Hundreds of angry protesters gathered outside the headquarters of Delhi police today after a five-year-old girl was raped and tortured, reviving memories of a brutal December assault on a woman that shook the country.
Police arrested a man they accuse of the attack from the eastern state of Bihar, and he was being brought to Delhi for interrogation.
Doctors say the girl suffered severe injuries and bruising all over her body including her neck and genitalia.
Protests that began yesterday grew more intense after video footage showed a policeman slapping a woman protester, and following reports investigators offered the victim's family 2,000 rupees not to file a case.
The assault on the girl revived memories of the gang rape by five men and a teenaged boy of a 23-year-old physiotherapy student on a bus on December 16th in New Delhi. The victim later died of her injuries in a Singapore hospital.
The case caused an outpouring of anger in Delhi.
While statistically India does not have the world's highest incidence of rape, the frequency and apparent increase in brutal crimes has become a major political issue in the nation of 1.2 billion a year before elections.
Today, a group of men and women kicked and pushed yellow metal barricades at the gates of the police station in an attempt to break through.
The girl was "conscious and alert" and her condition stable, but her injuries are infected and so severe she may need corrective surgery, an official of the state-run All India Institute of Medical Sciences hospital told reporters.
Police identified the accused as a 22-year-old called Manoj, who was arrested last night in Bihar where he had fled after leaving the girl for dead in an apartment in the same Delhi building the family lives in. The girl was kept in captivity for 40 hours, police said.
The accused was a temporary worker in garment factories and lived with his father, a juice seller, police said. He was hiding at his in-laws' house when he was captured.
In a televised news conference, a deputy commissioner said police will seek to establish if more people were involved in the alleged rape after the accused is questioned. Interior minister Sushil Kumar Shinde said the government was conducting an inquiry into allegations of police negligence.
The girl, whose parents work as labourers and live in a slum in the outskirts of Delhi, went missing from home on April 15th, according to Manish Sisodia, an official of the Aam Aadmi Party which organised a protest on Friday. Local media said she was found by neighbours who heard her crying two days later.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's office said in a statement that he was deeply disturbed by the latest incident. In December his administration had faced criticism for failing to respond quickly to the horrific attack on the physiotherapy student.
The unprecedented protests by thousands of people across India eventually forced the government to pass tougher laws to fight gender crimes in March.
But activists yesterday said the laws were not enough to deter sex offenders in India's largely patriarchal societies. "If you thought just bringing in a new law will stop crimes, your are wrong. They will reduce, but won't stop. You need community policing to stop these crimes," activist Kiran Bedi told an Indian TV channel.
Reuters