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India: Indian Tribunal
Pushes for Sexual-Violence Inquiry
By Aparna Pallavi
November 5, 2007 - (WomensENews) The testimony
of 25-year-old Gouri Pradhan, a resident of the village Gokul Nagar,
is typical in its description of the type of sexual assault that
women say they suffered at the hands of police during violent land
disputes that began last March in Nandigram, a rural area in the
eastern state of West Bengal.
"I went to attend the rally when the police started firing
teargas and bullets simultaneously," Pradhan testified from
her hospital bed after the attack.
"I tried to flee, when three policemen caught me and dragged
me by the hand and into an empty house. I was beaten so badly that
I was in no condition to resist. One of the policemen held my arms
while two of them forcefully raped me. Then I lost consciousness
and I don't know if the third policeman also forced himself on me
or not. I don't know how I came here. I regained my consciousness
in the hospital."
Kajal Gharai, from the village of Shonachura, also testified: "I
got shot on my right shoulder. When I tried to flee the police chased
me, caught me and ripped all my clothes off. They stripped me naked,
kicked me and threw me in a corner. Close to evening someone found
me and took me to the hospital. While I was lying there I saw in
front of my own eyes two young girls being dragged by the police
and taken away."
The stories are a sampling of testimonies drawn from villagers who
on March 14 clashed with police acting on the orders of officials
in the West Bengal state government, controlled by the Communist
Party of India-Marxist.
The stories were published in August by the All India Citizen's
Initiative, a network of citizen activists across India. Authors
condemned the violence as a "pre-planned, state-sponsored massacre"
and delivered the report to West Bengal's governor, Gopal Krishna
Gandhi.
When police opened fire the villagers were resisting a seizure of
thousands of acres of land, which the state planned to turn over
to developers to build an industrial zone, including a proposed
chemical plant.
Official sources said 14 people were killed but activists say the
death toll was higher and that large-scale methodical sexual assault
was also carried out by the police.
Insisting that the state government has tried to cover up the extent
of the violence, activists formed a People's Tribunal and began
to collect depositions from villagers.
In the August report, they found "a disturbingly large number
of incidents of sexual violence by both police and armed ruling
party cadre against women, many of them carried out in the most
cruel, degrading and inhuman manner."
Land Pressures Spur Clashes
The clashes in Nandigram have mirrored incidents in several other
villages over the past year as farmers are increasingly resisting
government efforts to seize their land for industrial uses. As India's
economy rapidly develops, companies--often headquartered outside
India--are turning to the government to secure land. In turn, they
say new industry will generate local jobs and stimulate the economy.
Activists say the deals provide few benefits, if any, to local communities.
Following the clash in March, which drew international media coverage
and resulted in hundreds of arrests of villagers, the state government
announced that it would no longer pursue the land deal in Nandigram.
But tensions remain: On Oct. 7 one woman was killed and two other
people injured as violence erupted between two citizens' groups,
one supporting the resistance and the other supporting the state
government, Indian news agency PTI reported.
Ninety percent of employed women in India work in agriculture or
related businesses, according to the United Nations.
While activists continue to oppose land seizures, the People's Tribunal
report is attempting to bring the claims of sexual assault to light.
It has received plenty of local and national media coverage in India
but the state government has not responded. The national government
has also been silent.
The tribunal demands that a special court headed by a female judge
be established to hear the cases of sexual violence against the
women of Nandigram and examine cases of tampering of evidence by
government hospital staff.
Calling for Assistance
Authors of the report call upon civil society organizations to help
the victims file their cases and seek justice.
Tribunal members are citizens from all over India. Some are activists;
others are professionals from fields such as media and medicine.
The tribunal was headed by S.N. Bhargava, former chief justice of
the highest court in the state of Sikkim.
The report's authors visited the site of police firings and other
places in the Nandigram area and recorded depositions from victims,
witnesses, social activists, intellectuals, doctors, human rights
groups and other concerned organizations.
One woman accuses police officers of having slashed her breasts.
Several accuse police of forcing rods, sticks and gun barrels into
sex organs and in some cases also turning the weapon while it was
inside them.
A separate 150-page report submitted to the Calcutta High Court
by a medical team of the All India Medical Service Center records
16 cases of rape and the findings are incorporated in the people's
tribunal report.
Dr. Debapriya Mallick of the Nandigram Swasthya Udyog, a voluntary
organization providing medical aid to the injured, told the tribunal
that he found a large number of women with injuries in the pelvic
region, back, breasts and vagina in the medical camps set up in
Nandigram after the March 14 attacks.
Tampering With Reports
The tribunal report raises questions about the extent to which officials
at the Nandigram and Tamluk government hospitals--where the injured
were taken--tampered with records to destroy evidence of sexual
assault.
Dr. Subrata Sarkar, another witness, said she met two injured women
at the Nandigram hospital who told her that they had been raped.
But their records did not mention rape, nor were they examined or
treated for rape. When Sarkar made inquiries, the hospital staff
told her that since they had not received complaints of rape, the
question of testing women for rape, or recording their rape accounts,
had not arisen.
Sarkar said separate facilities were not made at the hospitals for
men and women in clear violation of a law passed in 2004. This,
she said, also made it difficult for women to raise the topic of
sexual assault.
Activist Rajashri Dasgupta told the tribunal that "women were
traumatized and unwilling to talk due to shame."
Even as details of the Nandigram violence continues to emerge, the
tensions between rural farmers and governments hoping to use their
land to entice new developments show no signs of easing. On Oct.
28, a crowd of 25,000 farmers from 15 states across India marched
on the capital in New Delhi but police blocked them from reaching
the national parliament building, wire services reported.
The marchers were demanding new legislation to protect their land
ownership rights and prevent government-backed deals that allow
the rich and powerful to take over their land.
From: http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/3373/context/archive
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