NEW
DELHI (Reuters) - Authorities throttled movement in the heart of the
capital on Monday, shutting roads and metro stations in a bid to restore
law and order after police fought pitched battles with protesters enraged by the gang rape of a young woman.
In an unusual televised address, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh called for calm following the weekend clashes in New Delhi and vowed to punish the rapists for their "monstrous" crime.
Singh's government,
often accused by critics of being out of touch with the aspirations of
many Indians, has been caught off-guard by the depth of the popular
outrage as protests have snowballed and spread to other cities. India is seen as one of the most unsafe places in the world to be a woman.
Instead of channelling the outrage, the government
has found itself on the defensive over the use of force against the
protesters and complaints that it has done little in its eight years in
power to create a safer environment for women.
The protests have
been the biggest in the capital since 2011 demonstrations against
corruption that rocked the government.
"People are not
reacting to just one rape case. They are reacting to the general
malaise, the frustration with the leadership. There is a feeling that
the leadership is completely disconnected," said political analyst
Neerja Chowdhury.
Police barricaded
roads leading to India Gate, an imposing Arc de Triomphe-style war
memorial in the centre of the city, that has become a hub of the
protests by mostly college students. Many metro rail stations in
fog-shrouded Delhi were also closed, crippling movement around the city
of 16 million.
The protests overshadowed an official visit by Russian President Vladimir Putin and disrupted his schedule.
The 23-year-old
victim of the December 16 attack, who was beaten, raped for almost an
hour and thrown out of a moving bus in New Delhi, was still in a
critical condition on respiratory support, doctors said.
For video on protests: click http://reut.rs/12K46Ne
For vidoe on prime minister's appeal for calm: click http://reut.rs/YErBry
In the weekend
spasm of violent protests, police used batons, teargas and water cannon
against demonstrators around the capital. Protests and candle-light
vigils have also taken place in other Indian cities but they have been
more peaceful.
"I appeal to all
concerned citizens to maintain peace and calm. I assure you we will make
all possible efforts to ensure security and safety of women in this
country," Singh said in his televised address to the nation.
Singh has been
under fire for remaining largely silent since the rape. He issued a
statement for the first time on Sunday, a week after the crime. Sonia
Gandhi, chief of the ruling Congress Party, has met some of the
protesters to hear their demands.
Comments by
political commentators, sociologists and protesters suggest the rape has
tapped into a deep well of frustration that many Indians have over what
they see as weak governance and poor leadership on social and economic
issues.
"There is a huge
amount of anger. People are deeply upset that despite so many incidents
there has not been much response from the state and the government,"
said social activist Ranjana Kumari, director of the Centre for Social
Research in Delhi.
SOCIAL MEDIA SITES DRIVE PROTESTS
New Delhi has the highest number of sex crimes among India's
major cities, with a rape reported on average every 18 hours, according
to police figures. A global poll by Thomson Reuters Foundation in June
found that India was the worst place in the world to be a woman because
of high rates of infanticide, child marriage and slavery.
Since last week's rape, the authorities have promised
better police patrolling to ensure safety for women returning from work
and entertainment districts, more buses at night, and fast-track courts
for swift verdicts on cases of rape and sexual assaults.
But protesters view
those measures as inadequate and are looking for the government to take
a firmer stand on sexual assaults countrywide, most of which go
unreported.
Reported rape cases
in India have increased by 9.2 percent to 24,206 cases in 2011 from
22,172 the previous year, according to the latest figures from the
National Crime Record Bureau,
"This is not about that one rape," said aspiring
fashion designer Shruti Sharma, 24, at a protest in Delhi on Monday.
"This is about how
crime is rampant in our cities. We are angry at the government for not
ensuring the safety of its citizens. The judiciary is slow. Cases take
too long."
Opposition
political parties, normally quick to exploit the government's
vulnerabilities, have largely been sidelined in the protests, which have
mostly been organised through social media sites such as Twitter and
Facebook.
The protesters come
from all walks of life but many are young and middle class. Political
commentators see their involvement as evidence of growing frustration
with the government's focus on poor and rural voters and a failure to
pass on the benefits of a decade of rapid economic growth.
So far, however, the protesters' focus has been on the rape case rather than on other grievances.
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