All Doors shut on kin of '14 victims
J Shanmugha Sundaram
Tiruvannamalai: Twenty-three-year-old Pavithra of Thanniyur hamlet in Athimur
panchayat, Tiruvannamalai, does not mind taking to the tough job of cutting
sugarcane. All that this young widow now thinks about is the future of her two
daughters, aged five and two years.
Like her, 20-year-old Rekha, also a widow, also cuts
sugarcane to feed her two-and-a-half-year-old daughter, while 50 year-old
Poomalli struggles to make ends meet after she lost her son, the sole
breadwinner of the family.
It is almost a year since the three women lost their sole
breadwinners. A common string binds them with the 20 families, who lost their
men in controversial surrounding twin
encounters by Red Sander Anti-Smuggling Task Force (RSASTF) in
Seshachalam Reserve Forest on April 7. The trio – Vijayakanth (25), Sasi (25) and
Venkateshan (26) - was also gunned down by the special task force during an
alleged encounter on May 27 last year in Guddeddula Banda in Shyamala Forest
Range.
While various quarters are fighting for justice for the
families of the 20 men, these three families have been living amidst poverty
and isolation for nearly a year now. The young widows bemoaned that the
government officials were looking them down and spoke ill about their husband
when they approach for the financial aid for widows.
“I met government
officials seeking widow pension, but the officials categorically said “no”.
They even spoke ill about my husband and tagged him as criminal (red sander
smugglers),” said Pavithra with tears in her eyes. Rekha has also echoed the
same.

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