RG Medical College Rape Victim’s Parents Meet CBI Chief, Allege Cover-Up

New Delhi: RG Medical College The parents of the sacrifice of the rape came together with the CBI Director Praveen Sood, and to express the dissatisfaction with the agency’s investigation in the rape and murder of the daughters of the agency, the authorities took a patient hearing by bringing the criminal to the agency center by bringing the criminal to justice.
This is the second meeting of Sood with them. It took half an hour. The 26 -year -old trainee graduate doctor was raped and killed in RG Snow Medical College and Hospital in Kalcutta in the seminar hall of the chest medicine department in the night shift last year last year.
The crime sent shock waves sparking by large protests by doctors and medical students throughout the country. The CBI’s investigation nailed Civic Volunteer Sanjay Roy, who was sentenced to life imprisonment in January. The CBI challenged the decision seeking a death penalty for Roy at the Supreme Court of Calcutta.
However, the parents were convinced that Roy did not act alone and that the incident was covered up. “We said there was more than one person from the first day. He was a strong girl. There is no way to do it in such a safe building. All early covering points to a larger bond.” He said.
His father claimed that attempts were made to destroy the evidence. “There were three bodies on the crematorium that day. Still, our daughter’s body was burned first. Why hurriedly? Steps were taken to erase evidence.”
Parents also plan to meet senior leaders, including Interior Minister Amit Shah. In order to celebrate the first anniversary of the tragic incident, two public activities are planned in Kalcutta, which is expected to walk to the Kalighat area where Prime Minister Mamata Mamata Banerler lived.
‘Abhaya Mancha’, a forum that formed after the incident, will observe Raksha Bandhan that day. On August 14, he plans to walk from 9 o’clock to midnight in the Galcutta and suburbs. Roy, Sealdah, Anirban Das’deki additional region and sessions were given by the judge. The court also ordered Roy to pay a fine of 50,000 RS and led the state government to pay 17 lakh compensation to the family of those who died.
Judge Das said that the crime did not fall into the category of “Nadirin’s rare” category, which justified the decision of not imposing the death penalty. Roy, a former civilian volunteer with the police police, was found guilty in 64 (rape), 66 (punishment of death) and Bharatia Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 103 (1). The CBI questioned the order that the case was the most rare of a ‘rare event’ that the death penalty would be a proper punishment for Roy.


