TWO brothers who raped a minor girl before burning her alive have been sentenced to death in a landmark case in India.
The vile monsters, identified as Kalu, 25, and Kanha, 21, were found guilty on Saturday of rape and murder in the horrific incident that took place in August last year.
Kalu Kalbeliya, 25, has been given a death sentence in the chilling case
The Indian court also found Kanha, 21, guilty of raping and murdering the 14-year-old child
All India Progressive Women’s Association (AIPWA) activists protesting after cases of increasing rapes in India
Special Public Prosecutor Mahavir Kisanawat said: “Magistrate Anil Gupta of the Bhilwara POCSO court declared the two main suspects guilty in the event.”
The chilling case and the landmark verdict have been classified as “rarest of the rare”.
The victim’s distraught parents were also present during the hearing who finally said: “We have got justice”.
“My daughter got justice today. I couldn’t eat properly in the last few months. Now I will have food with peace,” the mother of the victim said.
The cruel incident happened last year after the victim – who can not be named – was reported to have gone missing after going out to work in a field.
A case was filed by the victim’s family shortly after she failed to return back home.
But the girl’s brother – who went out to search for her – grew suspicious after he saw a burning furnace near their home, which caught his attention.
Cops investigating the case told the Times of India: “The girl’s brother saw several charcoal furnaces set up by the people of a nomadic community.
“Smoke billowing from one of the kilns drew his attention and made him suspicious as they were not active in the evening.
“He rummaged through the kiln with a stick and sifted through the charred items.”
The heartbroken boy found his sister’s bracelet, one he had given her just days before the indescribable horror.
Several body parts and charred clothing were recovered from the kiln by specialist forensic experts, while other remains were found discarded in the surrounding area.
It was concluded the young girl had tragically been set alight whilst she was still alive after evil killers doused her in flammable liquids.
The distressing case caused widespread outrage across the country as many people took to the streets to protest against growing cases of rape in India.
Last year during the Manipur violence, cops were accused of handing over two women to a large armed mob before they were paraded down the street naked in a disturbing video.
The Supreme Court stated the police had allegedly given the young victims to hoards of men, who later sexually abused them.
Distressing footage showed the two women being dragged into a field after being groped by the brutes.
The Supreme Court slammed the Manipur government and Indian state police.
The court said: “For two months there has been a total breakdown of law and order in Manipur, there is no law and order left.
“Police have no control over the situation, looks like for two months police had made no arrests, and had not recorded statements.”
The extreme violence inflicted on the young victims by hundreds of men has sparked protests across the state.
The Indigenous Tribal Leaders’ Forum (ITLF) condemned the attack on the woman as “sickening” and also claimed one woman was gang raped.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the incident had “shamed India” and that “no guilt will be spared”.
He said: “I assure the nation, the law will take its course with all its might.
“What happened with the daughters of Manipur can never be forgiven.”
Manipur Chief Minister Biren Singh: “A thorough investigation is currently underway and we will ensure strict action is taken against all the perpetrators, including considering the possibility of capital punishment.”
Inside India’s sexual violence epedemic
By Sayan Bose, Foreign News Reporter
India is plagued by sexual violence – especially against women. Rape is the fourth most common crime that is reported in India.
According to official statistics, more than 30,000 cases were registered in the country in 2021 – an average of 80 cases in a single day.
And this is when most of the rape incidents go unreported because the victims fear retaliation and humiliation, something seen very commonly in India.
Various human rights groups and NGOs say that women who belong to the lowest level of India’s centuries-old caste hierarchy system are most vulnerable to rape and other forms of physical and sexual violence.
They believe men from the dominant caste groups often attack these women to re-establish repressive gender rules.
While this is absolutely true in most of the rural areas in India – sadly – it is also the case in urban cities and developed areas in the country.
The biggest example of this would be the 2012 Delhi Gang rape and murder – commonly known as the Nirbahaya Case – where a 22-year-old woman travelling in a bus with her partner was beaten, gang-raped and tortured by six men, including the bus driver.
While she was rushed to one of the biggest hospitals in India – and was later airlifted to Singapore – the woman later died of the severe injuries that were inflicted by the attackers.
This was the case that shook the nation – so much so that millions of people took to the public streets in New Delhi to protest against the weak rape laws.
Fourteen years since the incident, not much has changed in the country that still reports an overwhelming number of rape cases every single day.
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