NEW DELHI // A teenager was convicted and jailed for three years yesterday for his part in the gang rape and murder of a young woman who was attacked on a moving bus in Delhi in December.
The youth, who was 17 at the time of the assault, received the maximum penalty available for a juvenile offender, said Anil Sharma, the chief investigating officer in the case. The sentence includes the time he has spent in prison since his arrest and will be reviewed, Mr Sharma said.
The victim's mother emerged from the court in tears.
"He got just three years ... from December onwards, he has been given three years," she said. "He should get an adult sentence."
The victim's father said the family would fight for a harsher sentence.
"It's a crime to be born a girl in India," he said. "Girls are not safe in India."
Outside the court, about 20 protesters also demanded a harsher punishment, screaming "Hang the juvenile too" and "We want justice".
Yesterday's guilty verdict, announced in a New Delhi court overseen by the Juvenile Justice Board of India, was the first conviction in a case that ignited protests across the nation. Four other men, all adults, are still on trial. A sixth defendant was found dead in his jail cell in March.
The protests triggered by the gang rape turned violent, forcing the government to pass stricter laws in April to address issues of violence against women. These included up to 20 years in prison for rape, and the death penalty for a repeated rape offence.
The victim, a 23-year-old physiotherapy student, cannot be identified under Indian law. She was with a male friend when they were tricked into boarding an off-duty bus on December 16 after an afternoon showing of the film Life of Pi.
The men raped the woman and used a metal bar to inflict massive internal injuries. Her friend was also beaten and they were both stripped naked before being thrown off the bus. The woman died from her injuries on December 29 at a hospital in Singapore.
The supreme court this month cleared the way for the principal magistrate, Geetanjli Goel, to deliver the verdict on the teenager's case. It had been delayed after a petition was lodged in the court by an opposition politician for a review of the juvenile law, arguing suspects of age 16 and older who are accused of serious offences should be tried in adult courts.
The case also caused a public outcry to lower the age at which people can be tried as adults from 18 to 16. The parents of the victim said they wanted the teenager to be charged as an adult and he should receive the death penalty.
But K Swarna Kumari, the secretary of Mahila Action, a non-profit group in Andhra Pradesh that works with women and children in slums, said she opposed calls to lower the juvenile age.
She said children in the justice system were overwhelmingly from poor, broken families, who had been subjected to abuse and witnessed domestic violence.
"When you live in poverty in the slums as a child, you see a lot, you face a lot," she said. "If you are poor from the rural areas and sent to the city to work, then also you face a lot of abuse.
"It is a failure of society that we cannot protect these children. If they commit a crime, it is a reflection of our failure."
sbhattacharya@thenational.ae
* With additional reporting by Agence France-Presse
Al Jazira's foreign quartet for 2017/18
Romarinho, Brazil
Lassana Diarra, France
Sardor Rashidov, Uzbekistan
Mbark Boussoufa, Morocco
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Dubai Bling season three
Cast: Loujain Adada, Zeina Khoury, Farhana Bodi, Ebraheem Al Samadi, Mona Kattan, and couples Safa & Fahad Siddiqui and DJ Bliss & Danya Mohammed
Rating: 1/5
Our legal columnist
Name: Yousef Al Bahar
Advocate at Al Bahar & Associate Advocates and Legal Consultants, established in 1994
Education: Mr Al Bahar was born in 1979 and graduated in 2008 from the Judicial Institute. He took after his father, who was one of the first Emirati lawyers
The Energy Research Centre
Founded 50 years ago as a nuclear research institute, scientists at the centre believed nuclear would be the “solution for everything”.
Although they still do, they discovered in 1955 that the Netherlands had a lot of natural gas. “We still had the idea that, by 2000, it would all be nuclear,” said Harm Jeeninga, director of business and programme development at the centre.
"In the 1990s, we found out about global warming so we focused on energy savings and tackling the greenhouse gas effect.”
The energy centre’s research focuses on biomass, energy efficiency, the environment, wind and solar, as well as energy engineering and socio-economic research.
'The worst thing you can eat'
Trans fat is typically found in fried and baked goods, but you may be consuming more than you think.
Powdered coffee creamer, microwave popcorn and virtually anything processed with a crust is likely to contain it, as this guide from Mayo Clinic outlines:
Baked goods - Most cakes, cookies, pie crusts and crackers contain shortening, which is usually made from partially hydrogenated vegetable oil. Ready-made frosting is another source of trans fat.
Snacks - Potato, corn and tortilla chips often contain trans fat. And while popcorn can be a healthy snack, many types of packaged or microwave popcorn use trans fat to help cook or flavour the popcorn.
Fried food - Foods that require deep frying — french fries, doughnuts and fried chicken — can contain trans fat from the oil used in the cooking process.
Refrigerator dough - Products such as canned biscuits and cinnamon rolls often contain trans fat, as do frozen pizza crusts.
Creamer and margarine - Nondairy coffee creamer and stick margarines also may contain partially hydrogenated vegetable oils.
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Indoor cricket World Cup:
Insportz, Dubai, September 16-23
UAE fixtures:
Men
Saturday, September 16 – 1.45pm, v New Zealand
Sunday, September 17 – 10.30am, v Australia; 3.45pm, v South Africa
Monday, September 18 – 2pm, v England; 7.15pm, v India
Tuesday, September 19 – 12.15pm, v Singapore; 5.30pm, v Sri Lanka
Thursday, September 21 – 2pm v Malaysia
Friday, September 22 – 3.30pm, semi-final
Saturday, September 23 – 3pm, grand final
Women
Saturday, September 16 – 5.15pm, v Australia
Sunday, September 17 – 2pm, v South Africa; 7.15pm, v New Zealand
Monday, September 18 – 5.30pm, v England
Tuesday, September 19 – 10.30am, v New Zealand; 3.45pm, v South Africa
Thursday, September 21 – 12.15pm, v Australia
Friday, September 22 – 1.30pm, semi-final
Saturday, September 23 – 1pm, grand final