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The BBC's Sanjoy Majumder reports from outside the court in Delhi
A court in the Indian capital, Delhi, has been hearing the first evidence from witnesses in the case of the gang rape and murder of a 23-year-old physiotherapy student in December.
Five men deny abduction, rape and murder. If convicted, they could face the death penalty. A sixth suspect is to be tried by a juvenile court.
No reporting was allowed of Tuesday's proceedings, which have now ended.
The assault outraged India and sparked a debate about treatment of women.
Reporting restrictionsThe first of 80 witnesses to be produced by the prosecution took the stand in the Saket District Court on Tuesday.
At the scene
This was a key moment in what has become one of India's most closely watched trials.
The five accused arrived in a police van from prison, their faces hooded. And the bus on which the alleged assault took place was also driven into the court complex, as it is a prosecution exhibit.
Over the next several days, the prosecution will produce a number of witnesses, including police officers, forensics experts and doctors who treated the young woman in hospital.
The actual trial is being conducted in secrecy. Even before the day's proceedings got underway, the courtroom was cleared with only the accused, witnesses and lawyers allowed to remain. But that has not prevented the local and international media from taking up positions outside the court, determined to capture every moment in this complex and dramatic trial.
All reporting of proceedings inside the courtroom has been banned and the judge has ordered lawyers not to speak to reporters.
One key witness in the case is the victim's male friend, who was with her when she was attacked on a bus and thrown from the vehicle.
The student died in a Singapore hospital on 29 December from her internal injuries.
She and her 28-year-old companion cannot be named for legal reasons. He arrived at the courthouse in a wheelchair, still unable to walk properly due to injuries suffered in the attack.
His father, who accompanied him into the court complex, told Agence France-Presse news agency: "My son will go to any lengths to ensure that the guilty are punished."
The bus believed to have been used in the attack was driven into the court complex on Tuesday.
The five defendants facing trial in the Saket fast-track court are Ram Singh and his brother Mukesh, Pawan Gupta, Vinay Sharma and Akshay Thakur.
They face 13 charges, including murder, gang-rape, kidnapping and destruction of evidence.
Prosecutors say they have extensive forensic evidence, supported by the suspects' mobile-phone records and the testimony of the dying woman and her companion.
India's fast-track courts
- Some 1,200 fast-track courts were operating in India as of March 2012
- In Delhi, six fast-track courts were ordered for the trial of cases related to crimes against women, especially rape. Some other states such as Punjab and Maharashtra are also setting up fast-track courts for this purpose
- In 2000, central government started a scheme for more than 1,700 fast-track courts to try to clear the backlog of cases clogging up the Indian judicial system, partly related to a shortage of judges
- Funding is an issue because the central government said it could no longer fund them after March 2011, leaving future funding decisions to individual states
Defence lawyers are expected to argue that the forensic evidence has been fabricated and that the rush to prosecute has led to an unsafe trial.
The sixth suspect, who is 17, will face trial in a juvenile court.
The maximum sentence he would face if convicted would be three years in a reform facility.
The BBC's Sanjoy Majumder in Delhi says the case is being closely followed in India, where it has led to massive protests about the treatment of women and how the police and legal system tackle sex crimes.
On Sunday, Indian President Pranab Mukherjee signed a new anti-rape law which has increased the minimum sentence for those convicted of gang-rape and allows for the death penalty to be used in extreme cases.
But women's groups have come out against the new law, saying that marital rape and sexual assaults by Indian security forces in conflict zones should have been included.
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