by the police, the judiciary and the media.

But if middle-class India and the media no longer view rape as an issue to be whispered about, it still remains a crime hidden in deep cultural shadows.

IndiaRapeAP.jpg

Indian policemen stand guard at the District Court complex in New Delhi where a new fast-track court was inaugurated to deal specifically with crimes against women
In 1971, just 2,500 rapes were reported in India. In 2011, that number had jumped to more than 24,000.

But in the world's second-most populous nation, scholars and activists say even the higher number is absurdly small. The stigma of rape runs deep, with many women accused of rape still forced to answer questions about their sexual history, the provocativeness of their clothing and whether they may have invited the attack.

Rape victims can face years of whispers behind their backs. They and their siblings can have trouble finding spouses. Question marks can taint their families for a generation.

As a result, most experts estimate that fewer than one in 10 rapes in India is ever reported.

It's something that even rapists understand.

“They feel that they are not going to be caught,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director of Human Rights Watch. “They feel they will get away with it. That is pretty much the case.”
India's gang rape problem: A scourge reflecting the country's immense cultural divide - Asia - World - The Independent
 
We need some brutal public executions to send a message.

Better governance and not brutal punishments are needed to do the trick. Bihar serves the best example. The worst state for law and order, where rape was endemic has shown a great improvement with better governance.
 
Rape has nothing to do with governance or the rule of the law. It has more to do with the mindset of the male dominated society which has no respect for women.
A rapist does not think about the law or any such thing when he is about to commit rape , rather than blame the govt or police lets try to educate our boys from a young age about how to respect women.
 
Rape has nothing to do with governance or the rule of the law. It has more to do with the mindset of the male dominated society which has no respect for women.
A rapist does not think about the law or any such thing when he is about to commit rape , rather than blame the govt or police lets try to educate our boys from a young age about how to respect women.

This is why I gave the example of Bihar. Sometimes the fear of law supersedes respect (or disrespect) for others.
 
There are countries that have much higher numbers of rape around the world than India actually.. Hell most of the Islamic countries does not even officially recognize domestic rape

But India has this bizarre phenomenon of mass scale gang rape, This socio cultural straight needs to be examined
 
But India has this bizarre phenomenon of mass scale gang rape, This socio cultural straight needs to be examined

Here in India, retards often act in groups, because those fukcing cowards are too afraid of doing their crap alone.... for example mobs attacking women and children over religious issues, mobs attacking couples for holding their hands and celebrating valentines day to "protect" Indian culture etc etc etc
 
Better governance and not brutal punishments are needed to do the trick. Bihar serves the best example. The worst state for law and order, where rape was endemic has shown a great improvement with better governance.

''The good and reasonable must be reasoned with and governed with patience,the rabble must be led with terror''-Napoleon.

There will always be malcontents in society,to keep them in line fear of good government is essential.If they feel they can do anything and get away they will be emboldened and such crimes will multiply.These scum are not only destroying lives of countless women,creating fear among general populace and bad intl image..worst of all it seems like this is becoming a part of day to day culture now.If the threat of law is not enough to deter them,then the fear of it must.Mumbai was cleaned up with encounters,not good governance.Government needs to employ terror doctrine selectively in such cases.Quick cases(within 6 months) ,brutal punishment..and zero tolerance for politically connected accused.A few public lynchings should also send a message..the police will just be let's say 'late' or inactive' in protecting the scum from the public beating to death.
 
''The good and reasonable must be reasoned with and governed with patience,the rabble must be led with terror''-Napoleon.

There will always be malcontents in society,to keep them in line fear of good government is essential.If they feel they can do anything and get away they will be emboldened and such crimes will multiply.These scum are not only destroying lives of countless women,creating fear among general populace and bad intl image..worst of all it seems like this is becoming a part of day to day culture now.If the threat of law is not enough to deter them,then the fear of it must.Mumbai was cleaned up with encounters,not good governance.Government needs to employ terror doctrine selectively in such cases.Quick cases(within 6 months) ,brutal punishment..and zero tolerance for politically connected accused.A few public lynchings should also send a message..the police will just be let's say 'late' or inactive' in protecting the scum from the public beating to death.

There was no change of law in Bihar, just government. It showed result. Unless you say the state is still the same lawless one, I will have faith in current laws.
 
We need to change our judiciary..... These rape cases should be closed with in a year.... and appeals should be considered fast and should be taken only there is merit...... These days you can rape anyone...

I dont understand why these guys cover the face of these culprits, Shaming them in public should be considered.......

Things are soo bad that a judge is also not safe..........
 
The vows for change came quickly after the young Indian woman was beaten, gang-raped on a moving bus and finally died in a faraway hospital. No longer, politicians promised, would rape victims be shamed by police. No longer, the judicial system said, would rapists be able to blame their victims.

Thousands of people swept through the streets of New Delhi in spontaneous protests after the December 2012 bus rape, demanding protection for women. The victim became “the daughter of the entire nation,” said Sushma Swaraj, now the country's foreign minister.

Much has changed in the 18 months since then — harsher laws against rape, increased media focus on sexual violence, new police units dedicated to helping women. But a gang rape last week that left two teenage cousins dead, their corpses hanging from a village mango tree, has revealed the immense gulf that remains in India. In a nation that can at times appear convulsed with outrage over a culture of sexual violence, there are plenty of occasions when it seems little has changed at all.

Prominent politicians have been largely silent since last week's rapes, and there have been only a handful of protests, most attracting just a few dozen demonstrators. The largest protest, with about 200 women, occurred Monday, six days after the girls were first reported missing. The case dominated TV news for a day or so, but soon slipped from view.

AN44723204epa04231992%20A%20pic.jpg

Villagers and policemen gathered where two teenage cousins were found hanging from a mango tree in Katra villageThe attack happened in Uttar Pradesh, a sprawling north Indian state with nearly 200 million residents. But when the state's top politician was asked about it, he ridiculed the journalists questioning him.

“Aren't you safe?” Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav demanded of the reporters. “Then why are you worried? What's it to you?”

The comment aroused only a brief flurry of headlines. After all, Yadav's father — Uttar Pradesh's former chief minister, and now head of the state's ruling party — made far blunter comments about gang-rapists last month, arguing against the death penalty for convicted attackers by saying “boys will be boys.”

Some see the lack of anger rooted in the victims' caste. The girls attacked last week were dalits, from the group long known in India as “untouchables,” an overwhelmingly poor and ill-educated community which still faces daily discrimination.

27-IndiaWaterCannon-Reuters.jpg

Supporters of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) protest against the rape and hanging of two girls (REUTERS)While the men accused in the attack were also low-caste, their community — the Yadavs — is politically powerful in Uttar Pradesh.

“It's not a coincidence that the children who were raped and hanged were dalits,” said Ranjana Kumari, one of India's most prominent women's activists and director of the New Delhi-based Center for Social Research.

She believes the rapes may have been political revenge, since few dalits support the ruling party, which is headed by Yadavs. The rapists could have been “attacking the pride of the dalit community.”

But if the response to the rape has been muted, the crime has not been ignored. Amid the brief flurry of media attention, officials arrested two police officers and fired two more for failing to investigate when the father of one victim reported the girls missing. Three suspects, all from an extended family, have been arrested, and police are searching for two more suspects.
india8AP.jpg

And not long after mocking the journalists, the chief minister called on the federal government to have the Central Bureau of Investigation, India's FBI, investigate the attack. He also urged that the suspects be tried in special fast-track courts, bypassing the normal Indian court system, which can take years to issue verdicts in the simplest cases.

His ambivalence, in many ways, reflects the country around him.

A few decades ago, a brutal crime against a pair of dalit girls might never have been investigated, and probably would not make newspaper headlines at all. Until recently rape was widely ignored in India — by the police, the judiciary and the media.

But if middle-class India and the media no longer view rape as an issue to be whispered about, it still remains a crime hidden in deep cultural shadows.

IndiaRapeAP.jpg

Indian policemen stand guard at the District Court complex in New Delhi where a new fast-track court was inaugurated to deal specifically with crimes against women
In 1971, just 2,500 rapes were reported in India. In 2011, that number had jumped to more than 24,000.

But in the world's second-most populous nation, scholars and activists say even the higher number is absurdly small. The stigma of rape runs deep, with many women accused of rape still forced to answer questions about their sexual history, the provocativeness of their clothing and whether they may have invited the attack.

Rape victims can face years of whispers behind their backs. They and their siblings can have trouble finding spouses. Question marks can taint their families for a generation.

As a result, most experts estimate that fewer than one in 10 rapes in India is ever reported.

It's something that even rapists understand.

“They feel that they are not going to be caught,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director of Human Rights Watch. “They feel they will get away with it. That is pretty much the case.”
India's gang rape problem: A scourge reflecting the country's immense cultural divide - Asia - World - The Independent
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sad truth is ..
-social
women in india is most of the a secondary citizen
most of the life spent in producing children or taking care of familiy..
caste is major roadblock .
caste violence was happning since long time but it getting attention now .
women is major suffers in this violence as they are easy target and give major blow to victim family as whole..
UP /BIhar and some north states have worst crime rates
due to patriachial society to extreme levels combine with caste dominance and reivalry.

- economical
as india is progressing more people getting connected to NEW world .
a sex was no go area for many till 20 plus now with mobile and communication
its easily available ...
as most of the rapes done by 15- 35 age group ..
their sexual behavior resulted in to all this ..

- good side
now as india is in transition phase..
indian society have right prioritizes the women issue in national agenda..
now crime is more stringently coverd by law.. more is needed but still in right way..
indian media making right out cry for the cause ..
indian masses responding well with politician who support KHAP .. even khap changes it stand after centuries for good .

we are not good right now with these maters (you can say worst too) but we will be good if not best as we are right path
but need to incease the speed
cant afford these life to lost for heneous crimes like this

We need to change our judiciary..... These rape cases should be closed with in a year.... and appeals should be considered fast and should be taken only there is merit...... These days you can rape anyone...

I dont understand why these guys cover the face of these culprits, Shaming them in public should be considered.......

Things are soo bad that a judge is also not safe..........
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judicairy is one part.. more needed from society...
law can sentence crime or max minmise the crime but it should be start from society

Naah...too much time , money and patience needed. Seeing how much nuts the UP wallahs are I will prefer a massive purge.
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UP is bad ..
but its all india problem..so cant figure out one..
but yes UP/BIhar is worst lot for these
 
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