Members of the Indian parliament demanded severe punishment for the perpetrators. The then
Leader of the Opposition in the
Lok Sabha,
Sushma Swaraj, stated: "The rapists should be hanged". Chairperson of the then ruling
United Progressive Alliance Sonia Gandhi visited the
Safdarjang Hospital and met doctors on duty in the anesthesia and surgery departments for an update on the woman's health.
Bahujan Samaj Party chief,
Mayawati, said that proper investigation was required, and that "action should be so strict that no one should dare to act in such a manner again". She went on to say: "The laws at present are not enough, we need stricter laws." The then
Chief Minister of Delhi Sheila Dixit, said that she did not have the courage to meet the victim and described Delhi as a "rape capital" in interviews. She said that senior police officials should be held accountable for the failure to take adequate measures to stop such incidents and called for "immediate setting up of fast-track courts to try rape cases and to get justice in a time-bound manner". The three constables who had refused to take action upon Ram Adhar's complaint of robbery were suspended for dereliction of duty. On 24 December 2012, in his first official reaction after the incident, then
Prime Minister of India Manmohan Singh appealed for calm, stressing that "violence will serve no purpose". In a televised address, he assured that all possible efforts would be made to ensure the safety of women in India. Singh expressed empathy, saying: "As a father of three daughters I feel as strongly about the incident as each one of you". Then Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh,
Akhilesh Yadav, announced a package of financial assistance and a government job to her family. Speaking out against the protesters, President Pranab Mukherjee's son
Abhijit Mukherjee argued that the women protesters did not appear to him to be students. He said What's basically happening in Delhi is a lot like Egypt or elsewhere, where there's something called the Pink Revolution, which has very little connection with ground realities. In India, staging candle-lit marches, going to discothèques ... I can see many beautiful women among them – highly dented-painted ... [but] I have grave doubts whether they're students ... The remark was widely condemned as sexist. His sister
Sharmistha said that she and their father, the president both disapproved. Then Maharashtra Chief Minister
Prithviraj Chavan also expressed disapproval. Abhijit quickly withdrew his comment and apologised. Spiritual guru
Asaram Bapu also provoked extensive criticism from the public by saying that the victim was also to blame for her own assault because she could have stopped the attack if she had "chanted God's name and fallen at the feet of the attackers". Following the gruesome crime, several celebrities like
Preity Zinta,
Shah Rukh Khan,
Kareena Kapoor,
Amitabh Bachchan,
Farhan Akhtar and many more expressed outrages on social medial platforms like
Twitter. Many of them demanded that the rapists be castrated or hanged. The incident was later featured in the first episode of
second season of
Satyamev Jayate. Hosted by
Aamir Khan, the episode also dealt with other incidents of rape, as well as the sufferings of rape survivors at the hands of police officers, medical personnel, judicial system, and the general public.
International The
American embassy released a statement on 29 December 2012, offering their condolences to Nirbhaya's family and stated, "we also recommit ourselves to changing attitudes and ending all forms of gender-based violence, which plagues every country in the world". Nirbhaya was posthumously awarded one of the 2013
International Women of Courage Awards of the
US State Department. The citation stated that "for millions of Indian women, her personal ordeal, perseverance to fight for justice, and her family's continued bravery is helping to lift the stigma and vulnerability that drive violence against women." The crime of rape became a capital offence in India following the rape. Indian politician
Mulayam Singh Yadav opposed this change in the law, saying that "Boys will be boys. Boys commit mistakes". Two years later, in response to these comments and another
incident of rape that took place in Uttar Pradesh where Yadav's party was governing, UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon said "We say no to the dismissive, destructive attitude of, 'Boys will be boys'" and stated, "Violence against women must never be accepted, never excused, never tolerated. Every girl and woman have the right to be respected, valued and protected".
UN Women called on the
Government of India and the
Government of Delhi "to do everything in their power to take up radical reforms, ensure justice and reach out with robust public services to make women's lives more safe and secure". In the wake of remarks against India in Western media,
Jessica Valenti, writing in
The Nation, argued that such rapes are also common in the
United States, but US commentators exhibit a
double standard in denying or minimising their systemic nature while simultaneously attacking India for an alleged rape culture. Author and activist
Eve Ensler, who organised
One Billion Rising, a global campaign to end violence against women and girls, said that the gang rape and murder was a turning point in India and around the world. Ensler said that she had travelled to India at the time of the rape and murder, and she commented: After having worked every day of my life for the last 15 years on sexual violence, I have never seen anything like that, where sexual violence broke through the consciousness and was on the front page, nine articles in every paper every day, in the centre of every discourse, in the centre of the college students' discussions, in the centre of any restaurant you went in. And I think what's happened in India, India is really leading the way for the world. It's really broken through. They are actually fast-tracking laws. They are looking at sexual education. They are looking at the bases of patriarchy and masculinity and how all that leads to sexual violence.
Tourism In the aftermath of the rape case the number of female tourists to India fell by 35% compared to the same period the previous year, according to an industry survey by
ASSOCHAM. The
Foreign Office of the UK modified its travel advice and advised women against travelling alone. In 2014, Finance Minister
Arun Jaitley commented "one small incident of rape in Delhi' advertised world-over is enough to cost us billions of dollars in terms of lower tourism". == Results of protests ==