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‘Amanat’ case: Fast-track court likely to frame charges today

New Delhi: A special fast-track court is today likely to frame charges against five men accused of brutally gang-raping and murdering a medical student in Delhi last month.

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The prosecution has asked for the suspects to be charged for murder, gang-rape, robbery and conspiracy under the Indian Penal Code. The prosecution and defence lawyers have finished their arguments and the trial will technically begin after the court frames charges.

 

A sixth man arrested in the case has been declared a minor by the Juvenile Justice Board. The board went by his school certificate, which declares his age to be 17 years and six months, and rejected the Delhi police’s plea for a bone test.

The juvenile will be tried separately and faces a maximum sentence of three years in a reform facility. The police has described him as “an equal participant in the crime” and believes he was the most depraved of the six attackers.

 

The medical student, ‘Amanat’ (NOT her real name), was gang-raped on the night of December 16 in a moving bus, which was running without permit. The men first attacked the student and her friend with an iron rod and then gang-raped her.

 

The student died on December 29 in a Singapore hospital after a brave battle for survival. She underwent several surgeries, including one at Delhi’s Safdarjung Hospital to have her intestines removed, and suffered a cardiac arrest and brain damage.

 

The magnitude of the assault and her death shook the country, triggering fiery protests demanding better policing for women and a review of laws that deal with sexual offenders.

 

The overwhelming public anger had prompted one of the suspects to appeal for the trial to be shifted out of Delhi, but the Supreme Court turned down the request.

 

The Justice JS Verma commission set up by the government in the wake of the protests had reviewed India’s laws on sexual offences and recommended sweeping changes to enhance punishment. The government yesterday brought in an ordinance to introduce tougher jail terms for crimes against women, including death penalty in extreme cases.