India gang-rape victim's record compensation could help others, say activists
India gang-rape victim's record compensation could help others, say activists
Published: 12:43 pm Apr 25, 2019
NEW DELHI: A move by India’s top court to order record compensation for a Muslim woman gang-raped during religious riots more than 15 years ago could help other victims win justice, her lawyer and activists said on Wednesday. Bilkis Bano was three months pregnant when she was gang-raped and her three-year-old daughter was murdered during the violence that swept the western state of Gujarat state in 2002, killing more than 1,000 people. On Tuesday, the Supreme Court ordered the Gujarat government to compensate Bano with 5 million rupees ($71,582), a job and a home after she rejected an offer of 500,000 rupees in March. “This is a case where the maximum compensation has been granted by an Indian court for rape or communal violence,” said Shobha Gupta, Bano’s lawyer, describing the judgment as “historic” at a press conference. The cash compensation is nearly five times more than the 1.3 million rupees granted to a victim in northeast India in a 2017 case - the next highest amount, according to Gupta. “When such kind of orders are passed, yes, you have a ray of hope,” said Gupta. “There is a message that goes out that ‘yes, there are courts still existing and justice can still prevail’.” Last year, the Supreme Court approved a scheme that guarantees survivors of sexual assault compensation of up to 1 million rupees, saying such aid was crucial for their care and rehabilitation. Conservative attitudes in India mean victims of sexual assault are often shunned by their families and communities, and blamed for the violence perpetrated against them, say activists and lawyers.