USA TODAY International Edition

Acid attack survivors demand India take action

Women maimed in crimes support each other in struggle against societal shackles

- Sujoy Dhar Special for USA TODAY

“Those days, I felt all my dreams had ended. But I think the attacker was defeated, as he failed to crush my dream.” Laxmi Agarwal, acid attack survivor

In

NEW DELHI

early July, unidentifi­ed men threw acid on a 35- year- old woman while she was staying at a government- run women’s hostel in Lucknow, 330 miles southeast of here.

Guards came to her rescue, but the attackers fled. The assault on the woman, a gang rape victim whose first name is Vimla, was the latest in a series of acid attacks that included two men forcing her to drink acid in March. USA TODAY does not use the full names of sexual assault victims to protect their privacy.

India has made internatio­nal headlines for horrific rape cases in recent years. Acid attacks are common, too, although they receive less attention.

Between 250 and 300 acid attacks are reported in India every year, despite laws restrictin­g the sale of acid or other deadly chemicals, according to Stop Acid Attacks, a non- profit group.

Vimla “is a mysterious but tragic case of a woman being attacked repeatedly with acid,” said Asish Shukla of Stop Acid Attacks, which runs a chain of Sheroes Hangout Cafes managed by acid attack survivors.

Shukla said the group has demanded that India’s Central Bureau of Investigat­ion examine Vimla’s case.

“We are worried why she is attacked again and again over a long period,” Shukla said.

Dibyaloke Rai Chaudhuri, a coordinato­r at Acid Survivor Foundation India, said Vimla’s attackers targeted her repeatedly so she would be frightened into withdrawin­g the charges against them. She has not.

In 2016, India recorded 300 attacks, but many go unreported, so the actual number could exceed 1,000, according to Acid Survivors’ Trust Internatio­nal, based in the United Kingdom.

Other crimes against women in India are on the rise.

Rapes in the capital region increased 277%, from 572 in 2011 to 2,155 in 2016, according to Delhi police.

Laws against rape were made stricter after a notorious Delhi gang rape in 2012, when five men and a juvenile brutalized a 23year- old woman on a bus. She was dumped on a road and died two weeks later, sparking national outrage and protests.

Since 2013, acid attacks are an offense punishable by up to 10 years in prison. Before that, no law dealt specifical­ly with acid attacks.

“Acid is still sold openly in some parts of India, and it is easily available to the offenders. We have gathered videos of the acid being sold even after the restrictio­ns, but it evoked no action,” said Laxmi Agarwal, who is one of the most recognizab­le people in India fighting the assaults.

Agarwal was attacked in April 2005 at age 16 by someone who stalked her for months, demanding that she marry him.

“I remember the day in New Delhi near Khan Market when this guy and his brother’s girlfriend together attacked me in the heart of the city. I lay writhing in pain and was hit by vehicles as I was blinded for a while,” said Agarwal, who is married to social activist Alok Dixit, the founder of Stop Acid Attacks.

“I looked at my face months after the attack in a mirror and shuddered. I wanted to be a singer and had been taking lessons to be able to participat­e in a reality show without the knowledge of my parents,” Agarwal said. “Those days, I felt all my dreams had ended. But I think the attacker was defeated, as he failed to crush my dream.”

The mother of a 2- year- old girl and a TED Talk speaker, Agarwal said more victims file police complaints than in the past.

“Acid attacks destroy a family completely, and the victim has to undergo at least 80 reconstruc­tion operations. It is harrowing,” she said.

Agarwal, who became a face of Viva N Diva, an apparel brand that wanted to send a social message by signing her for modeling, said rehabilita­tion of victims is most important because the attacker’s aim is to kill a woman’s aspiration to live a life of her choice.

The Rights of Persons With Disabiliti­es Act was revised in 2016 to include acid attack survivors as physically disabled. That provides access to education and employment, and 3% of government jobs are reserved for acid attack victims.

Activists and victims said the attacks will continue if the country does not treat the attackers more harshly and the victims more generously.

“The law only recognizes those victims who have been blinded by the acid attacks. Many victims have other kind of disfigurem­ent. Nothing is classified separately in the new law,” said Chaudhuri, with the Acid Survivor Foundation. “Conviction rates are very low in India, and so it does not act as a deterrent. The attackers also get bail easily.”

Agarwal said the crux of the problem in India “is the way the boys are raised. ... They are taught from the childhood that they are superior to women.

“It is a patriarchy mindset that is leading to such crimes,” she said. “Even now the society here thinks a girl’s dream is not a dream.”

 ?? PHOTOS FROM STOP ACID ATTACKS ?? Laxmi Agarwal says boys in India are raised to believe they are superior to women. She says such a patriarcha­l mindset leads to crimes such as acid attacks.
PHOTOS FROM STOP ACID ATTACKS Laxmi Agarwal says boys in India are raised to believe they are superior to women. She says such a patriarcha­l mindset leads to crimes such as acid attacks.
 ??  ?? The Stop Acid Attacks group runs a chain of Sheroes Hangout Cafes, which are managed by acid attack survivors.
The Stop Acid Attacks group runs a chain of Sheroes Hangout Cafes, which are managed by acid attack survivors.

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