India is confronting the prospect of hanging two sisters convicted of abducting and murdering young children - the first time it would have used the death sentence against women.
Renuka Shinde, 41, and 36-year-old Seema Gavit were convicted in 2001 of kidnapping and killing five children in the western state of Maharashtra. Originally charged with the deaths of 13 children, the court heard they kidnapped the youngsters as part of a begging operation and then brutally disposed of them when they were no longer of any use.
In 2004, an appeal court upheld their death sentence and two years later India's Supreme Court did the same. Last month, India's President, Pranab Mukherjee, rejected their appeal for clemency and at the weekend the so-called buffer zone - the period by when the government is obliged to inform all concerned parties of the president's decision - expired.
The women, being held in Yerawada Central Jail near the city of Pune, could, in theory, be hanged at any time. Nobody from the jail was on Monday available for comment. Reports in the local media say officials there are engaged with the police, local officials and doctors on when the hanging should proceed.
Since 1983, the Indian courts have handed down the death penalty only for the "rarest of rare" cases. In recent years, just a handful of executions have been carried out, most notably that of Pakistani militant Ajmal Kasab, who was hanged in 2012 for his part in the 2008 attack on Mumbai.