In love: Anju Yadav, 19,from Karahkol village and Ranjit Yadav, 21 were in love according toe Anju's mother
*Girl set on fire by boyfriend's father after he discovers two-year affair
*Two men in custody but boyfriend's father on the run police confirm
*Girl's mother says couple were in love, all she wanted was her daughter's happiness
A 19-year-old girl has been burnt to
death and her mother beaten after pleading with village elders to be
allowed to marry a boy from the same village and same caste, Indian
police have confirmed.
Anju
Yadav, 19, from Karahkol village, in Deoria district of Uttar Pradesh,
was set on fire at her home while her mother, Gyanwati Devi, 48, was on
the other side of the village pleading with the village council to allow
Anju to marry her boyfriend of two-years, Ranjit Yadav, 21.
But
the village council, along with the boy's father, Jai Hind Yadav, 52,
rejected their pleas insisting it was against tradition.
Instead, the boy’s father rushed over to the family home and set the girl alight, it was claimed.
Indian society is well known for its
complex caste system, which can prevent people from different social
castes from marrying and in some cases carrying out certain professions.
However, what is less well known is
that it is equably unacceptable for people from the same caste and
village to marry. Marriages within the same Gotra (clan) are also not
permitted in traditional India, particularly in the northern regions of
the country where caste based groups, known as Khap Panchayats, consider
such marriages crimes.
Rakesh
Kumar, head of Ikauna Police Station, said: ‘Jai Hind along with three
other villagers rushed to the girl’s house and doused her with
inflammable liquid and set her alight while her mother was at the
council meeting. We have arrested two members of the group while two are
still on the run.’
Anju had suffered 85 per cent burn and died on her way to hospital on Thursday evening.
Anju
was alone when the four men broke into her home. In desperation she
jumped from her terrace onto the second floor to try and save herself.
She suffered fractures in her arms and legs.
Villagers poured water on her, but by then she had already suffered severe burns.
Her mother, Gyanwati, said both her daughter and Ranjit loved each other very much and wanted to marry.
Gyanwati
went to Jai Hind's house on Wednesday evening to discuss the marriage
proposal but when he and the family refused she went to village council
for help, which is usual in India.
Gyanwati
said: ‘I wanted to see my daughter happy. They loved each other; I had
no problem with the marriage. But when I went to Jai Hind with the
proposal he told me it’s a sin to marry within the same caste and would
not accept the marriage.’
Police confirmed Jai Hind was still missing.
The
attack comes six months after the brutal gang rape and murder of a
23-year-old physiotherapy student on a bus in Dehli. The attack prompted
worldwide condemnation and protests in India demanding better treatment
for women.
The number of high-profile rape cases in India
have sparked passionate protests and seen a drop in the number of women
tourists travelling to the country over safety fears
Attention has inevitably turned
on the country and stories of the mistreatment of women have regularly
made the news since including the deplorable case of a five year old
girl who was left fighting for her life after she was raped by a
neighbour in the Indian capital in April.
The girl died from her injuries two weeks later.
Two
weeks ago an American woman was gang-raped by three men in India while
hitchhiking back to a guest house, police announced today.
The 30-year-old was picked up by men in a truck and then attacked as she made her way home after visiting a friend.
It
came the day after it emerged a 21-year-old Irish charity worker was
allegedly drugged and raped while volunteering with an aid agency in
Kolkata.
Regular stories
of violence against women have had an impact on tourist visits with the
number of travellers entering the country believed to be down by
anything between 25 per cent and as much as 68 per cent according to
some sources.
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