Student’s rape triggers protests in Dhaka

Published January 7, 2020
DHAKA: Students of the Dhaka University hold placards during a rally to demand punishment for those involved in the rape.—AFP
DHAKA: Students of the Dhaka University hold placards during a rally to demand punishment for those involved in the rape.—AFP

DHAKA: The sexual assault of a student at a top university triggered angry protests in Bangladesh on Monday, with demonstrators urging the death penalty for convicted rapists.

The South Asian nation has seen a doubling of reported rape cases in the last year, according to activists, triggering spasms of public anger directed at the glacial response of police and the justice system.

“Rape is an unforgivable offence. In Bangladesh, the punishment for rape is very slow,” said demonstrator Shahela, who like the 21-year-old victim of Sunday’s attack is a student at the prestigious Dhaka University in the capital.

“We want quick executions for the perpetrators so that others are deterred from committing such crimes.” Demonstrators linked arms and marched along key roads in Dhaka, halting traffic to demand the perpetrator’s arrest within 24 hours.

“We are working to arrest him,” senior police official Sazzadur Rahman said.

Police said around 1,500 students joined the protests, which remained peaceful. A correspondent at the scene estimated that twice as many people joined the rally.

The victim in Sunday’s attack was travelling to a friend’s home when she was gagged, taken to a remote area in Dhaka’s outskirts and sexually assaulted.

Local rights group Ain O Salish Kendra said that there were 1,413 reported rape cases in Bangladesh last year, double the number recorded in 2018. Dozens of victims were killed while 10 committed suicide after they were attacked.

Nationwide protests gripped Bangladesh in April after a 19-year-old student who accused her seminary’s head teacher of sexual harassment was doused in kerosene and set on fire.

Sixteen people were later sentenced to death over the attack, including the teacher.

Published in Dawn, January 7th, 2020

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