Asifa Bano, 8, Kathua
The picturesque state of Jammu and Kashmir has long been home to some of India's worst intercommunal strife. In the city of Kathua, the latest atrocity was committed to deliver a horrific message. The Hindu majority in and around the town were uneasy with the recent arrival of the Barkawals,
a nomadic Muslim group who graze their horses and other livestock in the region. In January, the custodian of a local Hindu temple, Sanji Ram, took it upon himself to drive the Barkawals out.
Ram approached a Barkawal girl named Asifa Bano away from the meadow where she was tending horses. He then led her through the forest to the temple, where he and several other men sedated her, raped her repeatedly and bludgeoned her to death. The attacks lasted for three days before the child was finally killed and dumped in the forest. Her lifeless body was the message: leave.
Asifa's family and relatives lamented both the killing and the fact that the local police were paid off to quash any subsequent investigation. But they weren't the only people protesting. A growing number of ultra-nationalists belonging to the Hindu Ekta Manch group rushed to the defence of the accused; claiming that Muslims can't be trusted and pleading the mens' innocence. On Monday a group of 40 Hindu lawyers with links to the ruling BJP party
physically obstructed the police from finally filing charges against the accused. The fracas has further inflamed anti-Muslim sentiment in the town.
While the counter-protests have intensified (one group of Hindu women blocking a highway near Kathua has
vowed to self-immolate if the accused are found guilty), the government's own response has been non-existent. The state legislature in Jammu and Kashmir has criticised police corruption but the government in New Delhi has remained quiet.
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi has declined to comment on the case, as have many of his lieutenants. Activists say this silence is a sign that Modi's BJP is looking ahead to the 2019 elections. The party already has a chequered history of using
Hindu-Muslim tensions for political gain. Given that local BJP politicians are now speaking at Hindu Ekta Manch rallies in Kathua the accusations of politically-motivated indifference don't seem outlandish.
Unnamed, 15, Unnao
Where the Kathua case shows small-town bribery and discrimination, another rape which occurred last year has highlighted a vast coverup amongst police and local government officials. The Uttar Pradeshi city of Unnao has been rocked by a scandal involving the rape of a teenager by a powerful local politician. This week (one year on from the attack) India's Central Bureau of Investigation stepped in and charged BJP legislator Kuldeep Singh Sengar
with rape and assault.
The rape victim has been petitioning state authorities for a response ever since the assault last June. But the police have dragged their feet and the BJP has stonewalled; in desperation the girl finally
attempted to immolate herself last Thursday outside the home of the State's Chief Minister. Even this failed to spur the Chief Minister - Yogi Adityanath - to any real action. But then on Monday the police and party officials shielding Kuldeep from investigation made a fatal mistake.
The victim's father, who had raged at his daughter's alleged tormentors, was taken into custody over the weekend. On Monday he was
beaten to death by Atul Singh, the brother of the accused rapist. It's not the first time Adityanath's tenure in UP has been marred by extrajudicial killings. While the toxicology report states that the girl's father died of septicaemia and shock, the hospital's records show evidence of the thrashing he had received inside the police station. Now, Kuldeep has been charged and six police officers have been suspended. But the case is certain to expand drastically as CBI officers pursue additional charges.
The Indian justice system may eventually mete out blame and punishment to the tormentors in both these heinous cases but the much harder task will be to try and unknot the prejudices that allowed them to happen in the first place.