DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BPOYS & GIRLS IN HINDUS

Four-year-old sacrificed in Uttar Pradesh

Driven by the desire to get a son at any cost, a resident of Rumpura
Buzurg village in Bareilly district of Uttar Pradesh sacrificed his
neighbour’s four-year-old child.

Five people including two women have been arrested in this connection
after preliminary investigations.

Superintendent of Police, Bareilly (rural) Gulab Singh Saturday said
Naresh Pal, who had four daughters, was advised by an ‘ojha’ to
sacrifice a boy, if he wanted a son.

On August 15, Naresh, with some of his relatives lured away his
neighbour Nanhelal’s son Akash with sweets. They later beheaded the boy
with a sharp-edged weapon, threw his body in a pond and buried the head.

Nanhelal lodged a report in the Bhamura police station about Akash’s
sudden disappearance. Later, on finding his son’s headless body floating
in the lake he lodged a report against Naresh and his family members.

On interrogation, the family confessed to sacrificing the boy and the
weapon used in the crime was recovered.

UNI

Delhi
She crumbled despite counselling
By Vinay Tewari

NEW DELHI: A 14-year-old gang-rape victim, who was undergoing a
comprehensive counselling programme initiated by the Delhi Police, burnt
herself to death on Saturday, about 40 days after the incident took
place in northwest Delhi. The death of the girl, who was kicked-out of
school soon after the incident, reflects how shoddy implementation of
such grandiose schemes defeats their very purpose with no change in the
attitude of police and administration.

Counsellors who had intervened in the case as per a mandatory
requirement ordered by the police commissioner in May, are now
struggling to establish what went wrong, with the girl seemingly on a
recovery path. The counselling sessions are part of the responsibility
of the Rape Crisis Intervention Centres set up in each of the nine
police districts.

But a basic perusal of how the school and police authorities handled
this case shows where the obstacles lie, even though six persons - four
of whom raped her, and two others who aided in the crime, were arrested.

Obstacle one:When counsellors reached the address mentioned on the FIR,
it turned out to be a plot of barren land. It took them a month to
establish the correct address, with the local police ``refusing to
cooperate with them.'' So, while the girl was raped on July 3, the
counsellors could make their first intervention only on August 3,
against the 24-hour norm.

In fact, the counsellors visited the area police station and police post
on July 7, 8, 11 and 18 to get the address, but without success. ``They
first passed the buck on jurisdiction and then claimed to be
short-staffed,'' said counsellor Shalini, who had extensively interacted
with the victim and the police.

They finally managed to get the correct address and an officer to
accompany them to the victim's house only after they met district police
chief Sandeep Goel on July 21.

Obstacle two:Even before the counsellors had managed acceptability in
the victim's middle-class family of nine, this standard XI student was
given a transfer certificate by her government school, as authorities
feared a ``bad reputation.''

Officially, short attendance was given as the reason. ``This proved a
big setback for us, as she completely lost her self-dignity and set our
efforts back quite a bit,'' said Raj Mangal Prasad, vice-president of
Pratidhi, a Delhi-Police aided NGO for crime victims.

``Despite a negative self esteem, the girl wanted to continue studying.
Her family was supportive of this. In fact, they did not even blame the
girl for this incident, a normal response pattern of most parents,''
Prasad said. The father, refused to accept the TC from the school.

The girl's mental state, in fact, had showed slight improvement after a
medical test on August 10 revealed she was not pregnant, as feared by
the victim's mother. Two days before the counsellors were to make
another visit, the girl set herself on fire in her home.

``Delay in our first intervention and the school authorities attitude
are the prime factors which could have contributed to her mental
state,'' Prasad said.

Obviously, society still needs to introspect a bit more and legislate,
not only on pape

There was a big case of series of human sacrifices to get a baby in India some 10 years ago (near bombay, i think), i dont remember if he wanted a son or just a baby.

This has happened in big city, or if the kid killed was some runaway child on train station, killer would never be nabbed. In Pakistan, javed Iqbal killed 100 kids on his self appointed mission and none even knew about it, till he declared it himself.

news at 10, by sanam cut-'n-paste-'n-scream-hindu-hindu bureau.

Mr.Queer,true to your name do you think if i wrote these thingsin my own words ,you woudn’t believe me ,who said where wats the uel.So its queer you complain either way ,why waiste my prescious time to achieve the same result.Besides Queer you having posted more than 5 K post dont say you wrote all of them,otherwise you would have had a book of u r own!So anothr CUT-n-PASTE

http://www.expressindia.com/ie/daily/20000903/ina03028.html60 Minutes II
According to American lawyer Gary Haugen, the average price for a child
is $25 to $50. The length of service can last from a few years to a
lifetime.
Scott Pelley travels to rural India to interview bonded child laborers.
Tobacco Slaves In India
•Candy-Flavored Cigs Find Favor With U.S. Teens •But Some Are Made By
Bonded Indian Children •Kids Are Sold Into Years Of Work For $25
TAMIL NADU, India, Aug. 29, 2000
CBSShamshad rolls 500 bidis a day when she was 10.
(CBS) There was a time that some of the tobacco products sold in America
were made by slaves. 60 Minutes II Correspondent Scott Pelley reported
from India last fall, on the eve of the 21st century, on child slaves
who make cigarettes for America.
Find out what has happened since the report first aired.

Click here to read the 1999 report and the August 2000 update:•November
1999 Report
•August Update
November 1999 Report
The cigarettes are known as “bidis.” They are now hip among young people
in the United States. Sometimes they are sweetened, with flavors such as
chocolate, even bubble gum.
They’re also cheap, because they are hand rolled by kids who are tobacco
slaves, children sold into bonded servitude. It is illegal to import
goods into the United States that are made by bonded child labor. But
until now, the U.S. Customs Service never had the evidence to make a
case.
Walk by many high schools, bus stops and downtown coffee shops in
America these days, and you may notice young people smoking something
that looks a lot like a marijuana joint. It is a bidi cigarette, tobacco
wrapped in a leaf.
Bidis are sold in convenience stores, tobacco shops and even health food
stores - even though bidis pack three times the nicotine and tar of
other cigarettes. In America, they are a fad created by children living
by 18th century rules.
India’s tobacco road runs through the southern state of Tamil Nadu, a
place where traditions stretch back to the beginning of recorded time,
and where, in the world’s largest democracy, children are still sold
into bonded servitude.
Every day, Shamshad rolls bidis for hours. She rolls 500 a day.
Her story is typical. Six months ago she suffered seizures that
threatened her life. The family desperately needed money for medicine so
it struck a terrible bargain. It sold Shamshad’s labor to a money lender
in return for a loan.
To save her life, the family sold her freedom. Now she works for the
money lender. Most often children are bonded for many years, laboring
anonymously in their own homes as childhood passes them by. Shamshad was
traded for $25.
“We’ve had children from age 5, 6, 7, 10, 12,” said Special Commissioner
P.W.C. Davidar, an Indian government official fighting bonded labor in
Tamil Nadu. “It’s all ages. As soon as you can, and you know how to roll
bidis, you are an eligible candidate.”
Some Indians are selling their own children into this kind of work.
“We’ve had cases where you have the parents having taken a debt, getting
into bondage; and then the father dies. And the son takes on, he
inherits the debt,” Davidar said.
The origins of bonded servitude date back centuries, to the times of
Indian feudalism. But in the modern day, the practice has been banned.
In 1976 the Indian government outlawed bonded servitude all across the
country.
But 60 Minutes II found in remote India, it is still a common practice.
Some observers estimate that at least 10 million people are in bonded
labor - many of them children.
According to Gary Haugen, an American lawyer devoting himself to
rescuing children from illegal bondage, the average price for a child is
$25 to $50. The length of service can last from a few years to a
lifetime.
This fall Haugen went to a village in Tamil Nadu, deep in India’s
interior, to find out more about bonded children.
Haugen once prosecuted crooked police for the U.S. Justice Department.
He led the United Nation’s investigation of war crimes in Rwanda. Now
he’s set up a nonprofit group of investigators he calls the
International Justice Mission.
In his briefcase, Haugen carries shackles that a colleague pried from
the ankles of a boy who once ran away from a money lender.
“Some evil in the world dies hard,” Haugen said. “Even with slavery,
it’s alive and well in some places in the world. And this is one of the
places where you can still find children sold into slavery; and (the)
leg irons are a powerful reminder to me of that reality.”
After a journey halfway across India, Haugen, shadowed by Pelley,
arrived in the heart of Tamil Nadu. In the village of Krishnagiri,
Haugen went to the home of the Fareed family. Two of their daughters,
Karmela and Sumitbonu, were bonded to the village money lender.
According to Haugen, the girls had to work 10 hours a day, six days a
week, producing a quota of 1,000 bidis each.
“They’ve been working like this for two years. And the trick is, you
can’t get out of this debt unless you pay it off in a lump sum,” Haugen
said. “But they’re never paid enough to be able to meet that. And they
are charged enormous interest rates, sometimes 500 percent a year, 1,200
percent a year. And so this is bonded child labor.”
The girls, Haugen said, are producing bidi cigarettes specifically for
the Mangalore Ganesh Bidi Works, which exports bidis to the United
States and is one of the principal exporters to the country. It claims
that it employs an adult work force and insists that bonded labor is
never used in making its cigarettes. Using indentured children would
make its products illegal in America.
Ray Kelly, the commissioner of the U.S. Customs Service, ordered an
investigation of Mangalore Ganesh. But his agents have been frustrated.
When the Customs Service sends investigators into India, it must follow
diplomatic protocol, warning the Indian government. The investigators
are then taken to places where there is not bonded labor. “We need the
cooperation of foreign governments, and we don’t always get it,” Kelly
said.
CBS News came to Krishinagiri unannounced. The Fareed family spoke
freely to CBS News. One of the girls said that she had lost touch with
her friends. “If I go to play, only my family loses.” She added: “I
don’t want to play. I don’t think about it.”
The cigarettes she made were turned over to the money lender, who acted
as a subcontractor providing finished bidis to the Mangalore Ganesh
company. The money lender, who essentially owned the Fareed girls and
gave their bidis to the Mangalore Ganesh company, was Mr. Shafee.
Loans are usually paid off with three or four months of work, Shafee
said. It is impossible that someone would have to work for two years, or
10 years, he said. The Fareed family finished paying off its loan to
him, he added.
A few minutes later, however, the father of the Fareed girls walked in
with that day’s payment of cigarettes.
Those cigarettes are carried to warehouses, where they are bundled for
sale throughout India and the world. At the Mangalore Ganesh Bidi Works,
there were cigarettes wrapped with the U.S. Surgeon General’s health
warning, a requirement for export to the United States.
Haugen’s investigators go door to door, searching for bonded children.
They document each case with a sworn affidavit and, armed with that
evidence, Indian courts will free the child. In recent months, the
International Justice Mission had freed more than 200 children.
One of these children, Kanchen, was bonded for six years. She now
attends a special school for freed children. Through a translator, she
said that she was bonded when her mother died and the family needed
money for funeral expenses. During her bondage, her employers beat her
up for being late or for doing bad work, she said.
Another student at the school, Koobie, bonded for four years, was also
beat up and even burned with a hot knife one day.
Haugen sometimes gets affected by stories like this, he said: “In a lot
of ways as a law enforcement professional, human rights worker,
whatever, you tend to take a clinical approach. You have to do this
documentation;…put the evidence together so you can make the case.”
“But every once in a while, you do sort of step back, and you see these
children as children. And sure you have to choke it back,” Haugen noted.
60 Minutes II showed some of its footage to Customs Commissioner Kelly,
who said that the pictures provided enough evidence to legally bar
imports of Mangalore Ganesh cigarettes into the United States.
August Update
Soon after the 60 Minutes II report first aired in the fall of 1999, the
U.S. Customs Service banned the import of bidis made by Mangalore
Ganesh.
And an Indian court heard the cases of Shamshad, Shurmitbonu and
Karmela. All have been granted their freedom.
The broadcast was produced by Bill Owens and Margaret Ebrahim; the Web
story was produced by David Kohn; Copyright 2000, CBS Worldwide Inc.,
All Rights Reserved.