Indian woman who tried to drown herself in the sea alongside her parents and four sisters in mass suicide attempt washes up on beach alive… only to be raped by fishermen who find her.
A woman who was washed ashore alive after
attempting to drown herself alongside her parents and four sisters
claims she was raped by two fisherman who found her lying unconscious on
the beach.
The victim and her family
had attempted a mass suicide on December 18 after they were evicted from
their home in Puducherry, India.
Two
of the sisters and the mother drowned while the two other sisters, the
victim and the father were washed ashore at different locations along
the coast.
Scene: A woman who attempted to commit suicide by drowning herself in the sea claims she was raped by two fisherman who found her washed up on the shore near Puducherry, India (pictured)
The victim, who was found around a
kilometre from the scene of the suicide attempt, says she was raped
while lying unconscious on the shore.
Police
reviewed security camera recordings from hotels and guesthouses in the
area and noticed two men acting suspiciously at the time of the attack.
The two suspects, identified as
crabcatchers S Raja, 35 and his relative K Vijaykumar, 32, from
Pillaichavadi, Villupuram district, Tamil Nadu, were arrested the next
day.
Senior superintendent of police V J Chandran c;laims they have confessed to raping the woman.
The
family had been living in an ashram, a type of small monastery that are
common across India, when they were evicted following a Supreme Court
order.
India is fighting an endemic
rape culture which first came to international attention brought in 2012
by the shocking case of a woman who died after being gang raped in New
Delhi.
Indian protesters hold banners and wear black ribbons during a rally in
New Delhi following the cremation of a gangrape victim in the Indian
capital
The country brought in tougher laws
last year against sexual offenders after the fatal gang-rape of a
student in New Delhi in December 2012, but they have failed to stem the
tide of violence against women.
A
survey published last week said 91 per cent of women also saw no
improvements in safety despite a slew of measures rolled out in the
aftermath of the attack including improved policing, women's helplines
and fast-track courts as well as the new law.
The
survey by the Hindustan Times newspaper of 2,557 women also found that
97 percent had been victims themselves of some kind of sexual
harassment.
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