Who are these seemingly ordinary people who turn into brutal violators and killers?
Psychologists, lawyers and the police have been struggling to make sense of what is being described as a culture of rape, especially in Delhi and its neighbourhood.
In Delhi, over six women are raped every day. According to the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), 95 per cent of all rapes in 2015 in the country were committed by a person known to the victim. A seven-year-old Chennai girl, for instance, was raped, burnt and killer by her neighbour in February.
The director of the Institute of Human Behaviour & Allied Sciences, Nimesh Desai, attributes such criminal behaviour to factors like ingrained patriarchy and lack of gender sensitivity, as well as the internal distress and isolation of young men.
"Anti-social and criminal behaviour happens more in groups. Groups provide the comfort, courage and a false sense of bravado and masculinity, resulting in a compromise in judgement," he says.
The senior psychiatrist, however, warns against theories on the "psychology of the rapist", stressing that these can give the impression of the crime being justified.
"When we try and explain the psychology of a rapist, the intentions are usually good, but what it does to the public mind is that it kind of sanctifies or justifies the act," he told PTI.
Sometimes, the rapists act under the influence of alcohol or substance abuse, which Desai describes as "a ready recipe" for such crimes.
But the experts stress there are larger issues at play here - such as ingrained patriarchal values.
A male-dominated society "is not comfortable around an independent woman", says Supreme Court lawyer Shilpi Jain.
What confounds activists and law-enforcement agencies is that strict laws - which include death - do not seem to deter the perpetrators.
Mumbai-based psychologist Harish Shetty blames delayed convictions for this.
He adds that while there is more awareness about the law, "it has no teeth" unless judgements are on time.
"Acquittals are very high and convictions are very low," he adds.
The NCRB report shows a conviction rate of 21.7 per cent in crimes against women in India during 2015. It means more than 7 out of 10 people accused of such crimes walked free.
The December 16, 2012, case - when a physiotherapy intern was brutally raped and killed by a gang of men - evoked such nationwide horror that a court had sentenced the adult men to death in nine months.
Jain believes the situation can change only if there is a "complete overhaul" of police structures that allow probes by the lowest rungs of officials. She also suggests expedition of cases in courts.
Former Mumbai Police Joint Commissioner (Crime) M N Singh stresses the need for a "systemic change" to instill fear which he believes will act as a deterrent.
"If social control and policing are lacking, then howsoever strict the law is, it will only have a limited impact," Singh says. PTI MAH/TRS
Cops restraining an angry mob, which tried to attack the accused S Tashvant
CHENNAI: In a shocking incident,
Sunday, was murdered and her half-burnt body was recovered from under a bridge on the city's outskirts at Anakaputhur four days later.
Police said it was a 22-year-old diploma graduate, the child's neighbour, who kidnapped, murdered and disposed of the body. Surprisingly, it was the accused S Tashvant who had alerted the police control room on the missing child and gave interviews to TV news channels on the missing girl.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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