Death penalty for child rape gets approved in India

Responding to public pressure, the Indian government has moved to prescribe the death penalty for people convicted of raping girls aged under 12.

Protests have raged across India after the rape of an eight-year-old girl, prompting the government to approved the death penalty for rapists.

Protests have raged across India after the rape of an eight-year-old girl, prompting the government to approved the death penalty for rapists. Source: AAP

India's cabinet has approved the death penalty for rapists of girls below the age of 12, after Prime Minister Narendra Modi held an emergency meeting in response to nationwide outrage in the wake of a series of cases.

The executive order, or ordinance, amends the criminal law to also include more drastic punishment for convicted rapists of girls below the age of 16, government officials said on Saturday.

Angry protesters took to the streets demanding justice following the rape and murder of an eight-year-old girl.
Angry protesters took to the streets demanding justice following the rape and murder of an eight-year-old girl. Source: AAP


The order, a copy of which was seen by Reuters, will come into effect once it is signed by India's president.

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 India's rape epidemic has shown no sign of dying down.

There were 40,000 rapes reported in 2016. The victims were children in 40 per cent of those cases. Every day, newspapers carry fresh stories of sexual violence against women.

The latest outpouring of national revulsion came after details emerged of the gang rape of an eight-year-old Muslim girl in a Hindu-dominated area of Jammu and Kashmir state.

Local leaders of Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party had appeared to offer support to the men accused, adding to the public disgust.



Protests around the country were also prompted by the arrest of a lawmaker from the BJP last week in connection with the rape of a teenager in Uttar Pradesh, a populous northern state that is governed by the party.

More recently, a sexual attack on an 11-year-old girl was reported in Modi's home state of Gujarat. The post-mortem revealed the girl had been tortured, raped, strangled and smothered.

Modi's failure to speak out soon enough during the latest bout of public anger fuelled criticism that his government was not doing enough to protect women.

With a general election due next year, Modi moved swiftly to remedy that negative perception by holding the emergency cabinet meeting as soon as he returned on Saturday morning from an official visit to Europe.

The cabinet also prescribed measures for stronger punishment and faster trials in rape cases, a government document seen by Reuters showed.

In cases of the rape of a girl below the age of 16, the cabinet increased the minimum punishment to 20 years from 10 years.

The penalty for the rape of women was raised to 10 years from seven years.

The document made no mention of the rape of boys or men.


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