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Teen gang-raped and burned alive in latest Indian outrage against women

Anti-rape protests, like this Delhi rally in April, have not stopped the latest wave of horrific crimes against women.

Anti-rape protests, like this Delhi rally in April, have not stopped the latest wave of horrific crimes against women. Photo: EPA/Jagdeesh NV

Indian police have arrested 14 people suspected of kidnapping, raping and burning to death a teenage girl, the latest in rising crimes against women in India despite toughening of laws.

District Magistrate Jitendera Singh said the accused abducted the girl from Chatra, a village in eastern Jharkhand state, while she was attending a wedding ceremony on Thursday. Some of them allegedly raped her before letting her go home.

The village council leaders imposed a fine of 50,000 rupees ($A993) on the accused the next day.

Singh said the suspects beat up the girl’s family members for complaining against them and burned her to death after finding her at home alone on Friday. Police were searching for the main suspect in the case, he said.

India has been shaken by a series of sexual assaults since 2012, when a student was gang-raped and murdered on a moving New Delhi bus. That attack galvanised a country where widespread violence against women had long been quietly accepted.

While the government has passed a series of laws increasing punishment for rape of an adult to 20 years in prison, it’s rare for more than a few weeks to pass without another brutal sexual assault being reported.

Responding to widespread outrage over the recent rape and killings of young girls and other attacks on children, India’s government last month approved the death penalty for people convicted of raping children under the age of 12.

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