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Husband Arrested After Throwing Acid On Wife And Sending Her Out To Be Gang-Raped

By Modupeoluwa Adekanye
15 December 2020   |   3:22 pm
A gambler in India who bet his wife and lost then threw acid on her because she resisted his attempts to send her back to his friends, who had been gang-raping her as part of the deal according to a report by Independent News. The incident took place in the northeastern state of Bihar and…

Husband Arrested After Throwing Acid On Wife And Sending Her Out To Be Gang-Raped Image shutterstock

A gambler in India who bet his wife and lost then threw acid on her because she resisted his attempts to send her back to his friends, who had been gang-raping her as part of the deal according to a report by Independent News.

The incident took place in the northeastern state of Bihar and adds to the growing number of cases of domestic violence during the Covid-19 restrictions in India.

According to Rajesh Kumar Jha, a senior police official of Muzahidpur police station:

The couple was married for about 10 years. Her husband was into gambling and he lost her in a bet in late October. After that, he would send her to the gamblers against her wishes, where the men would rape her. If she ever resisted the sexual exploitation, her husband would beat her and hold her hostage. On 2 November, when the 30-year-old woman opposed her husband’s attempts to again send her to the gamblers, he threw acid on her.

The husband has been booked by the state police under various sections of Indian law, including acid attack, gang rape, domestic violence, and wrongful confinement, and is currently in judicial custody.

The couple cannot be named due to laws protecting the identity of victims of sexual crimes. The police is yet to identify the other accused persons.

The Covid-19 lockdown period has resulted in a nearly twofold rise in gender-based violence, according to the National Commission for Women (NCW), which receives complaints of domestic violence from across India.

The women’s commission recorded 587 domestic violence complaints between 23 March and 16 April, which was a 45 percent increase from the previous 25 days between 27 February and 22 March.

This has been attributed to confinement with an abusive partner, financial worries due to the lockdown, and lack of access to alcohol.

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