“Justice Betrayed: Kolkata Law College rape Horror” Classroom to Crime Scene….

Kolkata law college rape case – June 25,2025 Syllabus Topic – GS 1 (society- women empowerment) GS 2 (social justice) – https://upscuniverse360.com/

rape

Various Newspaper Headlines

Kolkata Police transfer law college gang rape case from SIT to Detective Department

The Kolkata Police have added new sections to the case, including those of kidnapping, causing grievous hurt with a dangerous weapon, and criminal intimidation #By The Hindu

Kolkata rape accused’s lawyer claims scratch marks on body are ‘love bites’ By @The Hindustan times

What is the Case?

Kolkata ‘gang-rape’ case
 

The alleged gang-rape took place inside a security guard’s room on the premises of South Calcutta Law College on June 25. The police have arrested four persons in connection with the case. First, they held the prime accused, Monojit Mishra, and his co-accused, Zaib Ahmed and Pramit Mukherjee, who were students of the law college. Later, college security guard Pinaki Bandyopadhyay was also arrested.

Medical examination had earlier revealed nail-inflicted injuries on Monojit’s body, indicating that the victim tried to fight back during the assault.

“There are signs of injuries, precisely scratch marks, on the body of Monojit. These injuries are fresh. Such injuries happen when someone faces struggle or resistance,” news agency PTI had reported, quoting a source within the police department.

A medical examination of the law student also corroborated her statement, with doctors discovering evidence of “forceful penetration, bite marks, and nail scratches” on her body. A CCTV footage of the campus also showed the survivor being dragged by the accused inside the college premises.

@UPSC MAINS…GS 1 (society- women empowerment) GS 2 (social justice) #ALL OPTIONAL SUBJECT

🧩 Case Summary

  • What occurred: On June 25, a 24‑year‑old first-year law student studying after hours at South Calcutta Law College was reportedly assaulted inside the security guard’s room by Monojit Mishra (a former student and ex-TMCP leader), along with two current students and a security guard who allegedly enabled the crime
  • Medical findings: The medical report detailed abrasion marks and bruising around her neck and chest, plus evidence of forced intercourse—no lacerations noted ]
  • Evidence: CCTV footage from June 25 corroborates the timeline—showing the accused accompanying the victim into the guard’s room

👥 Accused & Arrests

  • Monojit Mishra, 31, ex-student/alumnus, primary accused—allegedly driven by revenge after the victim rejected his marriage proposal
  • His defense contested injury marks as “love bites”
  • Two students and the security guard (Pinaki Banerjee, 55) have since been arrested, totaling four in custody
image 14

⚠️ Context and Concerns

  • Power dynamics: Mishra, accused of being protected by political influence (TMC student wing), allegedly had a history of predatory behavior
  • Premeditation: Police describe the assault as planned, dating back to the victim’s admission day, including video recording and blackmail attempts

📢 Aftermath & Reactions

  • Public outrage: Protests led by “Abhaya Mancha,” SFI, DYFI, and AIDWA marched to the college demanding swift justice
  • Judicial involvement: Calcutta High Court called for suo motu action, urging CBI-led investigation
  • Political backlash: The BJP has demanded CM Mamata Banerjee’s resignation, accusing the TMC of shielding perpetrators; TMC denies allegations .

📌 Key Issues & Imperatives

IssueDescription
Campus safetyRepeated sexual violence incidents highlight systemic lapses in institutional security
Political influenceAlleged shielding of accused under political patronage erodes trust in accountability .
Need for legal reformCalls for CBI oversight and centralized campus safety standards are intensifying .

🔍 What Happens Next?

  1. Ongoing investigation: Sit team is reconstructing crime scene; CCTV & DNA evidence under forensic review
  2. Judiciary role: Court may push for CBI probe and stricter legal enforcement.
  3. Demand for campus reforms: Advocates want institutional protections like helplines, CCTV monitoring, non-bailable offenses for campus sexual violence.

🧭 Final Thoughts

This disturbing event goes beyond one tragic incident—it underscores significant systemic issues: patriarchal control, campus impunity, and political shelter. Meaningful reform is critical—both through legal mechanisms and institutional accountability. Let me know if you’d like links to full reports, news coverage, victim support resources, or updates on legal proceedings!

Violence against women encompasses a range of harmful acts targeting women due to their gender. This includes physical, sexual, and psychological violence, both within and outside the home. It’s a pervasive issue with far-reaching consequences for individuals and society. 

Examples of violence against women include:

  • Physical violence: Assault, battery, and other forms of physical harm. 
  • Sexual violence: Rape, sexual assault, and sexual harassment. 
  • Psychological violence: Emotional abuse, intimidation, and threats. 
  • Domestic violence: Violence occurring within the home, often between partners or family members. 
  • Honor killings: Violence motivated by perceived threats to a family’s or community’s honor. 
  • Dowry-related violence: Violence inflicted on women in connection with dowry demands. 
  • Female genital mutilation (FGM): Harmful traditional practices that involve the partial or total removal of external female genitalia. 
  • Trafficking for sexual exploitation: Forced sexual exploitation of women through trafficking. 

Violence Against Women

National Crime Record Bureau report shows stark increase in violence against women in India in the forms of dowry deaths, acts of sexual harassment, torture, rapes and domestic violence.

Violence against Women

  • The United Nations defines violence against women as “any act of gender-based violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual, or mental harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or in private life.”
  • Violence against women is a social, economic, developmental, legal, educational, human right, and health (physical and mental) issue.
  • It is a preventable cause of morbidity and mortality in women.

Violence against women occurs throughout the life cycle from prebirth, infancy, childhood, adolescence, adulthood to old age.

Facts and Findings

  • As per World Health Organization (WHO) findings about 1 in 3 (35%) women worldwide have experienced either physical or sexual intimate partner violence or non-partner sexual violence in their lifetime.
  • Violence against women – particularly intimate partner violence and sexual violence – is a major public health problem and a violation of women’s human rights.
  • Globally, 38% of murders of women are committed by a male intimate partner.
  • Violence can negatively affect women’s physical, mental, sexual and reproductive health, and may increase the risk of acquiring HIV in some settings.

Predisposing Factors

  • Men are more likely to perpetrate violence if they have low education, a history of child maltreatment, exposure to domestic violence against their mothers, harmful use of alcohol, unequal gender norms including attitudes accepting of violence, and a sense of entitlement over women.
  • Women are more likely to experience intimate partner violence if they have low education, exposure to mothers being abused by a partner, abuse during childhood, and attitudes accepting violence, male privilege, and women’s subordinate status.
  • There is evidence that advocacy and empowerment counselling interventions, as well as home visitation are promising in preventing or reducing intimate partner violence against women.
  • Situations of conflict, post conflict and displacement may exacerbate existing violence, such as by intimate partners, as well as non-partner sexual violence, and may also lead to new forms of violence against women.

Causes

  • Gender Disparity: is one of the deep rooted cause of violence against women that put women at risk of several forms of violence.
    • Discriminatory gender norms and gender stereotypes results into structural inequality.
  • Psychiatric Morbidity: Generally refers to the incidence of both physical and psychological deterioration as a result of a mental or psychological condition, generally caused due to the consumption of alcohol.
    • Regular consumption of alcohol by the husband has been strongly associated with poor mental health of women.
    • Alcohol operates as a situational factor, increasing the likelihood of violence by reducing inhibitions, clouding judgment and impairing an individual’s ability to interpret cues.
  • Sociodemographic factors: Patriarchy has been cited as the main cause of violence against women. Where women have a higher economic status than their husbands and are seen as having sufficient power to change traditional gender roles, risk for violence is high.
  • Family factors: Exposure to harsh physical discipline during childhood and witnessing the father beating the mother during childhood is a predictor of victimization and perpetration of violence against wife in adulthood.
  • Traditional and cultural practices:
    • Female genital mutilation: Can lead to death, infertility, and long-term psychological trauma combined with increased physical suffering.
    • Acid attacks: Acid attacks have emerged as a cheap and readily accessible weapon to disfigure and sometimes kill women and girls for reasons as varied as family feuds, inability to meet dowry demands, and rejection of marriage proposals.
    • Killing in the name of family honour: In several countries of the world including Bangladesh, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Pakistan, Turkey, and India, women are killed to uphold the honour of the family due to varied reasons such as-alleged adultery, premarital relationship (with or without sexual relations), rape, falling in love with a person the family disapproves, which justify a male member of the family to kill the woman concerned.
    • Early marriages: Early marriage with or without the consent of the girl, constitutes a form of violence as it undermines the health and autonomy of millions of girls.
  • Judiciary and law enforcement machinery: An insensitive, inefficient, corrupt and unaccountable judicial system and law enforcement machinery fails to deter against various forms of crimes.
  • Sociocultural factors disfavouring women: Stereotypes of gender roles have continued over the ages.
    • The primary roles for women have been marriage and motherhood.
    • Women must marry because an unmarried, separated or divorced status is a stigma.
    • The custom of dowry is still prevalent in Indian marriages.

Consequences

  • Health Issue: Violence in any form affects not only physical mental sexual and reproductive health of women but also adversely affects their self esteem, ability to work and make decisions about fertility.
  • Economic Issue: violence against women can have serious impact on economy of the household as well as of the nation.
    • Direct cost: loss of income, productivity, healthcare and cost of social services.
    • Indirect cost: Impact on child well being, female and child mortality, intergenerational social and psychological cost.
  • Development Issue: Violence obstructs participation of women in development and planning programs both at micro and macro level.
    • Violence prevents women from experiencing or accessing the benefits of development by restricting their ability to act or move freely.
    • Violence against women is an obstruction to poverty alleviation programs as it impedes equitable distribution of resources.
  • Rights Issue: Any form of Violence against women hinders their realization of fundamental rights under article 14, 21, 19 and 32 of the Indian constitution.

Concerns

  • Underreporting: According to WHO estimates less than 40 percent of the women who experience violence seek help of any sort.
    • Among women who seek help, tend to approach family and friends and very few look to formal institutions and mechanisms, such as police and health services.
    • Less than 10 percent of those women seeking help for experience of violence sought help by appealing to the police.
  • Erring Laws: Most of the times laws and legislations for women safety are either not in compliance with the International standards or not implemented properly.
    • Laws relating to violence themselves constitute greater barrier against justice for women.
  • Dearth of Data and Statistics: on crime against women.
    • There is a need of a comprehensive and systematic research and analysis on crime against women at Central, State, district and block level.
  • Accused are known persons: from the family or neighbourhood. Women are not safe among the people they know well and may be unsafe with dear and near ones.
  • Improper implementation: Although many laws and legislations are existing but their full implementation in terms of legal literacy, training officials responsible for administering legislation, legal support services is not upto the mark.

Way Forward

  • Gender based legislation: It is important to enact and enforce legislation and develop and implement policies that promote gender equality by ending discrimination against women in marriage, divorce and custody laws, inheritance laws and ownership of assets.
  • Financial Independence: Improving women’s access to paid employment.
  • Developing and resourcing national plans and policies to address violence against women.
  • Improve system of collecting crime surveillance data on violence against women.
  • Capacity building and training to service providers and law enforcement officers to handle cases of violence against women.
  • Male Mediated Initiatives: Ensure male involvement in devising program for abusers.
  • Prevent recurrence of violence: Through early identification of women and children who are experiencing violence and providing appropriate referral and support
  • Promote egalitarian gender norms as part of life skills and comprehensive sexuality education curricula taught to young people.
  • Gender based surveys: Generate evidence on what works and on the magnitude of the problem by carrying out population-based surveys, or including violence against women in population-based demographic and health surveys, as well as in surveillance and health information systems.

Quotes for Women FOR @UPSC(#IAS/#IPS/#IFS)

  • To call woman the weaker sex is a libel; it is man’s injustice to woman. If by strength is meant brute strength, then, indeed, is woman less brute than man. If by strength is meant moral power, then woman is immeasurably man’s superior.  – Gandhi in Young India, 1930
  • “In societies where men are truly confident of their own worth, women are not merely tolerated but valued.” – Aung San Suu Kyi
  • “If you want something said, ask a man; if you want something done, ask a woman.” – Margaret Thatcher
  • “I raise up my voice—not so I can shout, but so that those without a voice can be heard…we cannot succeed when half of us are held back.” – Malala Yousafzai

“I believe that the rights of women and girls is the unfinished business of the 21st century.” – Hillary Clinton

📊 National Overview (2022)

  • Total FIRs registered: 445,256 – averaging 51 cases per hour, up 4% from 428,278 in 2021 .
  • Crime rate: 66.4 incidents per 100,000 population (increased from 64.5 in 2021) .
  • Charge-sheeting rate: 75.8% of cases were chargesheeted economictimes.

🔍 Key Crime Categories under IPC

  1. Cruelty by husband or relatives: 31.4%
  2. Kidnapping & abduction: 19.2%
  3. Assault intended to outrage modesty: 18.7%
  4. Rape: 7.1%

🌍 Regional Breakdown

  • Delhi had the highest crime rate (144.4 per 100,000), with 14,247 cases indianexpress.com.
  • By absolute numbers, top five states:
    • Uttar Pradesh – 65,743 cases
    • Maharashtra – 45,331
    • Rajasthan – 45,058
    • West Bengal – 34,738
    • Madhya Pradesh – 32,765

📌 Rape-specific Data

  • Total rape cases (IPC Section 376) in 2022: 31,516 (31,982 victims)
  • Despite legal reforms, annual rape cases in India have remained above ~30,000, and conviction rates remain low (~27–28%)

  • Crimes against women rose by 4% in 2022 over 2021 (which had a 15.3% rise over 2020)
  • Some uptick may reflect better reporting mechanisms (e‑FIR, women helpdesks), though overall the picture remains concerning

⚠️ Summary Table

MetricValue (2022)
Total FIRs on women-related crimes445,256
Crime rate per 100,00066.4
Charge-sheeting rate75.8%
Rape cases31,516
Delhi crime rate per 100k144.4

Bottom line: Crimes against women remain alarmingly high, with domestic violence being the most common form. Rape cases alone exceed 30,000 annually, but low conviction rates continue to undermine justice. Regions like Delhi and UP report disproportionately high figures.

Let me know if you want deeper breakdowns (e.g., state-wise rates, cyber-crimes, POCSO, temporal trends) or regional comparisons!

Related NCRB news & analysis

OUR SOCIAL HANDLE
image 17

https://t.me/+we5lx7wRUa4wYTFl

https://chat.whatsapp.com/FJRedvmMB90Co07RW8TSS7

image 15

https://youtube.com/@upscuniverse360?si=7Vv55gByGqxpSqv2

image 16

https://www.instagram.com/upscuniverse360?igsh=ajB4MXRlYThja3li

for self study @https://upscuniverse360.com/

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top