Cape Times

Brides given selfdefenc­e ‘bats’

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NEW DELHI: An Indian state has handed out hundreds of wooden bats to newly married women to use as a weapon if their husbands become abusive.

Gopal Bargava, a minister in the state of Madhya Pradesh, handed out the paddles, traditiona­lly used to get dirt out of clothes, to around 700 brides at a mass wedding.

The nearly 25cm-long paddles have messages on them that read “For beating drunkards” and “Police won’t intervene”.

Bhargava said he wanted to draw attention to the domestic abuse rural women receive from their alcoholic husbands.

“Love” has killed more people than terrorism in India, stats show, he said: “Women say whenever their husbands get drunk they become violent. Their savings are taken away and splurged on liquor.

“There is no intent to provoke women or instigate them to violence but the bat is to prevent violence.”

He has ordered nearly 10 000 bats to distribute to newly-wed women.

The governor said he decided on the move after a woman asked him if she should beat her husband with a bat to stop him drinking.

A group of feminist vigilantes called the Gulabi Gangs, who wear pink saris and carry wooden sticks, have started a campaign to stop vendors selling alcohol and to shut down illegal moonshine operations.

Many Indian states have launched crackdowns on alcohol in recent years by banning or restrictin­g its sale to prevent violence.

In 2016 the government of Tamil Nadu state said they would introduce a ban during a state election campaign after the measure proved popular with women voters who blame alcohol for much of the state’s domestic and sexual violence.

The has been increasing concern about widespread misogyny across India.

Crimes against women increased 34% between 2012 and 2015, according to the National Crime Records Bureau.

The move followed the brutal gang-rape and disembowel­ment of a 23-year-old medical student in Delhi in December 2012. – The Independen­t

 ??  ?? UP IN ARMS: The Gulabi Gangs, feminist vigilantes, have started a campaign in Madhya Pradesh to disrupt alcohol sales to curb violence.
UP IN ARMS: The Gulabi Gangs, feminist vigilantes, have started a campaign in Madhya Pradesh to disrupt alcohol sales to curb violence.

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