4th February 2025
Beyond a Verdict: Why Systemic Reforms Are Key to Ending Sexual Violence in India
8 min read
Two months after the brutal rape and murder of a young doctor in Kolkata, a sessions court has sentenced the perpetrator to life imprisonment. While we welcome the conviction, justice cannot be confined to a single verdict. According to our report on Sexual Violence in South Asia, addressing the root causes of sexual violence requires systemic reforms that go beyond the courtroom and ensure safety, accountability, and prevention at every level.
Following this tragedy, Equality Now and the South Asian Movement for Accessing Justice (SAMAJ) released a solidarity statement calling for justice, alongside urgent demands to address the systemic failures that allow sexual violence to persist. These demands emphasized:
While these demands remain as critical as ever, deeper structural and policy-level reforms are needed to ensure that justice goes beyond individual verdicts and addresses the systemic failures that perpetuate sexual violence.
Justice must go beyond convictions, it requires urgent policy changes, institutional accountability, and survivor-centered reforms. The Nirbhaya Fund was established by the Government of India in 2013, following the tragic 2012 Delhi gang rape incident was set up for this very purpose – to support initiatives aimed at enhancing the safety and security of women. In addition to our original demands, we urgently call for the suggested reforms:
The Kolkata case is not an isolated incident; it is part of a pattern of gender-based violence that continues to affect thousands of women and girls across India. Official statistics report over 80 rapes per day in India, but the actual numbers are believed to be much higher. With a conviction rate of just 27.12%, survivors and their families are often left without justice (Equality Now’s Sexual Violence in South Asia report).
As we reflect on this verdict, we must ask: Is justice truly served if the system remains broken? Until legal reforms are implemented, discriminatory barriers dismantled, and accountability prioritized, the cycle of sexual violence will continue.
We stand in solidarity with the families of all victims and will continue advocating for systemic changes that make justice accessible to all survivors. Only through unified, decisive action can we create a safer and more just future for women and girls in India. Sexual violence must end, and it must end now.
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