Indian
brides seek protection from abusive grooms
NEW
DELHI - Sonal Agarwal says her disfigured face is a constant
reminder of the most terrifying night of her life -- her wedding
night.
“My
husband just went crazy. He said he wanted to kill me and lashed
out at me with a knife and cut my face.” said Sonal, tugging a
blue scarf covering her head to hide slash wounds on her left
cheek.
The
22-year-old student from the north Indian city of Chandigarh
thought she was heading for a prosperous new life in the West
with a British-born Indian doctor after he chose her from scores
of women who replied to his advert seeking a bride.
But
after leaving her family and homeland to live in the UK, Sonal
found her new husband was a fraud.
“He
was mentally sick and wasn’t a doctor and didn’t have a job.
His family tricked me and now my life is finished,” she said.
Women’s
groups say every year hundreds of starry-eyed girls seeking a
better life in the West are duped into wedlock by men of Indian
origin living in the diaspora -- in countries like the United
States, Britain, Canada and Australia -- mostly for money.
“Thousands
of Indian men in the West come here and advertise in
matrimonials every year,” said Yogesh Mehta from the National
Commission for Women, a government body for women’s rights.
“While
many are honest about who they are, there are also a lot who lie
about their jobs, economic and marital status often to get the
dowry,” he added.
Dowries
-- often jewellery, expensive clothing, motorcars and money --
are given by the bride’s family to the groom and his parents,
traditionally to ensure the bride will be comfortable in her new
home.
The
custom, outlawed in India more than four decades ago but still
widely practiced, is often exploited with the groom’s family
demanding more money in return for not abusing the bride.
“Cheat”
marriages
Women’s
groups say the number of women marrying men of Indian origin
living overseas or Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) is rising
proportionately as the Indian population overseas increases.
Consequently,
there are an increasing number of complaints from women who are
victims of fraud or “cheat” marriages.
“Everyday
we get around three complaints just to our ministry alone from
women who are victims of these marriages,” said one official
from the ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs.
“It’s
a serious issue which needs to be tackled as some of the stories
of what happens to these girls can be quite shocking,” the
official added.
Very
often the women go abroad after the wedding only to find
themselves abandoned with no one turn to, no money, no ability
to speak the local language and no knowledge of the norms and
customs of the alien country.
Other
women tell tales of being battered or kept prisoner in the home
and treated like domestic workers. Some even find their new
husband is already married to someone else.
There
are also cases of “holiday brides” -- women abandoned in
India within days or weeks of marriage with the husband
promising to return once visa arrangements have been made for
his wife, but never actually doing so.
There
are no accurate numbers on how many cheat marriages take place,
but some reports say India’s northern state of Punjab, which
has a large community overseas, has so far registered 15,000
cases alone.
Other
states like Gujarat and Kerala have also seen cases.
But
activists say the number of deceived brides is under-reported
with many unwilling to speak out, fearing the shame and stigma
associated with being a divorced or separated woman in
traditional Indian society.
Greener
pastures
In
many parts of India, a match for their daughter with an Indian
living abroad is coveted by parents lured by the prospect of
greener pastures for the entire family.
Eager
not to let go of such lucrative offers, the families often
ignore the common cautions that are observed in traditional
Indian matchmaking.
“If
a marriage proposal comes from a man in India, then checks are
made about him and his family through mutual acquaintances and
other ways,” said Sneha Singh, a social worker and victim of a
fraud marriage to an Indian living abroad.
“But
when it’s an NRI no one bothers to check anything because he
is from the West so he is thought to be rich and respectable.”
Activists
say social awareness campaigns must be held advising families to
check a groom’s background -- perhaps through his voter
registration card, social security number, employment record and
tax returns -- which would show his true status.
They
also argue legislation must be reviewed as even those brides
brave enough to seek justice get entangled in a web of legal
complexities due to the different laws pertaining to marriage in
India and the country where the NRI husband is from.
Activists
suggest bilateral pacts with countries with a large Indian
population to facilitate recognition and enforcement of -foreign
divorce decrees, child custody orders and property rights.
India
must also make it compulsory for marriages to be registered,
which will give more legal protection to the duped bride,
women’s groups add.
Reuters
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