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Bengal Nun Gangrape Case: No Arrests Yet; More People Detained

Bengal Nun Gangrape Case: No Arrests Yet; More People Detained
KOLKATA, INDIA - 2015/03/17: Christian community of Kolkata led by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Calcutta organized a protest rally to expressed solidarity with the 72 year old nun who was ganged rape at convent school in Ranaghat, Nadia. Archbishop of Kolkata Thomas D'Souza led the rally which started at Allen Park. (Photo by Saikat Paul/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Pacific Press via Getty Images
KOLKATA, INDIA - 2015/03/17: Christian community of Kolkata led by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Calcutta organized a protest rally to expressed solidarity with the 72 year old nun who was ganged rape at convent school in Ranaghat, Nadia. Archbishop of Kolkata Thomas D'Souza led the rally which started at Allen Park. (Photo by Saikat Paul/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)

RANAGHAT — No arrest has been made even after three days of the gang rape of a septuagenarian nun at a convent here but some more people were detained in connection with the incident last night.

The health of 71-year-old Sister Superior of Convent of Jesus and Mary, who is under treatment at Ranaghat sub-divisional hospital, is improving, doctors said.

Nadia district superintendent of police Arnab Ghosh said the detentions were in addition to the ten detained till yesterday but refused to give details.

A police team, he said, has been sent outside the state in connection with the incident.

CCTV footage had shown four persons who were allegedly involved in the crime. The SP had announced a reward of Rs 1 lakh to any individual providing credible information leading to the arrest of the accused.

Ranaghat hospital superintendent A K Mondol said she is taking normal food, both solid and liquid. A medical board has been formed for her treatment and she is being provided counselling.

Her spiritual counselling by a Christian missionary from Rome is also on, Mondol said.

Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee had visited the 71-year-old nun at the hospital yesterday and said she believed that the culprits should be hanged.

Meanwhile, traders observed a bandh in the area near the convent in protest against the incident and demanding immediate arrest of the culprits.

Vice-chairperson of West Bengal Minorities Commission, Maria Fernandes who visited the nun at the hospital, said that many incidents of attack on women had taken place across the country in the past eight months.

"We have to fight unitedly against the attacks on women," she said.

The incident, Fernandes said, was not a case of mere robbery only but of rape and vandalism also.

The chapel of the convent was vandalised, she said.

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