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http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/08/28/indian-village-orders-gang-rape-of-2-sisters.html
INDIA – VILLAGE INFORMAL LEGAL SYSTEM ORDERS GANG RAPE OF
2 SISTERS FOR BROTHER’S TRANSGRESSION - PROTESTS
Women
Protest Horrific Decision of Village Informal Legal System – Photo: Anindito
Mukherjee/Reuters
By Nina Strochlic –
August 28, 2015
Two sisters
in India will be gang-raped for a social “sin” committed by their brother
unless the country’s Supreme Court intervenes with protection, according to a report by Amnesty International.
The girls, from the “untouchable” caste, are being punished for
their brother’s elopement with a married woman.
The
sisters, one 15 and the other 23, were condemned to this brutal fate by an
informal legal system with a history of doling out egregious punishments. Their
so-called crime was that their brother eloped with a married woman of a higher
caste. The sisters and their family are from the Dalit caste, commonly called
Untouchables, which is the lowest in the Indian social hierarchy. On July 30,
the village council in the northern Indian district of Baghpat decreed that the
two sisters would be raped, then paraded around their village naked, with their
faces covered in black paint.
The ruling
from this all-male panel is not legally valid, but these unelected
panels called khap panchaya controversially act as courts throughout the
country and still command power.
The family
has already fled the town, seeking refuge in Delhi in May.
Earlier
this month, the elder sister petitioned the country’s highest court to protect
her family, whose home was ransacked. “After we went to the Supreme Court, the
villagers are even more aggressive,” the sisters’ other brother told Amnesty
International.
India’s
Supreme Court previously ruled that the village court’s decrees are not legally
binding, but that hasn’t fully eliminated the system.
The village council decreed that the two sisters would be raped, then
paraded around their village naked, with their faces covered in black paint.
“When
informal legal systems exist alongside the formal legal system, women and girls
often experience enormous abuse,” says Shelby Quast, policy director at gender
advocacy group Equality Now. “The Supreme Court must uphold the rule of law and
condemn Uttar Pradesh for allowing an informal legal council to sentence innocent
girls to rape as a form of punishment.”
The Supreme
Court has ordered the province to respond to the protection petition by
September 15, but for now the family feels endangered. The father of the young
women has also filed complaints—one to the National Human Rights Commission and
another to the National Commission for Scheduled Castes—for protection.
A petition released by Amnesty International this week has
already garnered nearly 30,000 signatures.
“Revenge
rape” as a punishment for a woman or her family member’s crimes isn’t unheard
of in the region. It’s traditionally seen as a way to ruin a family’s worth, by
tarnishing its honor and ruining a daughter’s chances for marriage. Last year,
a 22-year-old woman was left in critical condition after village elders ordered
13 men to rape her as punishment for her relationship with a man outside the
community. The attackers were later arrested by police.
July of
last year saw the rape of a 14-year-old whose brother was accused of sexual
assaulting a married woman. The woman’s husband was ordered to dole out the
punishment, and took her into the woods as the village looked on.
The issue has commanded worldwide attention before—notably in a 2002 case in Pakistan, when a victim of this savage “justice” took her attackers to court and was paid restitution. “I tried to commit suicide twice after the incident because I felt like I wasn’t getting any justice,” she told the BBC last year. “What happened to me is another form of honor killing."