In
some remote areas of Nepal menstruating women are forced to sleep in a hut away
from the home
|
A young Nepali woman has
died of suspected smoke inhalation while she was banished to a shed for
menstruating under an ancient tradition banned more than a decade ago, police
said Wednesday.
AFP
report continues:
Many
communities in Nepal view menstruating women as impure and in some remote areas
they are forced to sleep in a hut away from the home, a practice known as chhaupadi.
Gauri
Bayak, 21, was found dead by her neighbours inside a smoke-filled hut on Monday
morning in a village in the western district of Achham.
"She
had lit a fire to keep herself warm and we suspect she suffocated and died of
smoke inhalation," local police chief Dadhi Ram Neupane told AFP.
Police
are waiting for the results of a postmortem to confirm the cause of death.
Chhaupadi is linked to Hinduism and
considers women untouchable when they menstruate, as well as after childbirth.
Barred
from touching food, religious icons, cattle and men, they are banished from the
home and forced to sleep in basic huts.
The
practice was banned in 2005 but is still followed in parts of Nepal,
particularly in remote western regions.
Last
year a teenager died after being bitten by a snake while sleeping in a shed and
in 2016 two women died in separate incidents while following the ritual.
Last
year Nepal passed a new law criminalizing chhaupadi.
It will come into effect in August, when anyone forcing a woman to follow the
custom faces a three-month jail sentence and a 3,000 rupee (US$30) fine.
Manju Mahat, a district women's rights official, said chhaupadi was "a clear violation of our human rights" and urged women's families to "take responsibility and stop this practice".
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