Woman photojournalist, 22, gang raped in Mumbai
A young photojournalist was gang raped while her male colleague was
tied up and beaten in an isolated, overgrown corner of India's business
hub of Mumbai, police said Friday. The case was reminiscent of the
December gang rape and death of a young university student in the Indian
capital that shocked the country.
The attack took place in Lower
Parel, a onetime textile-manufacturing neighborhood of south Mumbai
that over the past decade has changed dramatically. Today, upscale
malls, trendy restaurants and super-luxury condominiums sit side-by-side
with abandoned textile mills and sprawling slums.
Police said
the woman was on assignment to take pictures of the neighborhood
Thursday evening when five men confronted her and her colleague. After
initially offering to help her get permission to shoot inside a
crumbling, isolated building, they became aggressive and accused the
male colleague of being involved in a local crime.
When he denied
involvement in the crime, they tied his hands with a belt and took the
woman to another part of the compound and took turns raping her,
Mumbai's Police Commissioner Satyapal Singh told reporters.
The attack
took place at about 7 p.m. on Thursday.
On Friday, police
arrested one suspect in the attack and he had named and identified the
other four men, Singh said. While police have released sketches of the
four men, Singh would not give their names or other details, saying
authorities did not want to give them any warning that they were being
sought. Singh said the men may have been local drug dealers.
The
woman, 22, is in stable condition in a hospital. Police declined to say
who the woman was working for at the time of the attack.
The
assault comes amid heightened concerns about sexual violence in India.
The gang rape and death of the student on a bus in New Delhi in December
had shaken a country long inured to violence against women and sparked
protests demanding better protection for women.
In response, the
government passed a stringent law increasing prison terms for rape and
making voyeurism, stalking, acid attacks and the trafficking of women
punishable under criminal law.
The attack was discussed in
India's Parliament, where junior Home Minister R.P.N. Singh told
lawmakers that the government had asked the state of Maharashtra, of
which Mumbai is the capital, for a detailed report on the attack.
Singh,
the home minister, said the federal government had recommended that the
"harshest" punishment be handed down to anyone found guilty in the
case.
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