Junior doctors in India's West Bengal state have resumed their full strike as of Tuesday, expressing dissatisfaction with the judiciary's insufficient efforts to restore justice following the rape and murder of a trainee doctor in August. The West Bengal Junior Doctors' Front, which represents around 7,000 physicians in the state, had previously reinstated partial services last month due to the flood situation in certain areas. The brutal rape and murder of the 31-year-old female doctor in Kolkata, the capital of the eastern state, sparked widespread protests among doctors demanding enhanced workplace safety for women and justice for their deceased colleague. This led India's Supreme Court to establish a hospital safety task force. During its latest hearing on Monday, the Supreme Court urged the state government to implement all necessary measures by October 15 to address the doctors' demands. The court also instructed the information ministry to ensure the victim's identity remains concealed and not disseminated online as mandated by law. However, the doctors expressed their disappointment with the court's decisions, stating they were "compelled to return to a full ceasework." "Unless we see clear action from the government on safety, patient services, and the politics of fear, we will have no option but to continue our full strike," the group declared in a statement on Tuesday. The doctors' demands encompass increased police protection in hospitals and the investigation of alleged corruption in several medical colleges. According to a Reuters report, West Bengal, governed by the regional Trinamool Congress party, has been sluggish in establishing new tribunals to expedite trials for sex crimes. The state currently operates only six tribunals, a stark contrast to the target of setting up 123 fast-track tribunals by March 2021.