Demonstrators in New Delhi hold candles in honour of a physiotherapy student who was gang raped and murdered to mark the one year anniversary of her death on December 29, 2013. Sajjad Hussain / AFP
Demonstrators in New Delhi hold candles in honour of a physiotherapy student who was gang raped and murdered to mark the one year anniversary of her death on December 29, 2013. Sajjad Hussain / AFP
Demonstrators in New Delhi hold candles in honour of a physiotherapy student who was gang raped and murdered to mark the one year anniversary of her death on December 29, 2013. Sajjad Hussain / AFP
Demonstrators in New Delhi hold candles in honour of a physiotherapy student who was gang raped and murdered to mark the one year anniversary of her death on December 29, 2013. Sajjad Hussain / AFP

Family marks India gang rape victim’s first anniversary with prayer ceremony


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NEW DELHI // With vigils and prayers, India on Sunday marked the first anniversary of the death of a student savagely gang raped on a Delhi bus — a tragedy that sparked nationwide protests.

The 23-year-old physiotherapy student died on December 29 last year, nearly two weeks after being attacked by a gang of six men on a moving bus as she returned home from the cinema with a male companion.

The attack and her subsequent death shook the country, shone a global spotlight on India’s treatment of women and unleashed seething public anger about sexual violence and harassment of women.

The victim’s family are holding a religious ceremony in their ancestral village in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, away from the constant media attention they have faced since the attack, her brother said.

“We want to remember her in a quiet way, away from all the glare. We want it to be a private family moment,” said the brother, who cannot be named for legal reasons.

The family will follow traditional Hindu rituals, with a prayer ceremony and symbolic offerings to their ancestors, which are believed to bring peace to those who have died.

The student, who was repeatedly assaulted with an iron rod during her ordeal, has been praised for her determination to report her attackers to the police before she died of her injuries.

Four of her attackers were convicted and given the death penalty in September, while a juvenile was sentenced to a detention centre.

The sixth man died in prison in March in an apparent suicide.

The angry and sometimes violent protests against the attack jolted India’s parliament, which this year passed tougher laws against rapists and other sex-crime offenders.

Women’s groups say some improvements have also been made in the last 12 months to India’s notoriously slow, inefficient and sometimes corrupt police and judicial systems.

Despite the reforms, new cases of rape continue to be reported daily from across the country. An ambulance driver allegedly raped a 10-year-old girl after he drove her sick mother to the hospital in the central state of Chhattisgarh, the Press Trust of India reported.

Police have charged the driver over the December 23 incident.

In the capital a small group of school students and workers gathered on Sunday at a protest site in the city’s centre where a makeshift memorial has been set up for the victim.

They urged lawmakers to push ahead with reforms aimed at reducing crimes against women, including speeding up the justice system.

* Agence France-Presse