In 2011, a man named Ramakrishna and his nephews Ramanna and Timmesh Lallegowda allegedly killed Suvarna over her affair with a Dalit man of their village in Mandya district. Over five years later, conviction seems to be a far-fetched idea.
Quoting figures from the State Crime Records Bureau, The Hindu reported that there have been 10 suspected honour killings in Karnataka since 2011.
Mandya has recorded three cases and Ramanagara district two cases. Anekal, Hesaraghatta, Dharwad , Mysuru and Hassan have record one case each. A total of 13 people, including a four-month-old baby have been killed.
In several of these cases, media reports and studies by activists show efforts were made to make the death look like a suicide, or to pin blame on the Dalit man’s family.
Nineteen-year-old Monica’s death some days ago, also points to this. Mandya SP had told The News Minute that her father and her maternal uncle had confessed that they hanged the body from a tree after killing her.
HV Vasu, a member of Karnataka Jana Shakti (KJS), who is pursuing the legal battle with Suvarna’s killing, said that there were attempts to pin the blame on Suvarna’s partner Govindaraju.
Govindaraju and some of his family members too had been assaulted.
Even when the partner of the murdered woman wishes to give a statement to the police, he would be discouraged, says Mallige, also a member of KJS.
In some cases, the police too tacitly support the girl’s family.
Meanwhile, Manjula Manasa, Chairperson of the Karnataka State Commission for Women wrote a letter to Home Minister G Parameshwara.
Guruprasad, who has protested against caste atrocities cases including the Abalavadi case said that even if the police registers a case, convictions are very difficult as there would be no one to appear as witness.
After Suvarna’s death in 2011, KJS members had interacted with college students on the subject. To their surprise, some girls felt what she had done was wrong.
(The writer Sarayu Srinivasan works with The News Minute.)
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