Two teenage Indian girls found hanging from a tree in May took their own lives and were not gang-raped and murdered, federal investigators have said.
The announcement came after months of inquiry by the Central Bureau of Investigation following global outrage.
Three men arrested in connection with the case in northern Uttar Pradesh state were freed on bail in September.
It is unclear why the girls might have taken their lives. Correspondents say there are many unanswered questions.
Women's rights activists say they are not happy with the latest findings and are urging the CBI to continue investigating.
The lower-caste cousins, thought to have been 14 and 15, were found hanged from a mango tree in Badaun district on 28 May.
The fact that there has been little explanation about the motive has led many people to question the findings of the CBI.
"CBI has tried to fudge the case and save the accused from the very beginning," Sohan Lal, father of one of the girls, told BBC Hindi.
"I am very angry with their decision. The team did not show any promptness while investigating the case."
A
local post-mortem examination initially confirmed multiple sexual assaults and
death due to hanging.
But
forensic tests conducted since then have concluded the girls were not sexually
assaulted, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) said.
"Based
on around 40 scientific reports the CBI has concluded that the two minor girls
in the Badaun case had not been raped and murdered as had been alleged in the
FIR [first information report]," CBI spokeswoman Kanchan Prasad said on
Thursday.
"Investigation
has concluded that it is a case of suicide."
More
details are due at a news conference later on Thursday.
Analysis: Geeta
Pandey, BBC News, Delhi
The
latest CBI revelations are baffling and many will not believe them.
It
was initially believed that the two lower-caste girls were gang raped and
hanged by young men from a slightly higher caste. A post-mortem carried out on
the bodies by a team of three local doctors said the girls had injuries
"suggestive of rape".
In
August, the CBI had the clothes, vaginal swabs and other personal effects of
the girls and the three accused men tested - and came up with the startling
revelation that the cousins had not been sexually assaulted at all.
It
was also suggested the murders could be a case of "honour killing" by
relatives. The CBI chief's latest statement that the girls took their own lives
"because of family pressure" over their friendship with a villager has
added a further twist.
In
just six months, there have been three different theories about how the
teenagers died and each theory has raised more questions than it has answered.
How the investigators arrived at a verdict of suicide is as yet unclear.
Indians
are now beginning to wonder whether they will ever know what actually happened
on the night the two girls brutally died.
"The
local police had erroneously conducted their probe along the lines that the
sisters were killed," he said.
Correspondents
say the story of the hangings has become murkier and murkier over the past few
months, with officials raising questions over the testimony of the victims'
families, accusing them of failing lie-detector tests.
Investigators
also raised doubts about the credibility of the main witness, a neighbour of
the girls, amid reports that he had been paid money by their families.
It
is also became clear that the CBI did not trust the original local police
investigation.
In
September a court bailed the three accused after federal investigators refused
to charge them, citing a lack of evidence.
Two
constables, who were also arrested along with the accused and charged with
dereliction of duty and criminal conspiracy for not taking the parents'
complaint seriously, were also bailed in September.
Federal
investigators have said the clothes and personal effects of the girls were
examined by the Centre for DNA Fingerprinting and Diagnostics (CDFD) in
Hyderabad and it found no proof of sexual assault.
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