Culled
from the Daily Mail
Why
will someone beat another person to death, just because of his/her choice of a partner?
Strict Laws should be put in place to stop these dreadful acts.
What
will someone see? God help us.
A
young Indian woman was beaten to death by members of her own family and her boyfriend
beheaded in an horrific honour killing after they were lured back to their
village thinking were going to be allowed to marry.
Nidhi
Barak, 20, a fine arts student, and Dharmender Barak, 23, who was studying at
technical college, were killed last night as locals in Gharnavati village in
the Indian state of Haryana watched on. The people watching are so heartless, why will watch them kill another human being and you do nothing about it.
The
pair had eloped to nearby Delhi on Tuesday because their families did not
approve of their relationship.
But
they had been lured back with promises that they would not be harmed and would
finally be allowed to marry.
Miss
Barak's parents and uncle have been arrested and police are now trying to trace
her brother and other family members who disappeared g since the crime. Like seriously, they should be found and made to pay for their inhumane acts.
According
to police the couple were tortured for several hours at Miss Barak's home
before she was beaten to death in full public view.
Dharmender
Barak was beaten and his arms and legs broken, before he was beheaded. His body
was allegedly dumped near his family's home at a public square in the village.
Police,
who had been alerted by a villager, reportedly caught Miss Barak's family
cremating her body on a pyre.
Her
half-burnt body and that of Dharmender Barak have been sent for a post-mortem.
Local
police chief Anil Kumar said: 'While murdering the boy they also beheaded him.
'We
have arrested her father, mother and uncle and we are looking for her brother,
a friend and driver of the car in which the couple were brought back to her
home in Gharnavati village.
'Both
belonged to the same village and the same caste. It is an honour killing but
the murder was not approved by society.'
India has for centuries seen killings that often target young couples who have relationships of which their families, clans or communities, particularly in traditional rural areas, disapprove.
Reasons
for disapproval are numerous, but they sometimes include having relationships
outside of their caste or religion.
The
killings are carried out by relatives to protect the family's reputation and
pride.
Police
in Haryana have been conducting a campaign against honour killings in the
state, where the sex-gender ratio is skewed in favour of men because of an
outlawed but still existing tradition of female infanticide.
'We
hold seminars and our women officers visit villages but the ultimate weapon
against the scourge of honour killings is (more) education,' Kumar said.
India's
Supreme Court said in 2010 that the death penalty should be given to those
found guilty of honour killings, calling the crime a barbaric 'slur' on the
nation.
There
are no official figures on honour killings in India, but the All India
Democratic Women's Association says its research shows about 1,000 such cases
nationwide a year.
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