New Delhi: President Droupadi Murmu has expressed profound dismay and outrage over the brutal rape and murder of a trainee doctor in Kolkata, marking her first public comments on the horrific crime that has shaken the nation. In a statement to the news agency PTI, the President said, “enough is enough” and urged the society to confront the pervasive violence against women with renewed urgency.
The President’s remarks come amid nationwide protests ignited by the discovery of the 31-year-old doctor’s body at Kolkata’s RG Kar Medical College and Hospital on August 9. The incident has sparked widespread anger, drawing citizens from all walks of life to demand justice and systemic change.
President Murmu condemned the persistent threat posed by criminals, noting that even as protests erupted in Kolkata, “criminals remained on the prowl elsewhere”. She further emphasized that “no civilized society can allow daughters and sisters to be subjected to such atrocities,” thereby calling for “honest, unbiased self-introspection” to address the deep-rooted causes of these heinous crimes.
The President denounced the “deplorable mindset” that continues to view women as inferior, lamenting the “collective amnesia” that has plagued Indian society since the 2012 Nirbhaya case. She highlighted the troubling tendency to forget the countless rapes that have occurred over the years, stating, “This collective amnesia is obnoxious”.
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee said her government would bring in a Bill providing for capital punishment for rape and that if the Governor refused to give his assent to the legislation, Trinamool Congress workers would protest in front of Raj Bhavan. “I will tell Speaker to call an Assembly session next week and we will bring in a Bill that will have capital punishment for rape,” Banerjee said and claimed that the Central Government had refused to enact such a law in spite of demands for it. “Our workers, male and female, will sit in protest in front of Raj Bhavan,” she added. Earlier, she questioned the progress in the CBI's investigation into the sensitive case and questioned, "where is justice". |