Google – AFP, Ammu Kannampilly (AFP), 1 Sep 2013
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A convicted
juvenile is escorted from a New Delhi court August 31,
2013 after his guilty verdict (AFP, Prakash Singh) |
NEW DELHI —
India's opposition said Sunday it would seek tougher punishments for juveniles
after the first verdict in the New Delhi gang-rape case saw a teenager
sentenced to three years' detention, sparking widespread anger.
The rape
and murder of a 23-year-old student by six attackers on a moving bus last
December sparked nationwide protests and led to reforms that mandated longer
sentences for adult sex offenders.
Sushma
Swaraj, opposition leader in the lower house of parliament, said she would
introduce a bill this week to amend the law for juveniles.
"This
meagre punishment of just three years does not do justice," Swaraj wrote
on Twitter.
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Activists
demand the death sentence of
a teenager convicted of gang-rape at a
New Delhi
court on August 31, 2013
(AFP, Raveendran)
|
On Saturday
a juvenile court in New Delhi sentenced the only under-age suspect in the gang
-- who was 17 at the time of the crime -- to three years in a correctional
facility.
This was
the maximum sentence under India's law, which treats all under-18s as children
and seeks to reform rather than punish them.
"TRAVESTY:
December 16 teen rapist 'gets away' with murder," a headline in the
tabloid Mail Today read, summing up the mood.
The
convicted teen will spend about 28 months in a juvenile detention centre,
having already spent about eight months in custody awaiting the verdict.
"He
can watch TV, play games while doing time," the Hindustan Times reported,
while pointing out that police sources had earlier described the teenager as
"the most brutal" of the six attackers.
The Times
of India said the gang-rape victim had "been denied justice" by the
juvenile court.
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Newspapers
published on September 1,
2013 show the reaction to the first verdict
in the
New Delhi gang-rape case (AFP,
Andrew Caballero-Reynolds)
|
"It's
ridiculous to think you can reform a person who has committed a heinous crime,
who has raped and murdered a young woman in such a brutal fashion," he
added.
According
to the teenager's defence lawyer, his conduct will be observed and the sentence
could be reduced for good behaviour.
The
juvenile was employed to clean the bus where the attack took place and often
slept rough or inside the vehicle, reports say.
A child
rights activist who knows him said he grew up poor in a village in the northern
state of Uttar Pradesh and moved to Delhi on his own at the age of 11 when he
began a string of menial jobs.
"He
changed jobs all the time, desperate to earn more and send money to his
family," the activist told AFP on condition of anonymity.
The attack
on the young woman brought simmering anger about endemic sex crime in India to
the boil, and turned her attackers into public hate figures.
But despite
soul-searching and a new law toughening sentences for rapists, sex crimes have
continued unabated, with almost every day bringing news of a new grave offence.
News
emerged Saturday evening of another attack in the Noida suburb of the capital,
where a woman was allegedly gang-raped by five attackers including two police
constables.
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Policemen
at the Shakti Mills compound
in Mumbai, scene of the gang-rape of a
photojournalist on August 28, 2013
(AFP/File, Indranil Mukherjee)
|
Last month
a 22-year-old photographer was gang-raped in Mumbai while taking pictures at an
abandoned mill in a posh part of the commercial capital.
Protestors
outside the juvenile court Saturday and the victim's family called for the
teenager to be hanged.
The victim,
a physiotherapy student, died of internal injuries two weeks after being raped
and assaulted with an iron bar on the night of December 16.
Her male
companion was beaten up before both were thrown bleeding from the bus.
A separate
trial of the four adult suspects in a fast-track court is hearing closing
arguments and is expected to wrap up in the next few weeks, with the men facing
a possible death sentence if convicted.
The fifth
adult, the suspected ringleader, died in jail in an apparent suicide.
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