5 women accused of being witches beaten to death in India
PATNA,
India (AP) — Dozens of villagers in eastern India beat to death five
women Saturday, accusing them of practicing witchcraft and blaming them
for a series of misfortunes in the village, police said.
Residents
of Kinjia village in Jharkhand state dragged the women out of their
homes and beat them with sticks and iron rods, said Arun Kumar Singh, a
deputy inspector-general of police in Ranchi, Jharkhand's capital.
The
attackers blamed the women for several accidents and misfortunes
suffered by villagers, including the death of an infant in Kinjia
earlier in the week, Singh said.
Police have arrested around 50
people involved in the attack, Singh said. A large number of police
officers have been deployed in the village to prevent any outbreak of
violence.Jharkhand's top elected official, Chief Minister Raghubar Das, condemned the incident. "In the age of knowledge, this incident is sorrowful. Society should ponder over it," he said in a statement.
Superstitious
beliefs persist in many parts of India and have been behind similar
attacks on women in Jharkhand. From 2000 to 2012, around 2,100 people,
mostly women, were killed in India on suspicion of practicing
witchcraft, according to the National Crime Records Bureau.
Kinjia is about 40 kilometers (25 miles) west of Ranchi.
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