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Indian woman branded witch, stripped and paraded naked

by Jatindra Dash | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Monday, 28 July 2014 10:30 GMT

A woman farmer carrying paddy crop is silhouetted against the setting sun near Agartala, in India's northeastern state of Tripura November 24, 2011. REUTERS/Jayanta Dey

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Branding women as witches and assaulting or killing them is still common is some parts of India

BHUBANESHWAR, India, July 28 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A 60-year-old woman was beaten, stripped and tied to an electricity pole in a village in eastern India after local people accused her of being a witch, police said on Monday.

Villagers in Odisha state's Mayurbhanj district blamed the death of an 18-year-old boy on the woman, saying she had practised witchcraft on him, although medical records showed he died of malaria.

"We rescued the woman and admitted her to a local hospital. She has received head injuries. She is critical," Additional District Superintendent of Police G.C. Mallick told Thomson Reuters Foundation.

"I have never witnessed such an inhuman incident during my three decades of service."

Police said they were investigating Sunday’s attack, during which the woman was tied up for around 12 hours, but no arrests had been made.

The practice of branding women as witches and assaulting or killing them is still common is some parts of India, particularly among tribal communities, despite there being a law against it.

According to government statistics, there were 160 cases of murder linked to witch hunts in 2013, and 119 the previous year.

Earlier this month, a woman in the eastern Indian state of Bihar was beaten to death after villagers accused her of practising witchcraft.

(Editing by Nita Bhalla and Ros Russell)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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