In an election speech on Thursday, Mulayam Singh Yadav, head of the
Socialist Party (SP), which runs the state government in Uttar Pradesh,
said if he became prime minister he would scrap a recently introduced
law that fixed the death penalty for rapists. Referring to a case in
Mumbai where three men were sentenced to death for two gang-rapes, Mr
Yadav claimed the men should not face the death penalty as it was not
uncommon "for boys to make mistakes".
"Boys will be boys. Following a girl-boy fight, the girl complains she was raped," he said in the city of Moradabad.
Mr
Yadav's comments sparked outcry from women's rights campaigners and
commentators, as well as his political opponents. They were also
denounced, though not that vocally, by the ruling Congress party, which
had been long allied in the federal government with the SP in a ruling
coalition.
On Friday, the 74-year-old Mr Yadav, whose son is the chief minister
of sprawling, impoverished UP, appeared to backtrack on his comments.
"Many
people said that my comments were right. I am against rape. Rapist
should be given the most severe punishment," he said at another rally,
according to local media. "Innocent people should not be hanged. Rape is
being debated in half the world. If I said this, what was wrong."
Matters
were made worse when another senior leader of the SP, whose government
oversees a population of 200 million and which draws much of its support
from Muslims, appeared to suggest that women who were raped might also
be hanged, along with the rapist.
Questioned by the NDTV news
channel about Mr Yadav's comments, Abu Azmi said: "Rape is punishable by
hanging in Islam. But here, nothing happens to women, only to men. Even
the woman is guilty."
"When the reporter questioned him further,
he replied: "Any woman if, whether married or unmarried, goes along with
a man, with or without her consent, should be hanged. Both should be
hanged. It shouldn't be allowed even if a woman goes by consent."
Mr
Azmi's comments sparked further outcry, including a denunciation from
his son, Farhan Azmi, who is contesting a seat in the city of Mumbai.
"I
believe a rapist should be hanged a hundred times," he said. "I have
five sisters and everyone in my family believes the same."
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