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Outrage over rapes in India

India in shock over 86-year-old grandmother’s rape

Tens of thousands of rapes are reported in India every year, but some stand out for being deeply disturbing.

In one particularly shocking case, police in the capital, Delhi, have arrested a man in his 30s for the rape and assault of an 86-year-old grandmother.

“The woman was waiting outside her home on Monday evening for the milkman when she was approached by her attacker,” Swati Maliwal, head of the Delhi Commission for Women, told the BBC.

“He told her that her regular milk delivery man wasn’t coming and offered to take her to the place where she could get milk.”

The octogenarian trustingly accompanied him, said Ms Maliwal, adding that he took her to a nearby farm where he raped her.

“She kept crying and begging him to leave her. She told him that she was like his grandmother. But he ignored her pleas and assaulted her mercilessly when she tried to resist and protect herself,” Ms Maliwal said.

Local villagers who were passing by heard her cries and rescued her. They handed over the attacker to the police.

Ms Maliwal, who visited the survivor at her home on Tuesday, described her meeting as “heart-breaking”.

“Her hands are totally wrinkled. You get a shock when you hear what she went through. There are bruises on her face and all over her body and she told me that she had vaginal bleeding. She is suffering from extreme trauma.”

Ms Maliwal has demanded the death penalty for the attacker, whom she described as “not human”.

“I’m writing to the chief justice of Delhi High Court and the lieutenant-governor of the city to fast-track the case and hang him in six months,” she said.

Rapes and sexual violence have been in the spotlight in India since December 2012 when a 23-year-old physiotherapy student was gang-raped on a moving bus in Delhi.

She died a few days later from injuries sustained during the assault. Four of the accused were hanged in March.

But despite the increased scrutiny of sexual crimes, their numbers continue to rise.

According to the National Crime Records Bureau, police recorded 33,977 cases of rape in India in 2018 - that works out to a rape every 15 minutes. But campaigners say the actual numbers are much higher as many cases are not even reported.

And not all make news - only the most brutal or shocking get reported in the press.

In the last few days, while India has been struggling to cope with the coronavirus pandemic, there have been reports of an ambulance driver who allegedly raped a Covid-19 patient while ferrying her to hospital.

Last month, a 13-year-old girl was found raped and murdered in a sugarcane field and her father alleged that her eyes were gouged out and her tongue had been cut.

And in July, a six-year-old girl was abducted and raped and her attacker inflicted severe injuries to her eyes apparently so she couldn’t identify him.

As women’s activist Yogita Bhayana points out, no age group is safe.

“I have met a month-old girl and women in their 60s who’ve been raped,” Ms Bhayana, who works for People Against Rapes in India (Pari), an NGO working with survivors, says.

After the global outcry over the brutality of the December 2012 Delhi bus rape, India introduced tough new rape laws, including the death penalty in especially horrific cases, and promised to set up fast-track courts to try rape cases.

But, campaigners say, things have not changed much on the ground.

“The situation hasn’t changed because protecting women and girls should top the list of government priorities, but it does not even figure there,” Ms Bhayana says.

“India talks about external security, but I ask them what about internal security? What are you doing to ensure the safety of women and girls?”

Ms Bhayana says over the years, she has written more than 100 letters to Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeking justice for rape victims, but hasn’t received a single response.

“Why doesn’t he talk about it?” she asks.

While in opposition, Mr Modi had described Delhi as “the rape capital” in several election rallies.

And after taking over as the prime minister in 2014, he appeared to make it a priority - in his first independence day speech that year, he talked about rape and offered parents some advice on how to bring up better sons.

“When we hear about these rapes our heads hang in shame,” he said.

“In every home, parents ask daughters lots of questions as to where she is going, when will she return, and ask her to inform them when she reaches her destination.

“But have you ever asked your son where he is going, why is he going and who are his friends? After all, the person committing the rape is also someone’s son,” he said, advising parents to keep tabs on their sons.

In India’s largely feudal and patriarchal society, this was seen as ground-breaking.

But since then the growing cases of sexual violence, many of them involving influential people, have made news - and Mr Modi has mostly kept silent, except for one tweet in 2018 that “India’s daughters will get justice” after rape allegations involving members of his own party became headline news.

Ms Bhayana says there is “no magic wand, no one thing” that can make this problem of gender violence disappear overnight.

She says a lot needs to change - police and judicial reform, greater sensitisation of police and lawyers, and better forensic tools.

“But above all, we need gender awareness, we need to work to change the mindsets, to prevent such crimes from happening in the first place.”

And that is a tough ask, she adds.

“There is no sign that any government, be it the Delhi government or the federal government, is serious about tackling gender violence.
“I’ve been working in the field for eight years. I’ve never met anyone who’s really serious about the issue.”

Ms Bhayana says there are hoardings in public places about all sorts of issues, about various achievements of government, about Covid-19, or cautioning people against drug use.

“But have you ever seen a hoarding in any city about rape or gender violence?” she asks.

“We often see hoardings with Mr Modi’s pet slogan, “Beti bachao, beti padhao [Educate daughters, save daughters]. I say why don’t we change it to Beta padhao, beti bachao [Educate your sons, save daughters]?”

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-54085183
 
I am disgusted. I hope the guy dies a painful death.
 
India in shock over 86-year-old grandmother’s rape

Tens of thousands of rapes are reported in India every year, but some stand out for being deeply disturbing.

In one particularly shocking case, police in the capital, Delhi, have arrested a man in his 30s for the rape and assault of an 86-year-old grandmother.

“The woman was waiting outside her home on Monday evening for the milkman when she was approached by her attacker,” Swati Maliwal, head of the Delhi Commission for Women, told the BBC.

“He told her that her regular milk delivery man wasn’t coming and offered to take her to the place where she could get milk.”

The octogenarian trustingly accompanied him, said Ms Maliwal, adding that he took her to a nearby farm where he raped her.

“She kept crying and begging him to leave her. She told him that she was like his grandmother. But he ignored her pleas and assaulted her mercilessly when she tried to resist and protect herself,” Ms Maliwal said.

Local villagers who were passing by heard her cries and rescued her. They handed over the attacker to the police.

Ms Maliwal, who visited the survivor at her home on Tuesday, described her meeting as “heart-breaking”.

“Her hands are totally wrinkled. You get a shock when you hear what she went through. There are bruises on her face and all over her body and she told me that she had vaginal bleeding. She is suffering from extreme trauma.”

Ms Maliwal has demanded the death penalty for the attacker, whom she described as “not human”.

“I’m writing to the chief justice of Delhi High Court and the lieutenant-governor of the city to fast-track the case and hang him in six months,” she said.

Rapes and sexual violence have been in the spotlight in India since December 2012 when a 23-year-old physiotherapy student was gang-raped on a moving bus in Delhi.

She died a few days later from injuries sustained during the assault. Four of the accused were hanged in March.

But despite the increased scrutiny of sexual crimes, their numbers continue to rise.

According to the National Crime Records Bureau, police recorded 33,977 cases of rape in India in 2018 - that works out to a rape every 15 minutes. But campaigners say the actual numbers are much higher as many cases are not even reported.

And not all make news - only the most brutal or shocking get reported in the press.

In the last few days, while India has been struggling to cope with the coronavirus pandemic, there have been reports of an ambulance driver who allegedly raped a Covid-19 patient while ferrying her to hospital.

Last month, a 13-year-old girl was found raped and murdered in a sugarcane field and her father alleged that her eyes were gouged out and her tongue had been cut.

And in July, a six-year-old girl was abducted and raped and her attacker inflicted severe injuries to her eyes apparently so she couldn’t identify him.

As women’s activist Yogita Bhayana points out, no age group is safe.

“I have met a month-old girl and women in their 60s who’ve been raped,” Ms Bhayana, who works for People Against Rapes in India (Pari), an NGO working with survivors, says.

After the global outcry over the brutality of the December 2012 Delhi bus rape, India introduced tough new rape laws, including the death penalty in especially horrific cases, and promised to set up fast-track courts to try rape cases.

But, campaigners say, things have not changed much on the ground.

“The situation hasn’t changed because protecting women and girls should top the list of government priorities, but it does not even figure there,” Ms Bhayana says.

“India talks about external security, but I ask them what about internal security? What are you doing to ensure the safety of women and girls?”

Ms Bhayana says over the years, she has written more than 100 letters to Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeking justice for rape victims, but hasn’t received a single response.

“Why doesn’t he talk about it?” she asks.

While in opposition, Mr Modi had described Delhi as “the rape capital” in several election rallies.

And after taking over as the prime minister in 2014, he appeared to make it a priority - in his first independence day speech that year, he talked about rape and offered parents some advice on how to bring up better sons.

“When we hear about these rapes our heads hang in shame,” he said.

“In every home, parents ask daughters lots of questions as to where she is going, when will she return, and ask her to inform them when she reaches her destination.

“But have you ever asked your son where he is going, why is he going and who are his friends? After all, the person committing the rape is also someone’s son,” he said, advising parents to keep tabs on their sons.

In India’s largely feudal and patriarchal society, this was seen as ground-breaking.

But since then the growing cases of sexual violence, many of them involving influential people, have made news - and Mr Modi has mostly kept silent, except for one tweet in 2018 that “India’s daughters will get justice” after rape allegations involving members of his own party became headline news.

Ms Bhayana says there is “no magic wand, no one thing” that can make this problem of gender violence disappear overnight.

She says a lot needs to change - police and judicial reform, greater sensitisation of police and lawyers, and better forensic tools.

“But above all, we need gender awareness, we need to work to change the mindsets, to prevent such crimes from happening in the first place.”

And that is a tough ask, she adds.

“There is no sign that any government, be it the Delhi government or the federal government, is serious about tackling gender violence.
“I’ve been working in the field for eight years. I’ve never met anyone who’s really serious about the issue.”

Ms Bhayana says there are hoardings in public places about all sorts of issues, about various achievements of government, about Covid-19, or cautioning people against drug use.

“But have you ever seen a hoarding in any city about rape or gender violence?” she asks.

“We often see hoardings with Mr Modi’s pet slogan, “Beti bachao, beti padhao [Educate daughters, save daughters]. I say why don’t we change it to Beta padhao, beti bachao [Educate your sons, save daughters]?”

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-54085183

Pardon my language but what a kuttay ki nasal. I hope he is castrated and then sent to the gallows. Disgusting vile human being.
 
India in shock over 86-year-old grandmother’s rape

Tens of thousands of rapes are reported in India every year, but some stand out for being deeply disturbing.

In one particularly shocking case, police in the capital, Delhi, have arrested a man in his 30s for the rape and assault of an 86-year-old grandmother.

“The woman was waiting outside her home on Monday evening for the milkman when she was approached by her attacker,” Swati Maliwal, head of the Delhi Commission for Women, told the BBC.

“He told her that her regular milk delivery man wasn’t coming and offered to take her to the place where she could get milk.”

The octogenarian trustingly accompanied him, said Ms Maliwal, adding that he took her to a nearby farm where he raped her.

“She kept crying and begging him to leave her. She told him that she was like his grandmother. But he ignored her pleas and assaulted her mercilessly when she tried to resist and protect herself,” Ms Maliwal said.

Local villagers who were passing by heard her cries and rescued her. They handed over the attacker to the police.

Ms Maliwal, who visited the survivor at her home on Tuesday, described her meeting as “heart-breaking”.

“Her hands are totally wrinkled. You get a shock when you hear what she went through. There are bruises on her face and all over her body and she told me that she had vaginal bleeding. She is suffering from extreme trauma.”

Ms Maliwal has demanded the death penalty for the attacker, whom she described as “not human”.

“I’m writing to the chief justice of Delhi High Court and the lieutenant-governor of the city to fast-track the case and hang him in six months,” she said.

Rapes and sexual violence have been in the spotlight in India since December 2012 when a 23-year-old physiotherapy student was gang-raped on a moving bus in Delhi.

She died a few days later from injuries sustained during the assault. Four of the accused were hanged in March.

But despite the increased scrutiny of sexual crimes, their numbers continue to rise.

According to the National Crime Records Bureau, police recorded 33,977 cases of rape in India in 2018 - that works out to a rape every 15 minutes. But campaigners say the actual numbers are much higher as many cases are not even reported.

And not all make news - only the most brutal or shocking get reported in the press.

In the last few days, while India has been struggling to cope with the coronavirus pandemic, there have been reports of an ambulance driver who allegedly raped a Covid-19 patient while ferrying her to hospital.

Last month, a 13-year-old girl was found raped and murdered in a sugarcane field and her father alleged that her eyes were gouged out and her tongue had been cut.

And in July, a six-year-old girl was abducted and raped and her attacker inflicted severe injuries to her eyes apparently so she couldn’t identify him.

As women’s activist Yogita Bhayana points out, no age group is safe.

“I have met a month-old girl and women in their 60s who’ve been raped,” Ms Bhayana, who works for People Against Rapes in India (Pari), an NGO working with survivors, says.

After the global outcry over the brutality of the December 2012 Delhi bus rape, India introduced tough new rape laws, including the death penalty in especially horrific cases, and promised to set up fast-track courts to try rape cases.

But, campaigners say, things have not changed much on the ground.

“The situation hasn’t changed because protecting women and girls should top the list of government priorities, but it does not even figure there,” Ms Bhayana says.

“India talks about external security, but I ask them what about internal security? What are you doing to ensure the safety of women and girls?”

Ms Bhayana says over the years, she has written more than 100 letters to Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeking justice for rape victims, but hasn’t received a single response.

“Why doesn’t he talk about it?” she asks.

While in opposition, Mr Modi had described Delhi as “the rape capital” in several election rallies.

And after taking over as the prime minister in 2014, he appeared to make it a priority - in his first independence day speech that year, he talked about rape and offered parents some advice on how to bring up better sons.

“When we hear about these rapes our heads hang in shame,” he said.

“In every home, parents ask daughters lots of questions as to where she is going, when will she return, and ask her to inform them when she reaches her destination.

“But have you ever asked your son where he is going, why is he going and who are his friends? After all, the person committing the rape is also someone’s son,” he said, advising parents to keep tabs on their sons.

In India’s largely feudal and patriarchal society, this was seen as ground-breaking.

But since then the growing cases of sexual violence, many of them involving influential people, have made news - and Mr Modi has mostly kept silent, except for one tweet in 2018 that “India’s daughters will get justice” after rape allegations involving members of his own party became headline news.

Ms Bhayana says there is “no magic wand, no one thing” that can make this problem of gender violence disappear overnight.

She says a lot needs to change - police and judicial reform, greater sensitisation of police and lawyers, and better forensic tools.

“But above all, we need gender awareness, we need to work to change the mindsets, to prevent such crimes from happening in the first place.”

And that is a tough ask, she adds.

“There is no sign that any government, be it the Delhi government or the federal government, is serious about tackling gender violence.
“I’ve been working in the field for eight years. I’ve never met anyone who’s really serious about the issue.”

Ms Bhayana says there are hoardings in public places about all sorts of issues, about various achievements of government, about Covid-19, or cautioning people against drug use.

“But have you ever seen a hoarding in any city about rape or gender violence?” she asks.

“We often see hoardings with Mr Modi’s pet slogan, “Beti bachao, beti padhao [Educate daughters, save daughters]. I say why don’t we change it to Beta padhao, beti bachao [Educate your sons, save daughters]?”

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-54085183

And then you have some indian posters saying the situation is worse in the US and other western countries... when an incident is of this nature it is reported as ‘sexual assault’ in India whereas in the US inappropriate touching is also classified as sexual assault to same degree whereas in India or south Asia that is just brushed aside as being part of a woman. If you go to police station to report inappropriate touch you will be laughed out. Asides from this not to mention that the reporting lates must almost always be lower in a developing country.

I am just shocked at this story. It’s heartbreaking
 
Pardon my language but what a kuttay ki nasal. I hope he is castrated and then sent to the gallows. Disgusting vile human being.
Yes. This guy really is filth. Cannot be classified as human.
 
Pardon my language as well aise haramkhoro ko tadpa tadpa kar maarna chahiye.
 
This is horrible. Totally lost for words. We can't even imagine the plight of that elderly lady.

Hope we see a swift trial and sentence. However knowing how our courts function, don't think this case will be any different.
 
This is horrible. Totally lost for words. We can't even imagine the plight of that elderly lady.

Hope we see a swift trial and sentence. However knowing how our courts function, don't think this case will be any different.

Same problem as Pakistan. Need public hangings to get over this.
 
Same problem as Pakistan. Need public hangings to get over this.
Don't think even public hangings will help. Only a complete mindset change in our boys and men will probably stop this barbarism.
 

The woman went missing from her village on January 23 and her burned remains, including her skull, were found in a nearby forest on Friday.​


A 21-year-old woman was allegedly gangraped and strangled to death by her brother-in-law and two others in Uttar Pradesh’s Muzaffarnagar district, police said on Saturday.

The accused brother-in-law took a Rs 40,000 loan from a bank to hire two murderers and fund the crime, the police said as reported by Times of India.

The accused, after committing the crime, burned the victim’s body in an attempt to destroy evidence, the police said.

The woman went missing from her village on January 23 and her burned remains, including her skull, were found in a nearby forest on Friday.

Superintendent of Police (SP) (Rural) Aditya Bansal told news agency PTI that the main accused, Ashish, has been arrested, while two others, Shubham and Deepak are absconding.

The incident took place in Bavana village of Budhana area, when the woman’s family reported her missing on January 23, the officer said.

As per the probe, the main accused who was victim’s elder sister’s husband, was pressuring her to marry him.

According to officials, the accused along with his associates, lured the woman away from her home, gangraped her and later strangled her to death.

Ashish was arrested, following which he confessed to the crime. The woman’s charred remains have been recovered and a forensic examination is underway, the police added.


Cant even imagine that anyone could commit such crimes by taking loan.
 
Why are The Inds not here? If this was a white women and Yaxley tweeted about it they would be here in droves. Aren't all the crimes evil, whether they are committed against white women, brown women etc.
@RexRex
 
Why are The Inds not here? If this was a white women and Yaxley tweeted about it they would be here in droves. Aren't all the crimes evil, whether they are committed against white women, brown women etc.
@RexRex

Knowing the track record of BJP posters, I doubt any BJP poster would acknowledge this problem let alone condemn it.

They are a weird bunch.

:dav
 
Why are The Inds not here? If this was a white women and Yaxley tweeted about it they would be here in droves. Aren't all the crimes evil, whether they are committed against white women, brown women etc.
@RexRex
Even if someone tries to defend this crime, they will inevitably drag Pakistan and Bangladesh into the discussion. There is no point in knowing their views, they get offended too easily and resort to derailing threads to justify such crimes.
 
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Why are The Inds not here? If this was a white women and Yaxley tweeted about it they would be here in droves. Aren't all the crimes evil, whether they are committed against white women, brown women etc.
@RexRex

All the fake outrage over the Asian grooming scandal suddenly withers without a trace
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Why are The Inds not here? If this was a white women and Yaxley tweeted about it they would be here in droves. Aren't all the crimes evil, whether they are committed against white women, brown women etc.
@RexRex

What does this have to do with the price of eggs ?

The other thread was about a grooming gang epidemic in the UK, of which british pakistanis were the chief culprits.
 
What does this have to do with the price of eggs ?

The other thread was about a grooming gang epidemic in the UK, of which british pakistanis were the chief culprits.

Just like Indians are the chief culprits for call center scams?

:qdkcheeky
 
Rape is an issue in India , while cities and towns are better rural areas remain a huge problem.
 
What does this have to do with the price of eggs ?

The other thread was about a grooming gang epidemic in the UK, of which british pakistanis were the chief culprits.
Here Inds are murdering the poor women but you guys go totally quiet. Are you waiting for Yaxley Lennon to tweet
 
India anger as judge frees man accused of raping wife who then died

An Indian court's ruling that a man's forced "unnatural sex" with his wife is not an offence has led to huge outrage and sparked renewed calls for better protections for married women.

The controversial order has also brought back into the spotlight the issue of marital rape in a country which has stubbornly refused to criminalise it.

Earlier this week, a high court judge in the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh set free a 40-year-old man who was convicted by a trial court in 2019 of rape and unnatural sex with his wife, who died within hours of the alleged assault.

The lower court had also found the man guilty of "culpable homicide not amounting to murder". He was sentenced to "rigorous imprisonment for 10 years" on each count, with all the sentences to run concurrently.

But on Monday, the High Court's Justice Narendra Kumar Vyas acquitted the man of all charges, saying that since India did not recognise marital rape, the husband could not be considered guilty of non-consensual sex or any non-consensual unnatural sexual act.

The judgement has been met with anger, as activists, lawyers and campaigners renew their calls to criminalise marital rape in India.

"To watch this man walk away is unacceptable. This judgement may be correct legally, but it is ethically and morally abhorrent," said lawyer and gender rights activist Sukriti Chauhan.

"An order that absolves a man of such a crime, to say it's not a crime, is the darkest hour in our legal system," she told the BBC.

"It has shaken us to the core. This needs to change and change quickly."

Priyanka Shukla, a lawyer in Chhattisgarh, said a judgement like this "sends out the message that because you're the husband, you have rights. And you can do anything, you can even get away with murder".

She added that this is not the first time a court has given such a judgement, and there is always anger.

"This time, the outrage is more because it is so gruesome and the woman died."

The court documents make for grim reading.

According to the prosecution, the incident took place on the night of 11 December 2017, when the husband, who worked as a driver, "committed unnatural sex with the victim against her will… causing her a lot of pain".

After he left for work, she sought help from his sister and another relative, who took her to hospital where she died a few hours later.

In her statement to the police and her dying declaration to a magistrate, the woman said she became ill "due to forceful sexual intercourse by her husband".

A dying declaration carries weight in court and legal experts say it is generally enough for conviction, unless contradicted by other evidence.

While convicting the man in 2019, the trial court had relied heavily on her dying declaration and the post-mortem report, which stated "the cause of death was peritonitis and rectal perforation" - simply put, severe injuries to her abdomen and rectum.

Justice Vyas, however, saw matters differently – he questioned the "sanctity" of the dying statement, noted that some of the witnesses had retracted their statements and, most importantly, said that marital rape was not an offence in India.

The lower court's conviction was "a rarest of rare case", Ms Shukla said, "probably because the woman died".

"But what is shocking about the high court order is that there's not even one sympathetic comment from the judge."

Considering the nature of the assault, the high court's order has come as a shock for many, who believe the judge should not have dismissed the case so lightly.

India is among more than 30 countries - along with Pakistan, Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia - where marital rape is not a criminal offence.

A number of petitions have been filed in recent years seeking to strike down Section 375 of the Indian Penal Code, which has been in existence since 1860.

The British colonial-era law mentions several "exemptions" - or situations in which sex is not rape - and one of them is "by a man with his own wife" if she is not under 15 years.

Britain outlawed marital rape in 1991 but India, which recently rewrote its criminal code, retained the regressive law in its new statute book.

The idea is rooted in the belief that consent for sex is "implied" in marriage and that a wife cannot retract it later. Campaigners say such an argument is untenable in this day and age, and that forced sex is rape, regardless of who does it.

But in a country where marriage and family are considered sacrosanct, the issue has polarised opinions and there's strong resistance to the idea of criminalising marital rape.

The Indian government, religious leaders and men's rights activists have strongly opposed the move.

In October last year, the government told the Supreme Court that criminalisation of marital rape would be "excessively harsh". The federal home ministry said it "may lead to serious disturbances in the institution of marriage".

Authorities also insist that there are enough laws to protect married women against sexual violence. But campaigners say India cannot hide behind archaic laws to deny women bodily agency.

"A lot of people say the constitution cannot enter your bedroom," Ms Chauhan said.

"But doesn't it grant women - like all citizens - fundamental rights to safety and security? What kind of redundant country do we live in that we remain quiet when a woman has to face this level of violence?" she asks.

Violence within marriage is rampant in India.

According to a recent government survey, 32% of married women face physical, sexual or emotional violence by their husbands and 82% have experienced sexual violence by their husbands.

And even that doesn't give the true scale of the problem, Ms Shukla said, because a majority of women do not report violence, especially sexual violence, out of shame.

"In my experience, women are not trusted when they complain, everyone says it must be fake. The only time such cases are taken seriously is when a woman dies or the assault is particularly gruesome," the lawyer said.

Ms Chauhan believes nothing will change until the law changes.

"We need to criminalise marital rape. The wife not getting justice after such a gruesome incident deserves a nationwide campaign, which is not born of anger but is serious [and] well thought out."

She added that the government and men's activists try to project it as a "man versus woman debate".

"But the demand for criminalising marital rape is not against men, but for the safety and wellbeing of women. Is it not important to ensure women's safety?"

BBC
 

Pune woman raped inside state transport bus, Uddhav Sena workers vandalise depot​


A massive manhunt is underway after a 26-year-old woman was allegedly raped inside a parked Maharashtra State Road Transport Corporation (MSRTC) bus at the Swargate Bus Stand in Pune. The accused, identified as Dattatraya Gade, has a prior criminal record with cases of theft and chain-snatching registered against him, according to police.

The incident took place early Tuesday morning when the woman was waiting for a bus to Paithan on one of the platforms around 5.30 am. A man approached her, claiming that her bus had arrived at another platform.

Trusting him, she followed him to an empty bus parked at a secluded spot within the vast premises of the MSRTC depot. As she boarded the bus, the accused followed her inside and allegedly raped her before fleeing the scene under the cover of darkness.

Authorities identified the accused through CCTV footage, and multiple police teams have been deployed to trace and apprehend him, a Swargate police station official confirmed.

Following the incident, authorities have taken swift action regarding security lapses at the Swargate bus depot. Transport Minister Pratap Sarnaik has ordered the immediate suspension of as many as 23 security guards deployed at the bus stand. Additionally, new security personnel have been instructed to assume duty starting Thursday.

An inquiry has also been launched against the Swargate depot manager and the traffic controller. A detailed report on their accountability will be submitted within a week to the Transport Commissioner, based on which further action will be determined.

Meanwhile, the incident has triggered widespread outrage. A group of Shiv Sena (UBT) workers vandalised the security guard cabin at the Swargate Bus Stand, protesting against the alleged negligence that led to the crime. Several workers smashed the window panes and furniture inside the security office while women activists shouted slogans against the BJP-led Maharashtra government over the incident.

Justifying the vandalism, Shiv Sena (UBT) leader Vasant More said that if a woman is raped in front of a security cabin, then nobody has the right to sit there. "The incident took place in front of a security cabin. If a woman is raped in front of a security cabin, nobody has the right to sit there," news agency ANI quoted More as saying.

Authorities have reassured the public that stringent measures will be put in place to enhance security and prevent such incidents in the future. Meanwhile, efforts to locate and arrest the accused continue as police intensify their search operations across the city.

Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Pawar condemned the incident, calling it "extremely shameful, painful, and infuriating for every member of a civilized society".

"The incident of rape of our sister is extremely shameful, painful, and infuriating for every member of a civilised society. The crime committed by the accused is unforgivable, and there can be no punishment except death penalty. I have personally instructed the Pune Police Commissioner to closely monitor the investigation and ensure immediate arrest of the accused. Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis has also taken the incident seriously and has given the necessary instructions to the police," Pawar said.

 

Pune woman raped inside state transport bus, Uddhav Sena workers vandalise depot​


A massive manhunt is underway after a 26-year-old woman was allegedly raped inside a parked Maharashtra State Road Transport Corporation (MSRTC) bus at the Swargate Bus Stand in Pune. The accused, identified as Dattatraya Gade, has a prior criminal record with cases of theft and chain-snatching registered against him, according to police.

The incident took place early Tuesday morning when the woman was waiting for a bus to Paithan on one of the platforms around 5.30 am. A man approached her, claiming that her bus had arrived at another platform.

Trusting him, she followed him to an empty bus parked at a secluded spot within the vast premises of the MSRTC depot. As she boarded the bus, the accused followed her inside and allegedly raped her before fleeing the scene under the cover of darkness.

Authorities identified the accused through CCTV footage, and multiple police teams have been deployed to trace and apprehend him, a Swargate police station official confirmed.

Following the incident, authorities have taken swift action regarding security lapses at the Swargate bus depot. Transport Minister Pratap Sarnaik has ordered the immediate suspension of as many as 23 security guards deployed at the bus stand. Additionally, new security personnel have been instructed to assume duty starting Thursday.

An inquiry has also been launched against the Swargate depot manager and the traffic controller. A detailed report on their accountability will be submitted within a week to the Transport Commissioner, based on which further action will be determined.

Meanwhile, the incident has triggered widespread outrage. A group of Shiv Sena (UBT) workers vandalised the security guard cabin at the Swargate Bus Stand, protesting against the alleged negligence that led to the crime. Several workers smashed the window panes and furniture inside the security office while women activists shouted slogans against the BJP-led Maharashtra government over the incident.

Justifying the vandalism, Shiv Sena (UBT) leader Vasant More said that if a woman is raped in front of a security cabin, then nobody has the right to sit there. "The incident took place in front of a security cabin. If a woman is raped in front of a security cabin, nobody has the right to sit there," news agency ANI quoted More as saying.

Authorities have reassured the public that stringent measures will be put in place to enhance security and prevent such incidents in the future. Meanwhile, efforts to locate and arrest the accused continue as police intensify their search operations across the city.

Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Pawar condemned the incident, calling it "extremely shameful, painful, and infuriating for every member of a civilized society".

"The incident of rape of our sister is extremely shameful, painful, and infuriating for every member of a civilised society. The crime committed by the accused is unforgivable, and there can be no punishment except death penalty. I have personally instructed the Pune Police Commissioner to closely monitor the investigation and ensure immediate arrest of the accused. Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis has also taken the incident seriously and has given the necessary instructions to the police," Pawar said.


Another day. Another rape incident in India.

Like I said before, women and minorities are not safe in chaiwala Modi's India. :inti
 
While I can understand the sentiment behind vigilante justice, the vandalism inflicted by the Shiv Sena on the bus depot is not the way forward. This type of kangaroo court bullcrap is only fit for third world hellholes. Indian authorities should be prosecuting the Shiv Sena for damage to property and taking the law into their own hands.
 
While I can understand the sentiment behind vigilante justice, the vandalism inflicted by the Shiv Sena on the bus depot is not the way forward. This type of kangaroo court bullcrap is only fit for third world hellholes. Indian authorities should be prosecuting the Shiv Sena for damage to property and taking the law into their own hands.

Question is why is Indian government not banning Shiv Shena? Is it because they endorse Shiv Shena?

In most countries, Shiv Shena would probably be outlawed. But, not in India. :inti
 
Outrage over rapes

GOI should make a law for adult men to drink Dhaniyaa ka pani 🍸 twice a day
 
Question is why is Indian government not banning Shiv Shena? Is it because they endorse Shiv Shena?

In most countries, Shiv Shena would probably be outlawed. But, not in India. :inti


The govt don't just endorse Shiv Sena, in reality they ARE Shiv Sena. They just like to sneak around and change their masks so they can get public approval to win votes when it comes to elections.
 
The govt don't just endorse Shiv Sena, in reality they ARE Shiv Sena. They just like to sneak around and change their masks so they can get public approval to win votes when it comes to elections.

Indeed.

It seems like Shiv Shena loves to feast on defenseless civilians. Have they ever participated in any armed conflict? I bet they would be sitting ducks if they ever participate in a war. They are the lettuce army.

:inti
 
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