Woman on run after being accused of witch
Forty-five-years-old Saraswati Devi is in exile from her village Bishrampur after being blamed for practicing witchcraft in her village in Birgunj.
She was physically
assaulted and forced to eat human excreta by her own relatives on August 7.
She expressed her feelings saying, “I feel mentally traumatized
being treated like this by my own relatives. I am a widow and I have no one to
protect me they are after my property so they have done this. I don’t deserve this but there is no one to
support me.”
Meanwhile, Chief District Officer Kailash Kumar Bajimaya
said the local administration would relocate her in the village and take action
against the culprits.
SP Dhiraj Pratap Singh said Devmati Devi, 43, Lalchuniya Devi, 41 and Manjaya Chaurasiya, 18, had been arrested.
SP Dhiraj Pratap Singh said Devmati Devi, 43, Lalchuniya Devi, 41 and Manjaya Chaurasiya, 18, had been arrested.
There are no special legislative provisions against
witchcraft related violence in the country and very few governmental and
nongovernmental organizations are working in the area of witchcraft related
violence.
Although the country has passed out laws and different provisions for women along with this according to the Country's Interim Constitution, Part 3 ‘Fundamental Right', Article 20 ‘Rights of Women' explains that “no one shall be discriminated in any form merely for being a woman and no physical, mental or any other form of violence shall be inflicted to any woman, and such an act shall be punishable by law". Nevertheless, there is still no law specifically criminalizing attacks on women accused of witchcraft.
Although the country has passed out laws and different provisions for women along with this according to the Country's Interim Constitution, Part 3 ‘Fundamental Right', Article 20 ‘Rights of Women' explains that “no one shall be discriminated in any form merely for being a woman and no physical, mental or any other form of violence shall be inflicted to any woman, and such an act shall be punishable by law". Nevertheless, there is still no law specifically criminalizing attacks on women accused of witchcraft.
In the absence of effective legal safeguards, scores of women
in Nepal accused of practicing witchcraft are being beaten and forcefully fed
human excreta and even killed. Allegation of witchcraft and violence related to
it is inflicted mostly on the poor, widow, helpless, elderly and destitute
women who are vulnerable and have no protection against it. They are suppressed
and their voices are concealed.
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