|  | 
      
        | 
            
            
            
            
            
                       |   
          
          
          
          New Delhi, Dec 31 (IANS) Protests against violence on women   continued in the national capital Monday, a day after the city's gang-rape   victim was cremated under heavy security.A large number of people,   mainly the young, gathered near Jantar Mantar in the heart of Delhi, pressing   the government to enact a strict legislation against rape and other crimes. The   crowd included activists, students and professionals.
 
 
 |  The area was covered with posters and hundreds in the crowd formed groups,   chanting slogans, demanding action against crimes such as rape. While a majority   called for social change and rebellion, some groups also chanted anti-government   and anti-police slogans.
 Hundreds of candles were lit beside a dummy   representing the victim. Arya Samaj members performed a "havan" - prayer by fire   - for peace for the departed soul. Some groups called for Jan 3 as "protest   day".
 
 As the protests went on, candle sellers, snack kiosks and tea   vendors did brisk business.
 
 "It is sad she had to pay the price of being   a woman, but these protests will not die and she will get justice," said Jyoti,   a banker who joined the protest with her friends.
 
 In the crowd were two   six-year-olds with a poster that said: "Say no to New Year 2013". Twins Jaya and   Khushi had come with their grandfather, though they are too young to understand   how gruesome and what the crime was.
 
 Asked why they were there, Khushi   said: "We are here because she was killed by the goons."
 
 At a short   distance from the girls -- laughing and playing during the agitation -- members   of All India Student's Association (AISA), a leftist group, sang songs of   rebellion against the system.
 
 "We will not let this protest die. This is   the limit beyond which atrocities cannot be tolerated," said Om, a member of   AISA.
 
 The group had earlier planned a demonstration at Connaught Place,   the central business district and popular market, but were stopped by   police.
 
 All India Democratic Women's Association (AIDWA) demanded   fast-track courts and speedy justice for rape victims.
 
 "Demanding the   death sentence will not solve anything. Laws are there but they need to be   implemented," said Subhashini Ali, president of AIDWA and former member of   parliament.
 
 "Eighty thousand rape cases are pending. The accused in many   of these are IAS and IPS officers, political people. When will government act?   The need is not for a new law. Laws are already there. The problem is   implementation. One or two fast-track courts will not help. Hundreds of such   courts are needed all over the country," Ali said.
 
 Students from   Jawaharlal Nehru University will march to the bus stand in Munirka Monday night   from where the woman was abducted and later raped.
 
 Delhi Police have   announced a ban on traffic in and around Connaught Place from 7 p.m. Monday on   the New Year's eve.
 
 Three Delhi Metro stations -- Rajiv Chowk, Barakhamba   Road and Patel Chowk -- were closed at 7.30 p.m. Monday.
 
 Commuters would   not be allowed to enter or leave the three stations from that time on due to   security restrictions related to New Year celebrations, a Metro official   said.
 
 The 23-year-old woman who was gang-raped Dec 16 in a moving bus   here was cremated Sunday morning after her body was flown in from Singapore.
 
 
    
	
	
       |