
Nepal woman, two sons die in menstruation hut..... woman and her two sons suffocated to death in Nepal ... forced to sleep in a windowless shed
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The woman and her children perished in a "chhaupadi house" CREDIT: PRAKASH MATHEMA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES |
Saptarshi Ray, TT, New Delhi, 10 JANUARY 2019 : A woman and her two children have died of suspected smoke inhalation after a night in a “menstrual hut” in Nepal, according to police.
The windowless hut, where women are banished during their period, was filled with smoke after the woman lit a fire to keep herself and her children warm, police said Wednesday.
Many communities in Nepal consider menstruating women impure and force mothers and daughters to stay in sheds away from the family home once a month, despite the practice being outlawed.
Police said Amba Bohara, 35, fell asleep in a hut in western Bajura district on Tuesday evening with her two sons aged 12 and nine. The trio had huddled around a fire to stay warm in Nepal's freezing winter weather.
Local police chief Uddhab Singh Bhat said the woman's mother-in-law opened the hut the next day to find all three dead.
"We are waiting for the results of a postmortem to confirm the cause of death, but believe they died of suffocation," Bhat told the AFP new agency. "We are investigating."
Parts of the blankets covering the trio were burned, and Ms Bohara had suffered burns to her legs.
The ancient shunning practice known as "chhaupadi" was outlawed in 2005 but is still enforced in parts of Nepal, particularly in remote and conservative western regions.
Last year, Kathmandu introduced a three-month jail term and a 3,000 rupee fine for anyone caught imposing chhaupadi.
The practice is linked to Hinduism and considers women untouchable during menstruation and after childbirth.
Under chhaupadi, women are barred from touching food, religious icons, cattle and men during their period and must sleep away from others.
The death of Ms Bohara and her children are not the first linked to the practice. Last year, a 21-year-old woman succumbed to smoke inhalation while banished to a hut, and other women have died from snake bites in the past.
The country's National Human Rights Commission said police needed to do more to enforce the law.
"Women will continue to die unless there are consequences for enforcing this tradition," said the commission's Mohna Ansari.
Under Nepali law, anyone who makes a woman observe chhaupadi faces a three-month jail sentence and a $27 (£21) fine. Activists have called for the law to be more stringently enforced.
Senior police officers said they were deciding whether any charges would be applied after postmortems were performed and all relatives informed.
Meghan Markle has campaigned for the rights of menstruating women, writing in 2017 after visiting India that: “In communities all over the globe, young girls’ potential is being squandered because we are too shy to talk about the most natural thing in the world.”
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