Rape accuser on way to court set on fire in India

Activists march Thursday in Kolkata, India, to demand justice in the rape and murder of a 23-year-old woman.
Activists march Thursday in Kolkata, India, to demand justice in the rape and murder of a 23-year-old woman.

Five men poured fuel on a woman, lit her on fire and left her to burn early Thursday on a desolate road in the Indian district of Unnao, police say. She was traveling to a court hearing in her rape case when she was attacked.

In March, the 23-year-old filed a report with authorities, accusing two men from her village of sexually assaulting her and filming the act. Both men were arrested but later released on bond, according to The Indian Express.

Senior police officer SK Bhagat said that in the complaint the woman stated "one of the two rape-accused was in relationship with her in 2018, but he physically exploited her, lured her with a marriage proposal. Later, he refused to get married and raped her with another friend," reported network NDTV.

Police arrested five men on Thursday, including the two men accused of raping and exploiting the woman last year.

The Indian Express reported the woman is in critical condition, having suffered burns on more than 70% of her body, and is being treated in Lucknow.

The Washington Post in most cases does not disclose the names of surviving victims of sexual assault. Indian courts have ruled that the names of victims of sexual assault and harassment should not be publicly disclosed.

In 2012, the gang-rape and killing of a young woman on a New Delhi bus made national headlines. Thousands flooded the streets to protest acts of rape and violence against women and girls.

Despite official promises of justice and change, Thursday's crime is the latest in a series of sexually driven attacks.

An Indian police official said four men accused of raping and killing a woman last week in a high-profile case in India's southern city of Hyderabad have been fatally shot by police. The official said the men were killed today after they tried to escape during a visit to the crime scene.

The district of Unnao is in Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state, which is known for its violence and deteriorating law and order. Earlier this year, a teenager accused a prominent Unnao politician of raping her in 2017, when she approached him for a job. A month later, in July, she was severely injured in a near-fatal car accident, which left two dead. Police investigated whether the lawmaker was connected to the crash, but he wasn't charged.

About 33,000 rapes were reported in India in 2017, according to the most recent national crime statistics, marking a decrease from the prior two years. (In 2017, about 100,000 rapes were reported in the United States.)

As The Washington Post previously reported, about 25% of such cases in India result in conviction and, advocates say, the vast majority of victims are unlikely to approach authorities about sexual assault. As a result of this underreporting, the country's official figures might downplay the scope of the problem.

Information for this article was contributed by Joanna Slater of The Washington Post and Mohammed Shafeeq of The Associated Press.

A Section on 12/06/2019

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