Shops and schools in a
town in eastern India where an elderly nun was gang-raped closed Tuesday in
protest over perceived police inaction, as anger mounts over the
"inhuman" crime, business owners said.
Police have detained
around 10 people for questioning but
no arrests have been made over the Friday
attack on the nun, aged in her 70s, the latest in a string of high-profile
rapes in India.
The nun was attacked
after a gang of half a dozen robbers broke into a convent school near the town
of Ranaghat in West Bengal state and ransacked the premises, police say.
"We have called for
the shutdown of businesses and shops in this town to support the nun ... and
the immediate arrest of the culprits," said Samiran Paul, a spokesman for
the local business association.
"We can't imagine
such inhuman torture on an elderly nun who devoted her life to the service of
humanity. It's a shame to us," the cloth merchant told AFP.
Prime Minister Narendra
Modi on Tuesday expressed deep concern over the attack, along with a separate
incident of vandalism of a partly built church in the northern state of Haryana
on Sunday.
"PMO (prime
minister's office) has asked for immediate report on facts & action taken
regarding the incidents," he said in a tweet.
A series of attacks on
churches in recent months prompted Hindu nationalist Modi to promise a crackdown
on religious violence and freedom of worship for all faiths.
Modi had been heavily
criticised for not speaking out earlier against religious violence and has also
faced flak for remaining silent about a spate of mass
"re-conversions" of minority Christians and Muslims to Hinduism.
Rallies and prayer
sessions have been held across India since the rape, while West Bengal's chief
minister, Mamata Banerjee, faced hundreds of angry protesters late Monday when
she travelled to meet the nun in Ranaghat.
Teacher Sriparna Dutta
said government schools were shuttered in the area for the day because "we
are all so shocked".
Police superintendent
Arnab Ghosh said security has been stepped up "in the town and its
outskirts to avert any untoward incident during the shutdown".
The incident also adds
to a grim record of sexual assaults in India, which this month banned a
documentary about a December 2012 gang-rape that sparked domestic and
international outrage.
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