Friday, 25 October 2013

No “honour” in killing


"Violence of women is always a violation of human rights; it is a crime. Let us take this issue with a deadly seriousness that it deserves."
-Ban ki-moon, United Nations Secretary General

September 2010- The decomposed bodies of Inder Pal (22), a farmhand, and Maya (18) were recovered from the fields of Phoolkan village, Sirsa. The couple were neighbours and wanted to marry. They were killed by the boy’s family. Inder was forcibly married two months before the couple was killed.
August 15 2013- Murder of a 15-year-old girl, whose body was found from Bhakra canal, patiala, turned out to be a case of honour killing with police alleging that she had been killed by her own parents.
18 September 2013- Dharmender Barak, 23, and Nidhi Barak, 20, were allegedly killed by members of Nidhi's family in Garnauthi village in the northern state of Haryana on that disgust Wednesday evening.

But honour killing is not only restricted to rural areas, it has also been reported in urban areas like Tamilnadu and Hyderabad.
Newspaper reported the story of an 18year old girl being tortured and beaten up for falling in love in Delhi, august 2013.

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Recently, there has been a spate of honor killings in the country. But what is honour killing?
"Honour killings" are murders by families on family members who are believed to have brought "shame" on the family name. The apparent "shame" could be caused by a victim refusing to enter into an arranged marriage or for having a relationship that the family considers to be inappropriate.
This tradition was first viewed in its most horrible form during the Partition of the country in between the years 1947 and 1950 when many women were forcefully killed so that family honour could be preserved.

When are we going to draw boundaries? Or are we just going to wait till our child is a victim of it?
 In May 2008, Jayvirsingh Bhadodiya shot his daughter Vandana Bhadodiya and struck her on the head with an axe.
In June 2012, a man chopped off his 20-year-old daughter's head with a sword in Rajasthan after learning that she was dating men.

Are we seriously living in 21st century? Where one part of India is adapting the ‘live in relationship’ dogma, the other part is suffering through this? What is wrong in loving? Aren’t we taught to love and care since childhood? Castes matter so much? Aren’t the lower castes- ‘humans’? Don’t they have feelings?

Why are they even known as the ‘lower castes’? Why this bias? So many questions go unanswered. We all are human beings with feelings, emotions, god didn’t differentiate between us, aren’t these self-created boundaries?

We cannot fall in love and marry the person we love but we are expected to do an arranged marriage and loose our virginity the very same night with a ‘stranger’?
Is that our values? There is nothing wrong with arranged marriage but neither is love marriage wrong. With advancement in science and technology, film, agriculture, service sector, the mentality of the people need not necessarily be advanced.

Rich or poor, educated or uneducated- surely doesn’t matter. There is no honour in “killing”. Humans do not have the right to write down death sentences of innocent fellow humans.


According to a post in a well known newspaper on 18 September 2013, love-related disputes were the third most common motive for murder in 2012, after personal vendettas, and property disputes and affairs of the heart which resulted in 2,549 killings in 2011, up by 184 since 2010.
In some states, “love affairs/sexual causes” accounted for the highest number of murders, according to the 2012 data released by the National Crime Records Bureau.
The crime statistics bureau does not differentiate between murders because of relationships gone wrong and “honour” killings, despite repeated calls from activists for a separate record of crimes committed against couples who may break caste or religious barriers to marry.

Harsh Malhotra, who set up the voluntary organisation Love Commandos in 2010 to help protect young couples from their disapproving families, said that his organisation receives 600 to 700 phone calls every day from couples who face opposition from their families for marrying outside their caste or religion, with the most coming from Andhra Pradesh, followed by Uttar Pradesh, Haryana and Punjab.
Haryana reported 50 relationship-related murders last year, while neighbouring Punjab had 83.
Even after getting married, some couples “have to run like they have committed a crime”, he said.
At least 1,000 young people are killed in the name of honour every year, according to figures compiled by the All India Democratic Women’s Association.

When love can be so fatal, why are we even taught to love? 66 years of independence and we are following these traditions? Why? Just because our parents followed them? Or their parents followed it? Lose your virginity the very first night and if the marriage fails-no issue but sleep with a man before marriage and if it fails-regret it? I am not writing something “illicit” here but I am a girl with principles and hence I am writing this. Times are changing and we need to change along, stand for ourselves, build our boundaries, our own principles and guidelines, walk on them and be tomorrow’s change.