Police formally charged five men yesterday with the gang-rape and murder of a 23-year-old student, a crime which has appalled India.

Police filed a string of charges including murder, rape and kidnapping against the suspects, listing evidence in a confidential 1,000-page document submitted to a district court in the south of the capital New Delhi.

The five aged between 35 and 19, who would face the death penalty if convicted, had been expected in court but were not present when the media were allowed in to listen to part of the proceedings.

“We have filed the charge sheet against the five accused,” an investigating police officer told a woman district magistrate. She is expected to transfer the case to a fast-track trial court when the next hearing is held tomorrow.

The medical student from north India was repeatedly raped and violated with an iron bar on a moving bus in the capital on December 16 as she returned from a cinema with her boyfriend.

Protesters have massed in Indian cities daily since the assault to demand the Government and police take sex crimes more seriously, with tougher penalties for offenders.

The latest incident, though far from rare in a country where gang rapes are commonplace, has led to an outpouring of criticism and deep self-reflection in the media and the political class about crimes against women in India.

A statement from the Delhi victim, who died at the weekend from her injuries, and an account from her boyfriend, who was badly beaten during the attack, are expected to form crucial parts of the evidence against the five.

A sixth suspect who is believed to be a minor aged 17 was not charged in the court at Saket yesterday. Detectives are awaiting the results of a bone test to verify his age and determine whether he can be tried in an adult court.

The trial of the men, who were allegedly drunk when they took the private bus out for a joyride, is to be held in a special. fast-tracked court aimed at avoiding the delays typical of India’s dysfunctional justice system.

Amid public clamour for the guilty to be executed, Altamas Kabir, the country’s chief justice, has cautioned against letting anger overwhelm the due process of the law.

“Let us not get carried away. A swift trial should not be at the cost of a fair trial,” Kabir was quoted as saying in the local media yesterday.

Lawyers at the district court in New Delhi have refused to defend the suspects, meaning the Government will have to appoint advocates for them.

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