India's top court said
on Monday it had no power to detain the youngest of the men convicted of
the 2012 gang rape of a woman on a bus in New Delhi in a case that
shocked the nation, a day after he was released after three years in
custody.
The attack turned a global
spotlight on the treatment of women in India, where police say a rape is
reported every 20 minutes, and the sentence for the young man sparked
debate over whether the country is too soft on young offenders.
The
Supreme Court was hearing a petition from the Delhi Commission For
Women demanding a longer sentence for the man, who was 17 at the time of
the crime. He had received the maximum punishment of three years from
the Juvenile Justice Board.
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"Everything had happened in accordance with the law," the two judges said in their ruling. "We need legislative sanctions" to take any action, they said.
In
2012, the man and five adult companions lured the 23-year-old trainee
physiotherapist and her male friend onto a bus in Delhi, where they repeatedly raped the woman and beat both with a metal bar before dumping them on a road.
The woman died two weeks later of
her injuries. Four of the adults were sentenced to death while the
fifth hanged himself in prison. The death sentences have not been
carried out.
Police accused the teenager of being violent, and said he pulled out part of the woman's intestines with his hands.
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