Witch tag only on dalits and minorities in Nepal
Mallika Aryal
30 December 2009
In Nepal's Lalitpur district, a 46-year old dalit woman was
mercilessly beaten up for being a 'witch'. Activists say it is a shame
that people, particularly women from dalit and minority communities,
are tortured and treated with such disdain that they are forced to eat
their own excreta.
The headmistress of a local school along with a local shaman accused
Kalli Kumari, 46, resident of Thasingtole village, just 40 kms away
from the capital Kathmandu, of practicing witchcraft and tortured her
for two days.
"They kept hitting my head and my bruises. They fed human excreta and
then they took a blade out and started cutting my skin. I couldn't
bear it anymore and was forced to admit that that I am a witch so they
would stop giving me so much pain," said B.K. in a public forum here
in Kathmandu.
They let her go when she accepted that it was because of her that the
village cattle was dying and signed a paper, which said that if any
more animals died it was her responsibility.
After being freed, she rushed to the police and filed a complaint at
the area police office. For days the administration did nothing. After
pressure from local rights group the police finally apprehended the
local headmistress.
However, the accused was let off after she paid a fine. Now she has
been reinstated at the school and lives in the same village as B.K. "I
live in fear, the people who tortured me are still in this village,
what if they come at night and take me away again?" said B.K.
In Sunsari, 650 km south-east of Kathmandu, Jabrun Khatun, 26 was
dragged out of her house and beaten in the middle of the village.
"They said I was a witch, that because of me a lot of children were
falling sick and beat me for hours. Then they stepped on my chest and
forced me to eat human excreta," said Khatun.
They imprisoned her for days until local children let her out. She was
all alone in the family as her husband had recently left to work in
neighbouring India. "I have come all the way to Kathmandu looking for
justice," said Khatun.
In Kalilali, far west Nepal, Jugu Kumari Chaudhari was accused of
practicing witch-craft when a close family member died. Chaudhari was
beaten up and her husband had to come rescue her. "We went to the
police station to file a complaint but they said it was a personal
matter and we should resolve in the community," said Chaudhari.
Fighting against the scourge
Gender activists have been fighting for years to end this extreme form
of violence against women, but the problem is still common in the
Tarai, the southern plains of Nepal, and in areas where there's high
illiteracy and poverty.
"An educated woman from higher-income family and higher caste never
gets accused of practicing witchcraft," said Indu Pant, gender advisor
at CARE Nepal. Urmila Bishwakarma of the Dalit media group Jagaran
Media Centre has been documenting cases of Dalit women who have been
accused as witches and tortured. She said that dalit and other
minority women are the most vulnerable because they are socially,
culturally, financially and politically backward.
Pant says that the problem is exacerbated because the state is often
missing in these regions, so the victims have nowhere to go for help.
"Even when they try to seek help from the police they are often turned
back because the police says it is a personal matter and must be
solved in the community. This culture of impunity lets the
perpetrators off the hook."
Spokesperson of the Supreme Court Sri Kanta Poudel said that there is
a legal vacuum when it comes to punishing those who are involved in
such crimes. "There are no provisions of compensation or reintegration
of the victims into the society, that is the weakness of our justice
system," admits Poudel.
'Our great shame'
Human rights activists like Kapil Shrestha say that it is our great
shame that in this day and age, we are still indulging in beating
women up, feeding them human excreta, torturing them until they have
no self-confidence, treating them like animals. He adds that by saying
we do not have laws to punish those who are involved in the witch-hunt
is irresponsible.
"We are a party to CEDAW (Convention on the Elimination on all forms
of Discrimination Against Women), which has strict provisions against
gender-based violence," said Shrestha adding, "we may not have
designed our laws according to the convention but once a country
ratifies an international convention we have an obligation to follow
their provisions."
Bishwakarma of Jagaran Media Centre says that if the state is really
serious about addressing this problem strict laws need to be devised
and implemented so that no perpetrator gets away.
"The government announced that Nepal is untouchability free but that
is not enough," he said, "Translate the words into actions, make laws,
and implement them properly so that this extreme form of violence
against women stop."
Bishwakarma said that the state must immediately look into proper ways
of rehabilitating those who have been accused and tortured as witches.
"It is wrong to expect victims like Kalli B.K. to live in the same
community as the perpetrator – isn't it the state's responsibility to
make every citizen feel safe, so why is Kalli still scared that those
who tortured her are going to come back?"
In the long-run, Bishwakarma said that the state must ensure that
there's representation of the hitherto backward community in
decision-making levels so that these issues are addressed in
policy-making levels as well. Activist Shrestha said massive education
programmes need to be launched in the areas where this practice is
prevalent.
"This needs to be our curriculum so that children learn early on about
superstitions, it must be included in police training manuals, and the
organisations need to move out of the urban areas into the field and
work with communities. It is about changing the behaviour and mindset
of our society and it may take some time and it is definitely not
going to be easy," said Shrestha.
Source : IPS
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