Nepal: Woman, sons suffocate to death in banned ‘menstrual hut’

Many communities in Nepal consider menstruating women as impure and force mothers and daughters to stay in sheds.

Banished: Why menstruation can mean exile
The practice was banned by the Supreme Court in 2005 and a new law criminalised it last year [Al Jazeera]

A woman and her two sons suffocated to death in Nepal after she was forced to sleep in a windowless shed during her period, police said.

Amba Bohara and her children are the latest victims of an age-old Hindu practice in the Himalayan country, that was banned more than a decade ago.

Bohara, 35, and her sons – aged 12 and nine – had lit a fire on Tuesday night to keep warm in the freezing mud and stone hut, but were discovered dead the next morning by her father-in-law in western Nepal’s Bajura district, police said.

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The practice of “chhaupadi” banishes menstruating girls and women to animal sheds or huts for the duration of their period, when they are thought to be impure.

“They died of suffocation because there was no ventilation and they had made the chamber airtight to beat the cold,” police official Uddhav Singh Bhat told the Reuters news agency.

“We pulled out their bodies with burned limbs.”

Outlawed in 2005

The ancient tradition was outlawed in 2005, yet it remains prevalent in Nepal’s remote west. The monthly exclusion leaves women at risk of snake bites, attacks by wild animals and rape.

Some communities fear misfortune, such as a natural disaster, if menstruating women and girls are not sent away.

They are barred from touching a range of items – including milk, religious idols and cattle – and must eat frugally. Menstruating women and girls are also not allowed to meet other family members or venture out during their period.

The custom has led to several deaths, despite the government introducing three-month jail terms and fines of 3,000 rupees ($27). Last year, a woman suffocated to death after she was banished; in 2017, a teenager died after a snake bite.

Human rights activists say the government’s efforts to end the practice have been inadequate and urged tighter monitoring.

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“That a woman dies with her children during menstruation is one of the biggest tragedies,” said Mohana Ansari of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC).

Officials say battling centuries-old attitudes is not easy.

The NHRC said police needed to do more to enforce the law.

“Women will continue to die unless there are consequences for enforcing this tradition,” said Ansari.

Source: News Agencies