Indian state minister vows action on rapes

India's Uttar Pradesh chief minister has plans for a special police branch for crimes against women and training sessions to make officers more sensitive.

Indian women girls light candles to pay tribute to a gang rape victim

Indian women girls light candles to pay tribute to a gang rape victim. (AAP)

The embattled chief minister of an Indian state under fire for a series of rapes and hangings says he has called for a more sensitive police force to tackle growing crimes against women.

The shocking gang-rape and lynching of two low-caste teenage girls and a string of other sex attacks in northern Uttar Pradesh has sparked public outrage, with chief minister Akhilesh Yadav coming under mounting pressure to resign for his handling of law and order.

In an interview with AFP, 40-year-old Yadav acknowledged that rapes were a growing problem in his state, often committed by relatives or neighbours.

"I firmly believe that the government must sincerely work to make sure such incidents do not happen. The government should be sensitive about these issues," Yadav said at his plush residence, which overlooks a sprawling manicured garden.

Yadav of the socialist Samajwadi Party became the youngest ever chief minister of Uttar Pradesh two years ago promising to rid the area of endemic crime.

But the latest attacks on women have put him in the spotlight, with activists calling his government's failure to protect women shameful.

Yadav said he has chalked out a plan for a special police branch for crimes against women and training sessions to make officers more sensitive.

"A woman police officer will be heading the branch so that if any crime against any woman happens, it comes to the notice of the government and immediate investigation takes place," Yadav said.

"I have also told the high court that I want fast-track courts. I have specifically told the top cops of the state that they must be sensitive to these issues and that they have to get to the crime before the media, else who will help the victims? The police will!"

India last year brought in tougher laws against sexual offenders after the fatal gang-rape of a student in New Delhi in December 2012, an attack that drew international condemnation of India's treatment of women.


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