Patna: A 35-year-old woman in Bihar was dragged out of her home, beaten and forced to eat human faeces by a group of villagers in the latest attack linked to accusations of witchcraft, police said on Wednesday.
Eleven people in Katihar district attacked the woman on Tuesday while her husband was away, police said. She told police they accused her of causing the death of a 30-year-old villager who died from an illness last week.
Police said the woman, who is from a "Dalit" community in Sakrail village, was slapped, punched and force-fed faeces.
"The villagers dragged the woman out of her house and made her consume human excreta, blaming her for the death of the man," Katihar sub-divisional police official Rakesh Kumar told theThomson Reuters Foundation by phone.
"The victim told us the accused persons branded her a witch and said it is because of her that everyone in the village was falling sick."
Police arrested a 60-year-old male villager and charged him with physical assault and wrongful restraint, and are looking for 10 other suspects, Kumar said.
Earlier this month, a 22-year-old man was arrested in the state of Odisha and charged with the murder of a couple he suspected of witchcraft. He accused the 65-year-old man and his wife, 60, of being responsible for the deaths of his sister and two brothers who had died from various diseases over the previous three years.
The practice of accusing people, mostly women, of being witches and assaulting or killing them is still common is some parts of India, particularly among tribal communities, although it is illegal.
A United Nations official said last year that archaic practices such as lynching women accused of witchcraft, honour killings and dowry murders persisted in India because they remained socially acceptable.
Government statistics show there were 160 cases of murder linked to witch hunts in 2013, and 119 in 2012.
Eleven people in Katihar district attacked the woman on Tuesday while her husband was away, police said. She told police they accused her of causing the death of a 30-year-old villager who died from an illness last week.
Police said the woman, who is from a "Dalit" community in Sakrail village, was slapped, punched and force-fed faeces.
"The victim told us the accused persons branded her a witch and said it is because of her that everyone in the village was falling sick."
Police arrested a 60-year-old male villager and charged him with physical assault and wrongful restraint, and are looking for 10 other suspects, Kumar said.
Advertisement
The practice of accusing people, mostly women, of being witches and assaulting or killing them is still common is some parts of India, particularly among tribal communities, although it is illegal.
Advertisement
Government statistics show there were 160 cases of murder linked to witch hunts in 2013, and 119 in 2012.
Advertisement
© Thomson Reuters 2014
COMMENTS
Advertisement
Bihar Assembly Premises, Ministers' Homes Waterlogged After Heavy Rain In Patna Snake vs 3 Mongooses: Watch Epic Showdown At Patna Airport Runway Patna Court Sends NEET-UG Paper Leak Key Accused To 14-Day CBI Custody Rahul Gandhi's Seat At Red Fort Triggers Fresh Congress Attack On BJP Nurse Raped, Killed On Way Home, Body Found 9 Days Later In UP "Don't Expect Anything From Me": Kolkata Hospital's New Principal Loses Cool Unable To Repay Loans, 3 Of Family Die By Suicide In Karnataka: Cops Theft At Official Residence Of Jaivardhan Singh, Cash Stolen: Cops Most Of Landslide-Hit Chooralmala In Wayanad Safe Now, Says Scientist Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.