After Ex-Bureaucrats, 600 Academics Send Sharp Letter To PM Modi On Rapes

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
the centre clambered to introduce harsher punishment for child rapists to cap public outrage over sexual crimes, a group of 637 academics in
India and abroad have written an open letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, telling him that his statements on the "monstrous crimes" had
been "wholly inadequate, platitudinous" and gave "non-specific assurances of justice" for the victims."We send you this letter so that we
are not guilty of silence; and so that callousness and cowardice might finally draw the line at the broken body of a little girl and the
rape of a young woman", said the strongly-worded letter, released around the same time the government cleared changes to the penal code to
introduce death penalty for child rapists.The signatories include over 200 academics and scholars at universities in the United States,
United Kingdom and Australia.The open letter is the second that has been addressed to PM Modi this week.Former bureaucrats and police
officers had written to him, holding PM Modi responsible for a "terrifying state of affairs" and expressing concern at the "decline in the
secular, democratic, and liberal values".In their letter, the academics spoke about expressed their "deep anger and anguish" at the efforts
to protect the alleged perpetrators of the rapes in Jammu and Kashmir's Kathua and Uttar Pradesh's Unnao and what they called, were
Pradesh where the police hadn't filed a rape case against a BJP lawmaker accused of rape last year, the Allahabad High Court finally had to
intervene and ordered legislator Kuldeep Singh Sengar's arrest.The horrific details of the eight-year-old girl's torturous last days were
described by the International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde to be "revolting"
The child, belonging to a nomadic community, was kidnapped in January and over the next week, drugged, starved, repeatedly gang raped and
then murdered.Listing out a string of incidents that had taken place since 2015 including deaths linked to cow vigilantism, the academics
saw the two rapes as "part of a pattern of repeated targeted attacks" on religious minorities, Dalits, tribals and women.The letter noted
that all these attacks had taken place in BJP-ruled states."This is not to associate violence exclusively with your party and with State
governments presided over by your party
But there is an undeniable association with the ruling dispensation," they said.They also noted that there had been "little evidence" to
suggest that the government was assisting vulnerable sections of society or discouraging blatant breaches of the rule of law through