Again and again, Sinha and Solanki are at pains to represent differing points of view, even on the same side of the case. True radical change, they posit, can come only through fraught discussion, not through easy agreement.
When the accused begin to be killed off in a series of frightening extrajudicial killings, Raavi is quick to condemn this behaviour openly. If murder can be justified as revenge for rape, she argues, what is to stop rape from being justified as revenge for rape? And then more murder to avenge that rape?
Meanwhile, what does Parima feel? She confesses quietly to Vinay that hearing one of her rapists had been killed made her feel good—but that she doesn’t want to feel this way.





