Another custody death puts Bangla police in the dock
The death of a 17-year-old garment factory worker in police custody
in Chittagong has sparked a storm of protest across Bangladesh
and put more pressure on the government for an immediate enquiry
into police behaviour.
Ordinary citizens, students and human rights activists joined
together at rallies and demonstrations while demanding exemplary
punishment for the police officers responsible for this latest
case of custodial death.
It follows an earlier outcry when Seema Chowdhury was gang-raped
in a police station last October after she was arrested, along
with her fiancé, near their village. Four policemen, including
the officer in charge, were arrested in the case.
However, police brushed aside appeals from women's organisations
and kept Seema in custody in Chittagong, pending investigations.
But on February 3 she was rushed to Chittagong College Hospital
where doctors in the emergency ward declared her dead on arrival.
The news triggered protests and demands that the country's rape
laws should be amended to protect victims and to speed up the
process of justice.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed had ordered an investigation
into the circumstances leading to Seema's tragic death. According
to press reports, a post-mortem examination showed the young woman
had been tortured. Her teeth were found loose and there was blood
on her nose. A police doctor was suspended, and a 12-member committee
of parliamentarians and a member of the judicial investigation
committee headed by a sitting high court judge had been appointed
to investigate the suspected murder.
Initially, the police alleged Seema was a prostitute as they had
in a similar incident two years ago when another teenager was
raped and killed by policemen near Dinajpur town, 275-km northwest
of the Bangladesh capital.
Infuriated crowds stoned the police station and eight people were
killed when police opened fire. The situation was eventually brought
under control by the paramilitary units.
Rokyea Begum, a women's rights activist, said the police regularly
try and claim rape victims are prostitutes. ''Does this mean that
the police have the right to rape a prostitute?'' she asked.
Women's organisations say there is an alarming increase in crimes
against women. At a recent rally in Dhaka, the Sammilite Nari
Samaj accused the police of ''targeting'' women, a charge that
is confirmed by Kazi Abdur Razzak, president of the Bangladesh
Human Rights Commission, who said police excesses are on the rise
despite the return of democracy to the country.
Commenting on Seema's unsolved murder, a leading lawyer in Dhaka
said, ''It works better for the criminals if the woman is gang-raped
and even better if she is killed as she is the only source of
direct evidence.''
Policemen are regularly implicated in rape cases, but not one
has been even charged with the crime in the last 25 years. Like
its South Asian neighbours, patriarchal norms dominate this conservative
society. Women are treated as non-entities, particularly in the
rural areas where the majority of the people live.
The law ministry said the number of cases involving crimes against
women have risen in the 1990s. Most cases of divorce are filed
by men, and the grounds for seeking an annulment are quite often
flimsy: talking loudly in front of in-laws and failure to perform
wifely duties quickly like serving food.
Bangladesh has enacted stringent punishment for horrific offences
like wife-murder or in cases where women have been disfigured
by acid thrown by attackers who were angry that they did not respond
to their sexual overtures.
But there is a big gap between the law and its implementation.
Obscurantist religious laws are still used by mullahs or
Islamic priests in the villages to order the stoning of women
accused of adultery, though their male partners often go scot-free.
And in rape cases, the poor among victims are often silenced by
money, say rights organisations.
''The honour of your raped daughter will not be restored by filing
a case against the rapist. Better take some money and go home,''
was the advice of a village chief to a poor farmer whose daughter
had been criminally assaulted by the son of a rich landowner in
a village in Jamalpur district two years ago, according to testimonies
recorded by the Sammilite Nari Samaj.
The government must revamp the police administration to make it
more sensitive to the needs of ordinary people, was the consensus
opinion of various women's organisations that were interviewed
in Dhaka recently.
In addition, they said, more money should be spent on education
and other programmes for the empowerment of women, which would
improve the quality of life of the people and raise social awareness
- all of which would contribute to safeguarding the rights of
both women and men in Bangladesh.
UNI
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