Dalit woman lynched in Agra village
POLICE APPEARED TO DENY THAT THE WOMAN WAS BEATEN TO DEATH, AND CLAIMED THE POSTMORTEM REPORT INDICATES SHE DIED OF CARDIAC ARREST
A 60-year old Dalit woman was allegedly lynched in Agra after villagers thought she was out to cut the hair of sleeping women, the first reported fatality of what appears to be turning into a case of mass hysteria.
Growing number of people, particularly in rural districts, of Haryana, Rajasthan, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh have reported mysterious instances of sleeping women being attacked and their hair chopped off short.
Family members said Maan Devi left the home around 4 am on Wednesday but lost her way, reaching a predominantly upper caste neighbourhood where people spotted her.
“She pleaded that she had lost her way but they took as one responsible for cutting women’s hair in Mutnai village and killed her,” the victim’s daughter-inlaw, Kalpana Jatav, said.
Local police first denied the death was connected to the “ghost barber” panic. Deputy superintendent of police (DSP), Fatehabad, Tej Veer Singh said a case was registered including charges relating to atrocities against Dalits, and teams were keeping a vigil in the area.
The police also appeared to deny that the woman was beaten to death. “The post-mortem report of Maan Devi indicates she died of cardiac arrest and not due to beating,” Singh said.
Devi’s son has named two suspects, both from the upper caste Baghel community, in his complaint where he also said that his mother’s body had been thrown back in their village. Till Thursday, neither had been arrested.
Agra and villages in districts nearby were the latest to report the hair-cutting mystery that seems to be spreading since first being recorded in parts of the National Capital Region last week. Officials said on Friday that more “sightings” were reported from the region, and the state’s Inspector General issued an appeal for calm.
Women in at least five states have reported waking up to the sound of scissors, spotting black cats, and seeing ghosts and shadows. Some claimed they found portions of their hair cut off, and others reported falling unconscious with fear.
Police have dismissed the allegations as rumours in several of these cases, and administration officials are now issuing alerts for local law enforcement to tackle fear mongering.
Parts of India, particularly rural districts where superstitious beliefs are common, have often been at the centre of mass hysteria events.
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