Indian police talk to villagers on August 8, 2015 after five women accused of practising witchcraft were killed in the eastern state of Jharkhand. AFP Photo
Indian police talk to villagers on August 8, 2015 after five women accused of practising witchcraft were killed in the eastern state of Jharkhand. AFP Photo
Indian police talk to villagers on August 8, 2015 after five women accused of practising witchcraft were killed in the eastern state of Jharkhand. AFP Photo
Indian police talk to villagers on August 8, 2015 after five women accused of practising witchcraft were killed in the eastern state of Jharkhand. AFP Photo

Five women murdered in India for ‘witchcraft’: police


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NEW DELHI // Five women accused of practising witchcraft have been killed by villagers in a rural part of eastern India, police said on Saturday.

A group of assailants dragged the women out of their huts and beat them to death with sticks at around midnight on Friday in the village of Kanjia in the state of Jharkhand.

Twenty-four villagers have been arrested over the killings of the women, who were mostly aged between 45 and 50.

The villagers also used stones and knives after blaming the five women for bringing illness, poor crops and bad luck on the village through witchcraft, said Jharkhand police spokesman S N Pradhan.

“It looks like the village held a grudge against these women for a very long time, holding them responsible for ... various misfortunes,” Mr Pradhan said.

“The whole village is ganging up against the police now saying they all killed the women,” he added, saying that an investigation was underway.

Belief in witchcraft and the occult remains widespread in some impoverished and remote areas in India, where women are sometimes accused of being witches to settle disputes or grievances, experts say.

In some cases women are stripped naked as punishment, burnt alive or driven from their homes and killed.

In July, machete-wielding villagers in the northeastern state of Assam dismembered and beheaded a 63-year-old woman after accusing her of being a witch and casting evil spells on her village.

According to India’s National Crime Records Bureau, around 2,000 people, mostly women, were killed between 2000 and 2012 on suspicions of practising witchcraft.

Jharkhand accounted for 54 of 160 “witch hunt” murders in 2013, government data showed.

Some Indian states including Jharkhand have introduced special laws to try to curb crimes against people accused of witchcraft.

Jharkhand chief minister Raghubar Das condemned the latest killings on Saturday, urging society to “ponder over it”.

“In the age of knowledge, this incident is sorrowful”.

* Agence France-Presse

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