Many Students and activists take part in a torch procession demanding women’s safety and justice for rape victims in Dhaka. A Bangladesh court has sentenced five men to death for the 2012 gang rape of a 15-year-old girl, amid growing public anger over rampant sexual violence. Court order comes days after government introduced death penalty for rape amid growing anger over sexual violence.
The sentence was handed down in the northern district of Tangailby on Thursday by a special tribunal set up to deal with cases of abuse against women and children, according to sources. Prosecutor Nasim Ahmed said the victim’s boyfriend took her to a riverside spot where she was raped by him and two friends. Two others helped them.
“All five were found guilty and have been sentenced to death,” Ahmed told to reporters. It was the first conviction since the government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina this week introduced the death penalty for rape.
Female activists and students take part in a torch procession demanding women’s safety and justice for rape victims in Dhaka. Last week, demonstrations broke out across the country after harrowing footage of a group of men stripping and attacking a woman went viral on social media.
Anger over the issue had been simmering since last month when members of the governing party’s student wing – Bangladesh Chhatra League – were arrested and charged in a separate gang rape case. Protesters in the capital and elsewhere have demanded harsher punishments, faster trials and an end to what they see as a culture of impunity for sex crimes.
Only about 3 percent of rape cases end in convictions, activists said. At least 208 cases of gang rape – a fifth of a total of nearly 1,000 cases – were reported in the first nine months of this year, according to Ain o Salish Kendra, a local rights group.
Bangladesh has hanged 23 people since 2013, while at least another 1,718 are on death row. Rights activists have criticized the introduction of the death sentence for rape, saying it will not reduce violence against women.
“This regressive step is a fig leaf that deflects attention from the lack of real action to address the appalling brutality faced by so many Bangladeshi women,” Amnesty International said. “Executions perpetuate violence, they don’t prevent it.”