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Gang Rape in India again! can flip the country?


Jman888
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15 minutes ago, mikk123 said:

If they do gang rape, that is the behavior of animal. To stop an animal, chemical castration is appropriate. 

I thought you wud say just shoot the animal! 😂 

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Just now, Watwheels said:

Like the women activist said in the article it doesnt serve as a deterrence. 

Anyway imo their problem is deep rooted. Their caste system, arranged marriages, poverty....when men cant love freely, they rape other women. Women are like the forbidden fruit. Can see but cannot touch and cannot love.

The other day,  watched a documentary on TV...  Talking about those women who were splashed with acid after rejecting the men. All scarred for life and the worst part is after the scarring,  they are also rejected by their society. 

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33 minutes ago, mikk123 said:

If they do gang rape, that is the behavior of animal. To stop an animal, chemical castration is appropriate. 

Physical castration is much better for these animals. No turning back. They can pee squatting down. 

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It's just lowering their sex drive. They can still take testosterone or Viagra or other illegal sex drugs. Then hero again. Maybe not 100% but still can rape.

Even cutting off the balls...like this guy , he can still rape.

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2007/12/can-a-sex-offender-still-have-sex-after-he-s-been-castrated.html

 

Might as well go for capital punishment. Dead men cannot erect.

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27 minutes ago, Watwheels said:

It's just lowering their sex drive. They can still take testosterone or Viagra or other illegal sex drugs. Then hero again. Maybe not 100% but still can rape.

Even cutting off the balls...like this guy , he can still rape.

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2007/12/can-a-sex-offender-still-have-sex-after-he-s-been-castrated.html

 

Might as well go for capital punishment. Dead men cannot erect.

Cut also the pen is. Maybe all fingers as well. 

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Find the judge, tie him up get some guys to rape him.

It's not rape as he didn't fight back.

:D

On 12/8/2019 at 2:11 PM, Sdf4786k said:

Looks like India still holds the title of Rape Capital of the world.

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https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/india-rape-victim-set-on-fire-dies-hospital-uttar-pradesh-a9236851.html

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A rape victim in India, whose alleged rapist stands accused of setting her on fire while she was on the way to court, has died in hospital, the doctor treating her has said.

The 23-year-old was on her way to board a train in the Unnao district of northern Uttar Pradesh state, to attend a court hearing on Thursday.

She was doused with kerosene and set on fire by a gang of men, including her alleged rapist, police say.

It is the second prominent case of violence against women in the past two weeks and has sparked public outrage in India.

Dr Shalabh Kumar, the head of burns and plastic department at New Delhi’s Safdarjung hospital said: “She suffered 95 per cent burns.”

Indian police shoot dead 4 suspects in brutal gang rape and murder

He added that the woman’s windpipe was burnt and “toxic and hot fumes” had filled her lungs.

The victim was airlifted to New Delhi for treatment but she died on Friday after suffering a cardiac arrest.

The woman had filed a complaint with Unnao police in March alleging she had been raped at gunpoint in December last year, police documents showed. 

She named two local men, one of whom was arrested by police while the other absconded.

Having been subsequently jailed, the alleged rapist was released last week after securing bail, police officer SK Bhagat said in Lucknow, the capital of Uttar Pradesh state.

On Thursday, the rape victim is thought to have been seized by five men, allegedly including the two people she had named in her complaint, and beaten, stabbed and set on fire, according to local media, citing her statement to police.

Following the attack she walked nearly a kilometre, seeking help before finally calling the police herself, according to Aaj Taj TV news channel.

All five of the accused have been arrested and are in 14-day judicial custody, Vikrant Vir, superintendent of police said.

Read more

Judge ‘rules woman was not raped because she did not fight back’

A fast-track court would hear the case and the guilty would not be spared, Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath said.

In India, lengthy trials, often the result of fewer courts and judges, tend to delay convictions, leaving poor, disillusioned victims with little money and patience to pursue the case.

Also, long trials result in bails to the accused who often intimidate victims and their witnesses and try tampering with evidence.

The victim’s father has alleged that his family was harassed and threatened by the family of the accused.

He added: “We tried to seek protection as the accused and their family kept threatening my daughter and my family, but we received little help from the government. 

*****

https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/amaravati-city-joint-project-officially-terminated-mti

Andhra Pradesh project with Singapore to develop the Indian state's new capital cancelled

At least is a sigh of relived for Many Singaporean who has hardship at Pradesh is now a non-event. Safety is more important.

On a separate note in india...looks like patience and self-restraint is the order of the day.. wonder why the violence when the law should be adequate to cover.

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https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/indias-long-battle-against-rape-shame-and-reprisal

India's long battle against rape, shame and reprisal

Shooting of rape-murder suspects triggers heated debate on women's insecurity and 'quick justice'

When a woman in India complains about sexual assault, she is rarely believed. But if she dies after the assault, you see a whole country baying for the rapists' blood, observed Aisha (name changed), a 36-year-old software engineer in Hyderabad who has been struggling for a year to get her employers to believe she was assaulted by a male colleague.

"Maybe I have to be dead to get support and justice," she said.

On Nov 27 in Aisha's city, four men gang-raped a 27-year-old veterinarian and burned her body. Hyderabad then erupted in protest. Placards screamed, "Stop rape! Give us justice!" News channels discussed whether Indian cities were getting more unsafe for women.

A few days later, a rape nosurvivor in Unnao, in the North Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was on her way to court when she was set on fire by one of the men she had accused, who was out on bail. She walked half a kilometre with 90 per cent burns and named the men who did it, before she was taken to hospital. She died of her injuries yesterday.

There were 32,559 reports of rape in 2017, falling from 38,947 in 2016. Ms Rukmini S., a data journalist, said rape remains an under-reported crime because of the shame associated with the sexual crime, but also the fear of reprisal.

Seven years after the gang-rape and murder of a 23-year-old physiotherapy student in Delhi prompted a nationwide outcry, rape laws are stricter and conviction rates have improved to a third of all cases prosecuted, but Indians are having the same tiresome conversation again.

How can India be safer for women? What's wrong with Indian men? How do we fix the patriarchal mindset and teach men about consent? Why is the legal system so hobbled? What is real justice?

Ms Priyanka Dubey, who wrote No Nation For Women, a book on the precarious lives of Indian women, said: "I am heartbroken that my book's title never stops being relevant."

Frustrated, in both Delhi and Hyderabad, people asked for the accused to be killed. In the 2012 Delhi case, people demanded the death penalty, which Indian law allows for the "rarest of rare" cases. The Hyderabad rape took people further: Hundreds protested outside the police station where the accused were held, wanting to beat them to death.

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Senior parliamentarian Jaya Bachchan, the wife of actor Amitabh Bachchan, even called for the accused to be "lynched" on the streets.

On Friday, the Hyderabad police shot dead all the four accused, alleging that they tried to escape.

"The law has done its duty," said top police official V.C. Sajjanar.

Hyderabad-based journalists suspect that these extrajudicial killings might be staged - colloquially called "fake encounters". They have highlighted the eerie similarities between this killing, a 2008 killing of three accused of throwing acid on a woman, and earlier shootings of alleged Maoist insurgents - all involving Mr Sajjanar.

But overjoyed Hyderabad residents showered the policemen with rose petals. Politicians, movie stars and sportspeople like badminton champion Saina Nehwal said: "Justice has been served!"

Parents of the Delhi rape victim called the killings "quick justice", triggering sharply divided debates. Four men were sentenced to death by hanging for their daughter's rape and murder, but their penalty is under review.

Ms Gauri Dhabolkar, a Pune-based school teacher and trainer, said: "Our law is very weak... Making changes to the judicial system will take a very long time. I feel these fake encounters are the right step this time."

That possible extrajudicial murders offer solace to women is discomfiting, said others.

The blood thirst against strangers also eclipsed a more complicated truth about rape in India: that 93 per cent of rapes are committed by men known to the victim - friends, relatives, husbands and uncles.

Ms Ammu Joseph, a senior journalist and author in Bangalore, said: "I have a daughter. I would be devastated if she was raped and murdered. But I would not call for the death penalty, let alone public lynching or killing by so-called enforcers of the law."

In the dozens of interviews Ms Dubey conducted for her book on violence against women, she found an inexplicable level of hope, saying: "Even now, in the most desperately hostile and negative circumstances, women have faith in our courts.

"So, the legal system has a huge responsibility to deliver on those expectations - before we turn into a country of mob justice."

But policing must change, she said. "The police need mandatory gender sensitivity training, and a standard operating procedure on how to behave in the first 15 minutes when a victim comes to the station. They are, after all, products of the same toxic masculinity that creates rapists," said Ms Dubey.

Ms Janani Ganesan, a 30-year-old book editor in Delhi, felt it was this "everyday violence" in buses and homes, and "deep-running patriarchy" of curfews and dress codes that engendered rape culture.

"I don't want to be assured that should I be raped, the perpetrators will face the death sentence or the suspects will be murdered in extrajudicial killings with no fair trial. I want to be assured, and shown, that we are working towards a society that will treat its women as equal beings," she said.

 

Edited by Jamesc
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55 minutes ago, Jamesc said:

Find the judge, tie him up get some guys to rape him.

It's not rape as he didn't fight back.

:D

 

Now this is what I will really term it as a cultural issue .. as compare to smrt culture issue .. this is like the mother load of cultural issue.

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