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Gang-rape videos on sale in India amid rise in violent crimes against women

Perpetrators are increasingly recording their crimes on mobile phones to use as a blackmailing tool and to dissuade victims from going to the police

Rina Chandran
Mumbai
Friday 05 August 2016 19:37 BST
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The clips are being sold in the ‘hundreds, perhaps thousands, every day’ at a cost of 50-150 rupees (£0.56-£1.70) each
The clips are being sold in the ‘hundreds, perhaps thousands, every day’ at a cost of 50-150 rupees (£0.56-£1.70) each (AFP/Getty Images)

Graphic mobile phone clips of gang-rapes are being sold in shops in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, as a spate of rapes in one of the country’s most violent states has sparked anger and calls for the chief minister to step down.

The clips, which last 30 seconds to five minutes, are being sold in the “hundreds, perhaps thousands, every day”, the Times of India reported. They cost 50-150 rupees (£0.56-£1.70) each.

“We are aware. We are taking necessary action. But it is difficult, as the sales are happening below the counter,” Ajay Sharma, a deputy inspector general of police in the city of Agra, said.

Women still unsafe in India, says family of gang-rape victim

In recent weeks, several gang rapes have been reported in Uttar Pradesh. Last week, a woman and her 14-year-old daughter were dragged from their vehicle at gunpoint on a major highway and gang-raped for hours in nearby fields. Local media reported that initially the police did not respond to a call for help.

The daily Indian Express reported that this week another woman was gang-raped in Uttar Pradesh, and said the incident had been recorded on a mobile phone.

Increasingly, perpetrators are recording their crimes on mobile phones to use as a blackmailing tool and to dissuade victims from going to the police, the Times of India said. Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav has come under fire over the rise in violent crimes against women, with #LawlessUP trending on Twitter this week.

In 2014, there were 337,922 reports of violence against women including rape, molestation and abduction, a 9 per cent increase on the previous year, according to official data.

Rape victims in India suffer enormous stigma and endure an archaic and insensitive criminal justice system, women’s rights activists say. During lengthy trials, victims and their witnesses are sometimes intimidated by the accused who, in some cases, are granted bail by the court.

A wave of public protests following the fatal gang-rape of a woman on a Delhi bus in December 2012, prompting the government to enact stiffer penalties including the death sentence for repeat rape offenders and the criminalisation of stalking.

Thomson Reuters Foundation

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