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Raped Muslim Women in Gujarat Face Police Inaction 

"These women have already suffered and there is no undoing what has already happened to them. But they have to get justice" 

AHMEDABAD, India, September 20 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Months after Hindu mobs rampaged in India's western Muslim-majority state of Gujarat, many Muslim women who were raped by the zealots have seen no action taken against their aggressors, with police unwilling to take their complaints seriously.

Sultana Firoze, 24, was stripped naked by eight men in her village of Delol. Her life was spared, she said, only because she fell unconscious during the assault, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

"The police have done nothing against the accused; they are still scot-free. But I'm determined to get justice," said Firoze, who has still not returned home.

Rape victims face a first obstacle in identifying the men who assaulted them. But perhaps the biggest barrier is Indian police, who refuse to listen to the rape victims, and refuse to take action in their cases.

New York-based Human Rights Watch and other rights groups have blasted the Gujarat authorities' response to the riots, charging that police not only failed to prevent vigilante violence against Muslims but were even complicit in the attacks.

"What happened in Gujarat was not a spontaneous uprising; it was a carefully orchestrated attack against Muslims," Smita Narula, Human Rights Watch's senior South Asia researcher, said in a 75-page report released April 30.

"The attacks were planned in advance and organized with extensive participation of the police and state government officials," she said.

Police officials who sought to protect Muslims were removed from their positions, while some police even led distraught victims directly into the hands of their killers, the rights group said.

The report said that panicked phone calls made to the police, fire brigades, and even ambulance services generally proved futile. Several witnesses reported being told by police: "We have no orders to save you."

Rioting broke out across Gujarat, the largest state ruled by Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee's Hindu-nationalist BJP party.

Human Rights Watch said as many as 2,000 Muslims have died in the pogrom, but Indian authorities insist on putting the death toll at around 1,000.

In its April report, HRW said scores of Muslim women and girls were raped in Gujarat before being killed.

Witnesses say sexual assault was systematic.

"All the girls over 15 years old who were killed in the riots had been raped," said Mukhtar Mohammad, an organizer at the Kalol camp for people made homeless by the riots.

"Hindu mobs burned their bodies to destroy evidence," he said.

S.M. Lal, who is campaigning to get the rapists punished, said the official attitude toward violence against women has hampered attempts to prosecute for sexual assault.

"In the context of Gujarat, rape cases become even more difficult because of this whole belief that there was no gender violence during the riots," he said.

"These women have already suffered and there is no undoing what has already happened to them. But they have to get justice for those women who were raped and killed, and also to discourage men from committing such crimes against other women in the future," he said.

But many are pessimistic that the police will take action.

Women's rights activists say the problem is compounded by the traditional shame many rape victims feel in India. They also say that many of the tens of thousands of Muslims still homeless fear the majority Hindu community will not allow them to return to their homes if they fear being prosecuted for their actions during the riots.

"These women are under a lot of pressure to withdraw their statements. There is a threat to their lives and people from their villages are not allowing them to return back to their homes unless they retract their statements," said Nawas Kothwal of the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative.

The easy way out, activists say, is for all sides to say that accused rapists cannot be found.

Said Nanavati, the police official: "The accused have not been arrested because they are absconding."

He said search warrants have been issued and police informants in villages are looking for the suspects, "but verification of their identities becomes difficult."

Bilkees Yakub Patel, 22, saw 11 people killed in front of her, including her two-year-old daughter, when mobs attacked her village of Devgadhvaria.

She does not have a medical examination certificate to certify she was raped and police did not allow her to file a complaint. But, with the help of activists, she has pressed her case at a local court.

"I'll go to higher courts in spite of the threat," she said. "I'll fight until I get justice. I will not quit half-way."

Communal violence against Muslims in Gujarat is intimately connected to a rise of Hindu nationalism in the country and the state, a phenomenon that is also responsible for attacks against Christians over the last several years in the state and around the country.

 

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