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July 23, 2016

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Living in fear after double gang-rape

A low-caste Indian who survived a gang-rape aged 17 only to be raped again, allegedly by men awaiting trial for the first attack, said yesterday that she feared she and her family would never be safe again.

Police say the 20-year-old student from India’s lowest Dalit caste was abducted from outside her college on July 13, drugged and raped before being dumped on a highway.

Three men have been arrested in connection with the attack, two of whom had been charged with raping her in 2013, and only released on bail a few months ago.

Relatives say they believe the latest attack was revenge for her refusal to drop her complaint against the men, who they say were able to evade justice because they belonged to higher castes and had political connections.

“I will have to spend my entire life in constant fear of being raped again or killed,” said the woman, who is not named for legal reasons.

“My life will never be the same. I am worried about my family’s safety. They can harm us any time,” she said by telephone from her hospital bed in the northern Indian state of Haryana.

India promised to speed up rape trials in the wake of a fatal gang-rape in 2012 that shone a global spotlight on frightening levels of violence against women in India.

But rape and sexual assault remain commonplace in the country and cases are often slow to come to court — especially if the defendants are wealthy and well-connected.

Relatives of the victim said the alleged perpetrators of the 2013 rape had offered them money to withdraw the case, and threatened to attack her again if they did not.

“We were offered 5 million rupees (US$75,000) to withdraw the case. They are rich people and have strong political links,” her cousin said.

“We didn’t give in to their demands and pursued the case, but we were let down by the court, which gave them bail in May,” he said in Rohtak in Haryana, where the family moved to after the first attack.

He said he believed his cousin was originally attacked because she had spurned the advances of one of the alleged rapists.

“He must have thought, they are poor and helpless, and we will get away with the crime,” he added.

The relative said police only moved to arrest the alleged perpetrators after weeks of protests by the Dalit community, who face widespread discrimination in India even though this is illegal.

“We were tossed from one police station to another, but no one was listening. The accused were bribing them and were getting all help from the authorities,” he said.

“This country is only for rich and for upper castes, only they get justice,” said the cousin, adding that the entire family had now converted to Buddhism to escape discrimination under the Hindu caste system.




 

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