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Nepal: Girls not spared by violence
in Terai : Villagers in shock and grief over the killing of three
young girls
March 29, 2007 (IRIN) - I RAUTAHAT n the remote
Pathaya village of Rautahat district, some 200km southeast of the
Nepalese capital, Kathmandu, local women are coming to terms with
seeing three young girls killed in recent clashes between supporters
of the ethnic Madhesi party and former Maoist rebels.
“There have been sleepless nights for every witness and yet
they could do nothing to save these girls from their perpetrators,”
said women’s rights activist Shobha Gautam, who had travelled
to the area to report on the incident. “This was a crime against
humanity. I’m still too shocked to recount the details.”
Rights groups say Saraswati Upreti, Pratima Pariyar and Usha Thapa
- all aged between 16 and 18 years old and Maoist sympathisers -
were killed by supporters of the Madhesi People’s Rights Forum
(MPRF) on 21 March.
The girls were dragged to a local Hindu temple in Rautahat where
they were raped, tortured, had their breasts cut off and their heads
crushed with rocks in front of hundreds of people in broad daylight.
“Why is there so much hatred? Why is it always helpless women
who have to suffer the most?” cried a local female villager
who declined to reveal her name for fear that she would be killed
for sharing any information about the incident. No villager in Pathaya
was willing to say anything about the incident as they too feared
for their lives.
Hundreds of villagers have reportedly left their homes in Pathaya
and neighbouring villages fearing recurring violence.
The MPRF has been organising protests for the past three months,
demanding autonomy for the Madhesi people in the southern Terai
region. During the protests, some MPRF protesters have targeted
Pahadis, Nepalese hill people who make up the majority of Maoist
supporters in the region.
NGOs have expressed concern that the deteriorating security in the
Terai is affecting the most vulnerable and that the recent killing
of three girls will lead to more violence against women. The fact
that most local Terai men live and work in India, trying to provide
for their families, makes the many women living alone with their
children feel more insecure.
“The Terai violence has so much impact on women. This incident
has stirred so much fear of insecurity among women across the nation,
mostly in the Terai region, where there is no sign of violence stopping
now,” said Devkumari Mahara, an activist with the Women’s
Rehabilitation Centre (WOREC), a national NGO focussing on the protection
of women.
Mahara added that women’s rights activists were also at risk.
“We often get attacked and abused, even as women’s rights
defenders. You can imagine the vulnerability of ordinary women,”
she said.
Kamala Rai, an activist who works in Dhanusa, one of the most volatile
districts of the Terai, said that incidents of rape and abuse could
be on the rise amid escalating violence. But most of them would
go unreported as the victims would not be willing to report the
cases to the police, whom they do not trust, she said.
“Can you believe that a 72-year-old woman was recently raped
many times? But the rapists managed to get away as the security
system of the country has totally failed,” Rai said.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=71066
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