January 7, 2013 -- Updated 0519 GMT (1319 HKT)
Public outrage over India gang rape
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Five suspects face charges of murder, rape and kidnapping
- The attack on a woman and her male companion took place on December 16
- The woman died late last month from her severe injuries
- Her male companion says an iron bar was used in the attack
The horrific attack on
the 23-year-old woman in New Delhi prompted protests over the country's
treatment of women and handling of sexual attacks. It also stirred
worldwide outrage.
The suspects will appear
in the Metropolitan Magistrates' Court court in the southern New Delhi
district of Saket, the court said, according to CNN affiliate IBN.
That court is expected to
transfer the case to a so-called "fast-track" court, several of which
have been set up to expedite cases in a justice system bogged down by
red tape.
Charges of murder, rape
and kidnapping were filed against five of the accused men on Thursday.
If convicted, they could receive the death penalty.
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A juvenile court will
take up the matter of determining the age of a sixth suspect in the
attack, who claims to be 17 and therefore not old enough to be tried as
an adult, IBN reported.
The female victim of the
attack, whose name has not been released, died late last month in a
Singapore hospital, where she received treatment after being airlifted
from New Delhi.
The men are accused of
assaulting her and her male companion on a bus in the Indian capital on
December 16, robbing them of their belongings before dumping them at the
side of a road.
The 28-year-old male
victim, who survived with a broken leg, said in an interview last week
with the news agency Agence France-Presse that he and his friend had
boarded the private bus to return home after seeing a movie.
But the driver of the bus made lewd remarks and five other men on board taunted the couple and locked the doors, the man said.
He said that he was
beaten with a stick while the men raped his friend and hit her in the
worst possible ways in the most private parts of her body." The driver
used an iron bar in the attack, he told the news agency.
In a separate interview
with the news agency Reuters, the man said their abductors drove the
couple throughout the city for about two hours before dropping them
below an overpass; he was unable to stand and had no clothes.
He said that they
received no help "for nearly 20 or 25 minutes," and that when three
police vehicles finally did show up, the officers argued among
themselves about which police precinct had jurisdiction.
The case appears to have prompted changes in New Delhi law enforcement.
India's interior
minister has ordered the city's police stations to increase the number
of women officers to facilitate the handling of complaints from women.
Interior Minister Sushil
Kumar Shinde said last week that each police station in Delhi should
have 10 women constables and two women subinspectors.
The interior minister said he was also working with security officials to strengthen laws regarding rape and assault.
The brother of the woman
killed in the attack said Sunday that their family would like to see a
new hospital named after her to keep her memory alive.
He told CNN by phone
from eastern India that the family's home village, located in a
underdeveloped region, still doesn't have a well-equipped health care
center.
"It will be really good
if our village gets a hospital in her name. That will keep her memory
alive and serve a cause," said the 20-year-old, who asked not to be
named.
The rape victim was the
eldest of three siblings, with two younger brothers. A physiotherapy
student, she was expecting an internship at a hospital in the Indian
capital in January.
"After her internship,
she would have got a job. And that would have been a great help to our
family," said the brother, himself a student.
The family is still
struggling with the traumatic loss, he said, and feels that recent
protests in several Indian cities in response to the attack are
justified.
"You need these protests
to bring about a change in laws. And laws should be made so tough that
nobody should even think of committing such crimes. Rapists deserve
death sentence," he said.
CNN's Harmeet Shah Singh in New Delhi contributed to this report.
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