Monitoring press freedom and international affairs from Mid-Missouri Public Radio and the Missouri School of Journalism

Halting India's witch hunts [rebroadcast]

30 August 2018
Manikui Goipai talks in Karandih, India, June 30, 2000, about being wounded by a group of men who believed she had caused another's death through witchcraft. Goipai's husband was hacked to death by the group, her son was wounded and later died from blood loss. Goipai is one of only a few women in southern Bihar, India's most lawless state, to survive an attack after being branded a witch. (AP Photo/Saurabh Das)

For many, witch trials may seem like a relic of early colonial America. But in fact witch-hunting is still a feature of rural life today in many parts of the world.

One place where it's prevalent is India. On average, an Indian woman is killed every other day after being accused of witchcraft, according to government statistics. Many are tortured or publicly-humiliated before being burned, stabbed or beaten to death.

On this edition of Global Journalist, a look at the practice of witch-hunts in India, and why the phenomenon isn't merely an outgrowth of superstition.

Joining the program: 
  • Ashwaq Masoodi, a journalist for an Indian business daily in New Delhi
  • Mahdu Mehra, executive director of Partners for Law in Development, an Indian women's rights group
  • Shashank Sinha, an author and historian who is publishing director of Routledge India
  • Seema Yasmin, a journalist and John S. Knight fellow at Stanford University
 

Assistant producers: Teodora Agarici, Rosemary Belson
Supervising producer: Edom Kassaye
Visual editor: Jiwon Choi
Monitoring press freedom and international affairs from Mid-Missouri Public Radio and the Missouri School of Journalism.
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