AN 8 YEAR-OLD,S RAPE AND MURDER INFLAMES TENSIONS
IN INDIA
The rape and murder of 8-year-old
Asifa Bano in Kathua, India, inflamed tensions between Hindus and Muslims and
lead to violent April 11 protests in Kashmir. (Reuters)She was an 8-year-old
girl who, while grazing her horses in a meadow in northern India in January,
followed a man into the forest. Days later, Asifa Bano’s small, lifeless body
was recovered there.
Police say that Asifa was given
sedatives and, for three days, raped several times by different men. Asifa's
strangled body was eventually found Jan. 17. Police say she would have been
killed sooner had one man not insisted on waiting so that he could rape her a
final time.To ensure she was dead, Asifa’s killers hit her twice on the head
with a stone, according to charging documents filed by police in the state of
Jammu and Kashmir and published by the Indian news website Firstpost.
In the months since, Asifa’s death
has brought anguish to Kathua, the small town where she was killed. But it has
also brought division. Asifa’s case is the latest example of India’s religious
friction: As some denounce sexual violence and demand justice for Asifa’s
family, others demand justice for the men accused.The eight men accused in
connection to the rape and murder are Hindu. Asifa was a Muslim nomad, part of
the Bakarwal tribe. Asifa’s father, Mohammad Yusuf Pujwala, told the New York
Times that he believes his daughter was killed by the Hindu men for the sole
purpose of driving her people away. To add to the volatility of Asifa’s case,
police say she was killed in a Hindu temple, and that the temple’s custodian
plotted her death as a way to torment the Bakarwals.
Anti-Muslim demonstrators burn tires
and shout slogans during a protest Wednesday in Kathua, India, in support of an
investigation into the rape and murder of an 8-year-old girl. (Mukesh
Gupta/Reuters)
On Monday, a chaotic scene unfolded
outside a courthouse in Jammu and Kashmir, as a mob of Hindu attorneys tried to
physically stop police from filing charges against the men accused. The
attorneys in a statement argued for a federal investigation, stating that the
government had failed to “understand the sentiments of the people.” Police
still managed to complete the paperwork and charged the men, who include four
policemen and a retired government official.Protests have now spread across
much of Kathua. Hindu activists argue that some of the police officers who
worked on the case are, like Asifa, Muslims — and cannot be trusted, according
to the Times. Dozens of Hindu women have helped block a highway and organize a
hunger strike.
“They are against our religion,”
Bimla Devi, a protester, told the New York Times. She said that if the accused
men weren’t freed, “we will burn ourselves.”The lawyers, along with a group
affiliated with India’s ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, fight
on the basis of religious prejudice, even though BJP supporters are vocal
opponents of sexual violence. After the brutal gang rape and murder of a
medical student in New Delhi in 2012, the government promised to introduce
legal reforms and support services to help victims of sexual violence. To an
extent, it did — for example, the government amended the law to prosecute
children older than 16 as adults in rape and murder cases. (Not much more has
changed for rape victims, however, according to a November report by Human
Rights Watch).
Notable BJP members have asked the
case be moved out of the state police’s jurisdiction and into that of the
Central Bureau of Investigation, claiming the agency would act neutrally. The
bureau, however, reports to the BJP-led government in New Delhi.Asifa’s case
has shaken the state’s Legislative Assembly. Weeks after her body was found,
lawmakers still questioned the police’s behavior in the days after Asifa
disappeared: Police waited two days to file a report after Asifa disappeared,
for example, and did not alert newspapers until days after she was killed,
according to the Asia Times.
“The screams and cries of the girl
were heard by neighbors. Why was there such a delay by police?” lawmaker
Shamima Firdous said a few weeks after Asifa’s body was found, according to the
Asia Times. Talib Hussain, a Bakarwal social activist working on behalf of
Asifa’s family, told the New York Times that Bakarwal nomads for generations
have leased land from Hindu farmers so their animals can graze during the
winter. In recent years, however, Hindus in the Kathua area have campaigned
against the nomads. Believed to be at the campaign’s helm is the accused
custodian, Sanji Ram.
“His poison has been spreading,’’
Hussain told the Times. “When I was young, I remember the fear Sanji Ram’s name
invoked in Muslim women. If they wanted to scare each other, they would take
Sanji Ram’s name, since he was known to misbehave with Bakarwal women.’’Hussain
could not be immediately reached for comment by The Washington Post.
Feelings of suspicion and animosity
between the two communities run so deep that when Asifa didn’t return from the
meadow, her parents instantly feared she’d encountered danger. And when the
Bakarwal nomads retrieved Asifa’s body for her burial, “some baton-wielding
goons appeared at the graveyard asking us not to bury her there,” Hussain told
the Asia Times.The “goons,” he said, feared that if Asifa was buried on their
land, it would forever belong to Muslims.
Prof. John Kurakar
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