2 gang rapes show India struggling on women’s safety
NEW DELHI — One woman was brutally gang raped and murdered, her body left disfigured in a patch of shrubs near her home in a north Indian village. Days later, another woman was abducted and gang raped in a moving car in a New Delhi suburb.
The two crimes were reminiscent of the horrific 2012 deadly gang rape in New Delhi that spurred widespread protests and harsher punishments for perpetrators. Yet they occurred just after India’s Supreme Court upheld death sentences for the rapists in that 2012 case, proving that the strengthened laws and more severe sentences aren’t deterring violent crimes against women in India, experts said.
Perpetrators still “feel they can get away with crimes against women,” said Jagmati Sangwan, of the All India Democratic Women’s Association. “There is no fear of the police or the law.”
The problem, Sangwan said, is that there are few cases that actually make it to trial and conviction. Police are registering more rape cases than before the laws were strengthened — with 34,651 counted in 2015, compared with 24,157 in 2012 — suggesting that victims are more readily coming forward to report crimes.


