She advocated that a 'close watch' be kept on the accused after he is freed after completing sentence in the December 16 gangrape and murder case and said she will raise the issue with the authorities for doing so.
Reacting to the impending release of the accused, the minister said that 'justice should not be confused with law' and that he is being freed because law demands it as he was juvenile at the time of commission of crime.
"I don't know whether the justice has been served but certainly the law has been adhered to," the minister said and added "Yes, I am afraid we are" when asked if the government was waiting for him to commit another crime.
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On whether she has taken up the monitoring issue with the authorities, Gandhi said, "I will do it."
On December 15, the juvenile found guilty in the 2012 Delhi gangrape, will be released. He has turned 21 and will complete his three-year term at the prohibition centre.
He was 17-and-a-half, the youngest of six men who raped and brutally tortured the 23-year-old medical student on a moving bus in the capital. The victim died 13 days later in a hospital in Singapore where she was taken for the treatment by the government.