Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Participants at a candlelit vigil for the gang-rape victim yesterday AP Photo/ Saurabh Das
India

Doctors battle to save India gang-rape victim

The 23-year-old student was airlifted from India to Singapore overnight in a bid to save her life after a vicious gang-rape on a New Dehli bus left her with severe injuries.

DOCTORS IN SINGAPORE are battling to save the life of an Indian student who sustained horrific injuries in a gang-rape after she was dramatically airlifted overnight from a hospital in New Delhi.

As India’s prime minister vowed that the attackers of the 23-year-old would face swift justice, medics at Singapore’s Mount Elizabeth Hospital described her condition in the intensive care unit as “extremely critical”.

“She is being examined and the hospital is working with the Indian High Commission (embassy),” the hospital added in a brief statement.

The Indian government, which is paying for the woman’s treatment, approved the decision to transfer her from Delhi’s Safdarjung Hospital where she had been treated since the 16 December assault on a bus in the centre of the capital.

Visa arrangements were also fast-tracked to enable the victim’s relatives to keep watch over her in Singapore.

“The hospital and the family have requested that the privacy of the patient and the family be respected,” said a statement from the high commission.

According to police and prosecutors, six men took turns to rape the woman and assault her with an iron bar, leaving her with intestinal injuries, before they threw her out of a bus that they had taken for a joy-ride.

Students protest against the brutal gang-rape of the woman in Allahabad yesterday. (AP Photo/Rajesh Kumar Singh)

While doctors in Singapore did not give details about the treatment she has received since her early morning arrival, their counterparts at Safdarjung said Mount Elizabeth had been chosen as it has a multi-organ transplant facility.
B.D. Athani, medical superintendent at Safdarjung Hospital, told reporters the woman had already undergone three operations in New Delhi.

“With fortitude and courage she has survived the after-effects of the injuries so far but her condition continues to be critical,” Athani added.

Widespread protests

The gang-rape has prompted widespread street protests in India, not only in revulsion at the savage nature of the attack but also because it tapped into simmering anger at the level of violence against women.

Official figures show that 228,650 of the total 256,329 violent crimes recorded last year were against women, with the number of rapes in the capital rising 17 percent to 661 this year.

Gang-rapes are reported on a daily basis, with police revealing on Thursday that a 42-year-old woman had been found overnight dumped on a road in southeast Delhi after she was gagged, sedated and then raped by three men.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told a gathering of chief ministers from across India Thursday that there was a “problem” which “requires greater attention” by the central and state governments. He promised to review laws on women’s safety.

The Mount Elizabeth Hospital in Singapore (Photo: AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

Commission of inquiry

Six men are in custody in connection with the assault. Singh, whose government has been stung by criticism about the notoriously slow Indian justice system, said their case would be dealt with swiftly.

“The culprits have been apprehended and the law will deal with them expeditiously,” he said.

The government has already set up a commission of inquiry into the attack while a separate panel has been asked to suggest changes in the laws to make punishment for such horrific crimes stiffer.

“Laws regarding the safety of women will be reviewed,” Singh said.

India was rocked by a wave of protests in the week after the attack, prompting authorities in Delhi to seal off large parts of the capital.

With most of the roadblocks having now been lifted, activists are planning to hold fresh protests at the India Gate monument where some of the largest demonstrations have taken place.

- © AFP, 2012

Read: India: 10 men arrested over another gang-rape >

Read: India: PM urges calm as anger rages over gang-rape >

Your Voice
Readers Comments
17
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.