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'Absolutely Not': Backlash Over Jaya Bachchan's Call To Lynch Rapists

While many MPs talked for stricter laws and the need to fast-track rape cases, several MPs openly bayed for blood in the Parliament on Monday.
Jaya Bachchan in Rajya Sabha
Screenshot
Jaya Bachchan in Rajya Sabha

The rape and murder of a 26-year-old veterinarian in Hyderabad led to heated discussions in the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha on Monday as Parliamentarians discussed the state of women’s safety in the country.

While many MPs talked about stricter laws and the need to fast-track such cases, several MPs openly bayed for blood.

“These types of people (the accused in the case) need to be brought out in public and lynched,” Samajwadi Party’s Jaya Bachchan said in the Rajya Sabha, “I think it is time... the people want the government to give a proper and definite answer”.

Outside the Parliament, she reiterated to the media, “If you have not been able to provide security then leave it to the public to give judgement. Those who failed to provide security and those who committed the crime should be exposed in public, and then let people decide,” ANI quoted.

AIADMK’s Vijila Sathyananth told the Rajya Sabha, “Those involved in this heinous crime should be hanged before December 31.”

DMK’s P Wilson said courts should be empowered to castrate convicted rapists before they are released from jails, PTI reported.

In 2012, Bachchan had made a statement in the Rajya Sabha saying the government should apologise to family of the Delhi gang-rape case, Jyoti Singh. Protests had been held across the country and the MP had participated in one in Mumbai.

On Monday, people reacted to Bachchan’s comment in particular with absolute horror.

Reports of mob violence and lynchings have risen in the last five years. According to Quint’s tracker, 113 people have died due to mob violence since 2015.

The increase in mob violence prompted the Human Rights Watch, earlier this year, to urge the Narendra Modi-led government to implement Supreme Court directives on ensuring that individuals responsible for mob attacks were held accountable, that there was prompt and impartial investigation and prosecution of the perpetrators and instigators, and that senior state and high-ranking police officials made public statements saying perpetrators would be fully prosecuted.

In this context, Bachchan’s words were not merely tone-deaf, they amounted to inciting vigilante justice through violent means without any regard for the law.

People were aghast the statements were coming from an elected lawmaker:

Rights activists have repeatedly said that death penalty for rape crimes puts an added burden on survivors and also leads to less reporting of the crime in a country where rape is already underreported.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.