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Indian students participate in a candlelight vigil to mark the passing the 23-year-old student who was gang-rape on a bus in New Delhi, India. (AP Photo/Saurabh Das)
India

Teen given 3 years for gang rape and murder of student on New Delhi bus

The attack, which left the 23-year-old victim with such extensive internal injuries that she died two weeks later, sparked protests across India.

AN INDIAN JUVENILE court handed down the first conviction in the fatal gang rape of a young woman on a moving New Delhi bus, convicting a teenager of rape and murder and sentencing him to three years in a reform home, lawyers said.

The victim’s mother denounced the sentence, which was the maximum the defendant faced. The family had long insisted the teenager, who was 17 at the time of the attack and is now 18, be tried as an adult — and so face the death penalty — insisting he was the most brutal of the woman’s attackers.

“He should be hanged irrespective of whether he is a juvenile or not. He should be punished for what he did to my daughter,” the mother, Asha Devi, told reporters after the verdict was announced.

Indian law forbids the publication of the teenager’s name because he was sentenced in a juvenile court.

The attack, which left the 23-year-old victim with such extensive internal injuries that she died two weeks later, sparked protests across the country and led to reforms of India’s antiquated sexual violence laws. The government, facing immense public pressure, had promised swift justice in the case.

Metal bar

The convicted defendant was one of six people accused of tricking the woman and her male companion into boarding an off-duty bus on December 16 after they had seen an afternoon showing of “Life of Pi” at a upscale shopping mall. Police say the men raped the woman and used a metal bar to inflict massive internal injuries to her. They also beat her companion. The victims were dumped naked on the roadside, and the woman died from her injuries in a Singapore hospital.

The victim’s father said the family was deeply disappointed with the verdict.

“This is completely unacceptable to us,” Badrinath Singh said. “We are not satisfied with this outcome. He is virtually being set free. This is very wrong.”

Indian law forbids the publication of the names of rape victims, even if they die.
S.K. Singh, a lawyer for the victim’s family, said they would challenge the juvenile court’s verdict in a higher court.

“We will also seek a review of the man’s age by a medical panel, since we believe he was not a juvenile when the incident took place,” Singh said.

In India, especially in rural areas, many people do not have their births properly registered, and school certificates are used as proof of age.

Singh and the defendant’s lawyer, Rajesh Tewari, both confirmed that the defendant had been convicted and his sentence.

Four of the other defendants are being tried in a special fast-track court in New Delhi and face the death penalty. The sixth accused was found dead in his jail cell in March. The court is expected to hand down the rest of the verdicts in September.

- AP

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Author
Associated Foreign Press
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