Protests in India against release of 11 men convicted of gang-raping Muslim woman
Hundreds of people are holding protests in different parts of over a decision to release 11 men who had been sentenced to life imprisonment for gang-raping a pregnant Muslim woman and murdering her family during ‘religious riots’ in the state of in 2002.
The men, who were released on 15 August - India’s - were convicted in 2008 of rape, murder and unlawful assembly. Protestors in New Delhi urged the Gujarat government to rescind its decision, and chanted slogans and sang songs in support of the victim, Bilkis Bano.
India's Supreme Court will hear a petition challenging their release, according to .
Over the weekend protests demanding justice for Bilkis Bano held across the country. Don't forget, her rapists & those who murdered her family were convicted and jailed for life.
— Gargi Rawat (@GargiRawat)
A travesty this Independence day when the Gujarat govt decided to let them free
The so-called Gujarat riots began when a train carrying Hindu workers was allegedly burned by a group of Muslims, spurring an anti-Muslim pogrom which saw roving bands of Hindu extremists hunting down Muslims in their cars, businesses and homes across Gujarat. At least 1,000 people were killed in the violence.
Bilkis Bano was a pregnant 21-year-old in 2002 when she was gang-raped by the 11 men and saw 14 members of her family killed, according to a statement released by her lawyer on Bano’s behalf. Now 41, she said she was “bereft of words” and “still numb” from the government’s decision to release the men.
Statement by Bilkis Bano.
— Rana Ayyub (@RanaAyyub)
“Today I can say only this - how can justice for any woman end like this? I trusted the highest courts in our land. I trusted the system and I was learning slowly to live with my trauma. The release of these convicts has taken from me my peace and shaken my faith in justice. My sorrow and my wavering faith is not for myself alone but for every woman who is struggling for justice in courts,” read the statement.
Bano urged the government to “undo this harm” and to “give me back my right to live without fear and in peace.”
At the protest in solidarity with Bilkis Bano today in Delhi's Jantar Mantar, actor tears up while addressing the protesters and later while speaking to the media, and unequivocally condemns the release of the 11 convicts.
— Meghnad Bose (@MeghnadBose93)
Officials in Gujarat, which is ruled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), said the convicts’ application for release was granted because they had completed fourteen years in prison and were therefore eligible under a 1992 remission policy applicable at the time they were convicted.
They were released on the same day that Prime Minister Narendra Modi .
Prime Minister Narendra Modi was the chief minister of Gujarat at the time of the riots, and has long been accused of having the bloodshed. He was from visiting the United States from 2005 till he was elected Prime Minister in 2014 for his failure to stop the riots against Muslims in Gujarat.