India: After 6 Years of Rape, 2 Abortions And Giving Birth to Her Father’s Child, Indian Woman Files Complaint

Beef.Bhaijan

Minister (2k+ posts)
After 6 Years of Rape, 2 Abortions And Giving Birth to Her Father’s Child, Woman Files Complaint

According to reports, the accused also has a two-month-old infant from his daughter. He had in the past forced her to undergo two abortions.


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(फोटो प्रतीकात्‍मक)

New Delhi: In a shocking incident, a teenager was reportedly raped for over six years by her father and also impregnated by him thrice. This has been reported from Uttar Pradesh’s Firozabad district.

The matter came to light on May 3, Friday, when the accused tried to sexually assault his now married daughter again.

According to reports, the accused also has a two-month-old infant from his daughter. He had in the past forced her to undergo two abortions.
A report in the Times of India states, “Fearing assault, harassment, social stigma, the mother of the victim never complained to the local police. The woman was also forced to undergo abortion twice by her father,” a police official was quoted.

The accused married his daughter off to her boyfriend when she gave birth to his baby. It was on Friday then when she came visiting that he tried to sexually abuse her again- when she raised an alarm.

An FIR has been registered against the accused under relevant IPC sections.

 
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Beef.Bhaijan

Minister (2k+ posts)
This statement sums up the situation in the R@pe Capital !!

In a shocking incident, a teenager was reportedly raped for over six years by her father and also impregnated by him thrice.
 

Beef.Bhaijan

Minister (2k+ posts)
Despite changes after 2012 horror, India's rape victims denied speedy justice

Aditya Kalra
6 MIN READ

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India launched fast-track courts and a tougher rape law that included the death penalty after a gruesome assault on a young woman shocked the country in 2012, but crime statistics indicate the situation has got worse, not better, since then.


A student holds a placard as she participates in a signature campaign to protest against the rape of an eight-year-old girl in Kathua, near Jammu, in Srinagar April 18, 2018. REUTERS/Danish Ismail
The data was collated by Reuters amid mounting public anger over crimes against women after two horrific cases in recent months that has, once again, cast a harsh light on systemic problems plaguing the country’s police and courts.
The gang rape and murder of an eight-year-old girl in Kashmir state and the arrest of a ruling party legislator for the rape of a teenage mother in Uttar Pradesh province have sparked nationwide outrage, drawing nightmarish parallels with the gang rape and murder of a student in New Delhi six years ago.
Amid the wave of anger at that time, the government promised to speed up rape trials, provide harsher penalties, including the death sentence in extreme cases, and a law against stalking.
But statistics show that since 2012, reported rape cases climbed 60 percent to around 40,000 in 2016, with child rape accounting for about 40 percent. The conviction rate of people arrested for rape remains stuck around 25 percent.
The backlog of rape cases pending trial stood at more than 133,000 by the end of 2016, up from about 100,000 in 2012, National Crime Records Bureau data showed. In each year during that period, about 85 percent of the total rape cases being heard remained pending.
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In general, conviction rates for crime against women - deaths following demands for dowry, assault, kidnapping as well as rape - are lower than for most other crimes.
“The government can make a hundred laws and yet it will fail because there is no enforcement,” said Dushyant Dave, a senior lawyer at India’s Supreme Court.
“It needs to take this as an epidemic and treat it accordingly, by completely overhauling the police machinery, prosecutors and the judicial system.”
CASES BURIED
Crime statistics showed that police files remain open for about a third of all rapes that were investigated for each year between 2012 and 2016.
Understaffing is an issue. The government told parliament last month police had a sanctioned strength of nearly 2 million officers, but almost a quarter of those positions were vacant.
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Some of the worst accusations against the police stem from cases, like the ones in Uttar Pradesh and Jammu & Kashmir, where they are alleged to have bowed to pressure from people of influence to bury cases.
Vappala Balachandran, a former top police officer in the western state of Maharashtra who has criticised the government’s response to the recent cases, described how powerful local politicians stall police investigations.
“The one weapon the politician has is the threat of transfer (of police officers) and which they routinely exercise. So the investigation is slow, improper and weak,” Balachandran said.
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT
So far the only policy response to the latest cases has come from Maneka Gandhi, the minister for women and child development, who has advocated applying the death penalty for rape cases where the victim is under 12 years old.
Currently, the Supreme Court reserves the death penalty for extreme cases, as in the 2012 Delhi case.
Five people were convicted of rape and murder in that case within nine months, a remarkably swift decision for India. Four were sentenced to death while a juvenile was freed after serving three years. A sixth accused hung himself in his cell before the trial concluded.



Placards are seen on a banner with signatures of students participating in a signature campaign to protest against the rape of an eight-year-old girl in Kathua, near Jammu, in Srinagar April 18, 2018. REUTERS/Danish Ismail
Last year, the top court rejected an appeal by the four sentenced to death but they remain on death row.
A study by the National Law University in Delhi found that 43 death sentences were handed down for murder involving sexual violence in 2017, almost double the previous year’s number.

A study by Kailash Satyarthi Children’s Foundation, whose founder shared the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize, reckoned that as of the end of 2016, the backlog of child sex abuses cases in the courts would take two decades to clear.
Under India’s Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act passed in 2012, which covers victims under 18 years, police should collect evidence within a month of the complaint being filed and the court should complete a trial within a year.

“The government of India is doing its work sincerely in each and every case,” P.S. Narasimha, a senior prosecutor for the federal government, told Reuters in response to a question why rape cases took so long and the conviction rates were so low.
But Dev Sharma, a lawyer at the Punjab and Haryana High Court, said the Indian criminal justice system failed when it came to rape.
“The procedure itself is quite lengthy that deters most of victims from fighting the battle and thus the accused are set free ultimately in most of the cases,” he said.

“The procedure is traumatic for the victim who has to face a society that considers rape as a social stigma only for the victim and not the accused, due to which most victims choose to keep mum about what they go through rather than to report it.”

Very shameful ,
Musalmano tumhe kya ho gaya hai ?
 

Beef.Bhaijan

Minister (2k+ posts)
India is known as RAPE CAPITAL ...every kind of r@pe is crossing crisis proportions !

Why India's rape crisis shows no signs of abating


Soutik BiswasIndia correspondent
  • 17 April 2018

Image copyrightREUTERS
The police in India are looking for the rapists of a girl who has no face, name, home or number.
She was possibly between nine and 11 years old, and her mutilated corpse was found in a bush recently near a playground in western Gujarat state's bustling Surat city, known the world over for its diamond polishing industry. Her battered body bore 86 injury marks. The autopsy surgeon believes that the injuries "seem to have been caused over a period ranging from one week to a day prior to the recovery of the body".
The police believe she was held captive, tortured and ravaged. More than 10 days after they found her body, they are clueless about her identity: they have trawled the list of some 8,000 missing children in the state and come up with nothing. "There was no sign of struggle at the spot where the body was found," the local police chief says.
Putting up a struggle seems to be futile when rape is increasingly used as an instrument to assert power and intimidate the powerless in India. This is not surprising, many believe, in a hierarchical, patriarchal and increasingly polarised society, where hate is being used to divide people and harvest votes.
An awful sex ratio imbalance - largely because of illegal sex-selection abortions - means it is a country full of men. The country sees 112 boys born for every 100 girls, which is against the natural sex ratio of 105 boys for every 100 girls. A preference for boys has meant that more than 63 million women are statistically "missing". Many believe such skewed ratios can contribute to increased crimes against women.
Image copyrightREUTERS
The northern state of Haryana, which records the highest number of gang rapes in India, has the worst sex ratio in the country. In January alone, a 50-year-old man was held for mutilating a 10-year-old girl, a 15-year-old boy allegedly raped a three-and-a-half-year-old girl, a 20-year-old married women was raped by two men, a 24-year-old man was held for kidnapping and abducting a student and a minor's girl's brutalised body was found in the fields. And these were only the reported cases.
In Indian-administered Kashmir, a poisonous cocktail of biology and bigotry led to the macabre rape and murder of an eight-year-old Muslim nomadic girl in January. She was kidnapped, kept captive in a Hindu temple, raped repeatedly and dumped in a forest. It was a warning to the minority Muslim nomads in the area to stop grazing their animals on Hindu owned land, in a restive part of the region, which is simmering with religious tensions.

Eight Hindu men have been charged with the Kashmir gang-rape and murder. Their trial began in a fast track court on Monday. Two ministers from the ruling Hindu nationalist BJP who openly attended a rally in support of the accused resigned after the rising outrage forced the party's hand and compelled Prime Minister Narendra Modi to condemn the incident - on Twitter.
In the southern state of Kerala, a bank manager declared on his Facebook wall that it was "good" that the nomad girl was killed, because "she would have come as a [human] bomb against India tomorrow". His employers sacked him.
Mr Modi has tweeted that India's "daughters will get justice". His assurances, many believe, have begun to ring hollow. (Lawmakers belonging to his own party are being accused of rape, and supporting men accused of rape, and action is only taken against them only after widespread condemnation of their behaviour.)
Other politicians haven't done much better. When three men were convicted in 2014 for the gang rape of a journalist, Mulayam Singh Yadav, leader of the regional Samajwadi Party said: "Boys make mistakes. They should not hang for this. We will change the anti-rape laws."




Pakistani shaitans do it without any shame .

 

HimSar

Minister (2k+ posts)
Astaghfir Allah, are you grown men competing in who falls lower by calculating who scores higher number and lower age in victims, when the scenario in itself is as abominable as it gets?!
Shame on you lot.
 

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