This Article is From Feb 28, 2012

Indians forced daughter-in-law into life of 'servitude and sexual abuse'

Indians forced daughter-in-law into life of 'servitude and sexual abuse'

Picture courtesy: News12

New York: A US court has convicted three members of an Indian family on charges of sexually abusing their daughter-in-law, who moved to America after an arranged marriage.

Rockland County District Attorney Thomas Zugibe said Vishal Jagota, 34, his mother Parveen Jagota, 57 and sister Rajani Jagota, 31 were found guilty of trafficking. The court also found they used threats and physical violence to force the victim into a life of "servitude and sexual abuse".

She was used as a "round-the-clock servant, performing a variety of household chores, cooking, child care and other tasks under threats of violence", according to court documents Parveen Jagota and Rajani Jagota face up to seven years in state prison when sentenced on May 22, 2012 before Judge William Nelson, while Vishal Jagota faces up to one year in the Rockland County jail.

Assistant District Attorney Arthur Ferraro said the case marked the first indictments, trial and convictions under New York States new Labour Trafficking Law.

"These convictions underscore our serious commitment to prosecuting those defendants who would prey on vulnerable - and in many cases young - victims," Zugibe said.

"Human trafficking is a violent and degrading crime that will not be tolerated," he added.

The victim, now 25 years old, is an Indian citizen who was brought to the US five years ago after an arranged marriage with Vishal Jagota.

On one occasion, the woman's mother-in-law and sister-in-law burned her hand with a hot iron in order to "teach her a lesson" for not washing the clothes properly.

The victim was not allowed to receive medical treatment for the serious burns and was told to treat the open wound with "toothpaste".

Vishal Jagota is also accused of biting the victim, causing permanent scarring on her cheek.

The Jagotas had also hidden the woman's green card, passport and other documents that restricted her movement and forced her to comply with her in-laws' demands, the documents said.

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