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Friday, 7 December 2012

Indian village where women have been banned from using mobile phones because 'they could use them to elope'

  • A council in the eastern Indian state of Bihar said the phones were 'debasing the social atmosphere'
  • Single women are fined £130 if they are caught using a phone, married women around £20

A council in the eastern Indian state of Bihar has banned the use of mobile phones by women, saying the phones were 'debasing the social atmosphere'.

Councillors claimed the use of phones encouraged women to elope.
Single women are fined £130 if they are caught using a phone, married women around £20.

Ba: A council in the eastern Indian state of Bihar has banned the use of mobile phones by women, saying the phones were 'debasing the social atmosphere'
Ban: A council in the eastern Indian state of Bihar has banned the use of mobile phones by women, saying the phones were 'debasing the social atmosphere'

The ban has been put in place by Sunderbari council which is in a Muslim-dominated area in the north east of India.

'It always gives us a lot of embarrassment when someone asks who has eloped this time,' said Manuwar Alam, who heads a newly-formed committee tasked with enforcing the ban.

He said the number of elopements and extramarital love affairs had risen in the past few months, with at least six girls and women fleeing their homes.

'Even married women were deserting their husbands to elope with lovers.

That was shameful for us,' Alam said. 'So, we decided to tackle it firmly. Mobile phones are debasing the
Temptation: Councillors claimed the use of phones encouraged women to elope
social atmosphere.’

Local officials have begun investigations, saying that such bans cannot be allowed in a healthy society, while women’s rights activists called it an assault on freedom that could potentially end up harming women by stripping them of one source of protection from trouble, such as unwanted advances by men.

'Girls and women are capable enough to protect themselves,' said activist Suman Lal during a debate on local television.

'Technology is meant to be used, not to be banned...The order is nauseating.'

Fellow activist Mohammad Islam said it was 'disappointing' that the village council ignored the many advantages of mobile phones before placing a ban on them for one reason.

'I want every girl to be given a mobile phone so that she could call up family members if she has a problem", he said.




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