Kuwait Times

India widows face abuse and threats

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MUMBAI: Widows of farmers who have committed suicide in western India face abuse and threats to their children’s safety when they demand their inheritanc­e, highlighti­ng the risks vulnerable women face in claiming rights over property, a report said. Thousands of farmers kill themselves every year in Maharashtr­a state over failed crops and mounting debt. The most common reason cited is the inability to repay loans for seeds and fertilizer­s. While an upsurge in suicides has prompted the state to write off farmers’ debts and offer subsidized loans and insurance, many of these benefits are denied to widows, according to the study of 157 farmers’ widows.

“Widows in India have always been ostracized and abused; farmer widows suffer the additional stigma of the suicide and the debt,” said Shivani Chaudhry, executive director at the advocacy group Housing and Land Rights Network, which published the report. “They face eviction (by their in-laws) if they ask for their share in the family home or land,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation yesterday. Chaudhry said the woman’s in-laws would also often threaten to deprive her children of food or pull them out of school if she tried to make a claim.

The study published this month focuses on the region of Vidarbha, in eastern Maharashtr­a, which has been struggling with drought for four decades and accounts for many of the state’s farmer suicides. —Reuters

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