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Village orders sisters to be raped after brother’s adultery

Meenakshi Kuwari, 23, and her 15-year-old sister, have been forced to flee their home in Uttar Pradesh
Meenakshi Kuwari, 23, and her 15-year-old sister, have been forced to flee their home in Uttar Pradesh

A village council in India has ordered that two sisters should be raped as punishment after their brother eloped with a married woman, a case that has outraged human rights groups.

Meenakshi Kuwari, 23, and her 15-year-old sister, have been forced to flee their home after villagers ordered that they should be stripped naked and paraded with their faces blackened before being raped to atone for their brother’s crime.

The case is just the latest high-profile incident of rape being used as a punishment by unelected village leaders or councils in rural India. Similar cases have shocked the nation and the country’s Supreme Court has ruled the council judgments illegal but the practice persists in remote areas.

The family home was ransacked by furious villagers after her brother fled with a woman from a superior caste. A hastily-convened assembly of the all-male village council in the district of Baghpat in Uttar Pradesh, north of Delhi, then handed down the rape punishment.

The two sisters and their father have fled to Delhi and appealed to India’s Supreme Court for protection if they return to the village. The women’s father has also raised their plight with the national commissions for castes and human rights.

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Sumit Kumar, another brother to the sisters, has told human rights campaigners that he fears for their lives if they return. Local police offer little protection and have reportedly denied that the rape punishment was handed down as the village closed ranks against the family.

“The family wants to go back to the village but they are very concerned about the threats against them. These sort of orders are consistently meted out by so-called higher caste village leaders,” said Gopika Bashi, a women’s rights researcher for Amnesty International India.

“The edicts are not done in a formal space and nothing may be written down but that does not mean they will not be carried out.”

Rights activists are also deeply concerned about the woman who eloped with Meenakshi’s brother. She is now in hiding and believed to be pregnant. Though her case has received less attention, her affair with a lower caste man places her in equal danger to the two sisters.

Cases such as Meenakshi’s have shocked India but rape as a punishment remains prevalent in remote villages around India, where patriarchal views on gender still hold sway.

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In a high-profile incident last year, a young man assaulted a married woman in the eastern state of Jharkhand. As punishment, the village leader ordered the husband of the woman who had been attacked to rape the accused man’s 14-year-old sister. Villagers looked on as the girl was dragged, pleading for mercy, into the forest for the punishment to be carried out. In a West Bengal village last year, tribal elders ordered the gang rape of a woman for “falling in love” with a man from another community.

In 2011, India’s Supreme Court has denounced such judgements by village councils as “kangaroo courts” and ruled them illegal. Enforcement remains difficult, however, without support from local police.