Suspected rape victim hanged from tree in Uttar Pradesh

Wave of crime against women continues in India’s biggest state

Onlookers look at the body of a woman, hanged from a tree, in Moradabad district in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh yesterday. Photograph: Reuters
Onlookers look at the body of a woman, hanged from a tree, in Moradabad district in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh yesterday. Photograph: Reuters

A woman was hanged from a tree in India’s state of Uttar Pradesh yesterday and another was allegedly raped in a police station, police said, the latest incidents in a wave of crimes against women reported in the country’s most populous region over the past two weeks.

Police suspect the hanged woman was raped before being murdered, bringing to five the number of rapes reported in the past 36 hours in the state, including two women who were then killed.

“The subinspector accused of committing the rape of the woman has been put under arrest while we have launched a manhunt for the three constables accused of being party to the crime,” a spokesman at state police headquarters said.

The latest reports come after two girls, aged 12 and 14, were gang-raped and hanged from a tree on May 27th, the day after Narendra Modi was sworn in as prime minister.

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The two cousins, from a low-caste community, went missing from their home in Uttar Pradesh when they went to an outdoor toilet.

The next morning, villagers found their bodies hanging from a mango tree in a nearby orchard.

Workers from Modi’s party clashed with police when they tried to march on the office of the chief minister, Akhilesh Yadav, to protest against the violence, and opposition parties have demanded Mr Yadav’s dismissal.

Mr Yadav has asked the Central Bureau of Investigation to investigate the case. The bureau yesterday said it registered a case against three people and two police officials.

Uttar Pradesh is one of the world’s poorest regions and has largely missed out on the economic boom that swept much of India over the past decade. Its population of 208 million is larger than that of Russia, and it has endured a string of revolving door governments that have pandered to narrow caste interests.

Mr Yadav met businessmen in New Delhi yesterday to drum up investment and said reports of lawlessness were exaggerated. “In Uttar Pradesh, not only is the atmosphere good but law and order, compared with many other states, is also better,” he told reporters.

His government later issued a press release that some of India’s most prominent companies, including Reliance Industries and ITC, had pledged $9.2 billion in investment in the state at the meeting.– (Reuters)