Indian police say they are investigating a spate of rapes and hangings in a troubled northern region, as the national women's rights body called for the state government to resign over the crisis.
India has sought to improve its reputation over violence against women, but public outrage was reignited by the deaths last month of two girls, aged 12 and 14, who were gang-raped and lynched in their impoverished village in Uttar Pradesh.
On Thursday, a woman said she had been gang-raped by four officers at a police station in the state, and police said they were also investigating the death of a 19-year-old found, like the two girls, hanging from a tree.
"The body was strung up using the girl's dupatta (long scarf)," senior police superintendent Ashutosh Kumar said, adding the incident occurred in a village in Moradabad district.
"The FIR (first information report) was lodged by the girl's brother against unidentified persons. He has alleged the girl was murdered," Kumar told AFP.
The case is the latest in a series of attacks in Uttar Pradesh whose chief minister Akhilesh Yadav is under mounting political pressure to resign for his handling of law and order.
Mamatha Sharma, head of the state-run National Commission for Women, urged Yadav to resign, calling his government's failure to protect women "shameful".
"They (the government) not only fails in protecting their women but they don't even have the police in their control," Sharma told NDTV.
But Yadav, speaking on a visit to New Delhi, insisted that the situation was no worse than elsewhere in the country.
"Law and order is an important issue for any state. The government is working to maintain law and order," he said.
"In UP, the environment is good and the law and order situation is better than several other states."
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