Google – AFP, 20 January 2013
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Sonia
Gandhi, president of India's ruling Congress party, is pictured in New
Delhi on
September 25, 2012 (AFP/File, Raveendran)
|
JAIPUR,
India — Sonia Gandhi, president of India's ruling Congress party, on Sunday
condemned "shameful" social attitudes that led to crimes like the
fatal gang-rape of a student in New Delhi.
"We
cannot tolerate shameful social mindsets that lead to unspeakable atrocities on
women and children... every woman in the country has the fundamental right to
feel safe and secure," she said.
Gandhi,
seen as the country's most powerful politician, said the 23-year-old woman,
whose ordeal on a bus last month triggered nationwide protests, had tragically
become a symbol for thousands of women who suffered a similar fate.
"The
barbaric gang-rape of a young woman in the capital has shaken the entire
country. People are rightly demanding answers and actions," Gandhi, 66,
said at a meeting of her party in the northern city of Jaipur.
"This
brave young woman in many ways embodied the spirit of an aspirational India. We
will ensure her death will not have been in vain."
Sexual
crimes against women have been in the spotlight since the physiotherapy student
was gang-raped and violated with a rusty iron rod on December 16 as she
returned home from a cinema with her boyfriend.
The woman
died from her injuries about two weeks after the attack that triggered an
outpouring of grief and anger over the failure of the government and the police
to check rising crime against women.
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People
shout slogans during a protest against the gang-rape and murder
of a student in
New Delhi on January 18, 2013 (AFP/File, Raveendran)
|
Gandhi said
there was an urgent need to overhaul patriarchal mindsets and referred to some
"shocking" recent statements by politicians that she said reflected a
"completely unacceptable" attitude towards women.
A female
cabinet member in the state government of Madhya Pradesh said women who crossed
"moral limits" deserved to be punished, while a lawmaker in the state
of Rajasthan has suggested banning skirts in schools.
The
president's son, a ruling party lawmaker, dismissed protesters demanding
protection for women as "painted" women seeking to spark a "pink
revolution".
Five men
face murder, rape, robbery, kidnapping and other charges over the student's
death. The case against a sixth suspect, who claims he is 17, will be heard by
a juvenile court if it is confirmed he is a minor.
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