Tuesday, 3 April 2018

Girls become mother of one or more children before attaining legal marriage age of 18


Girls become mother of one or more children before attaining legal marriage age of 18


Jawadhu Hills

Two summers ago, precisely on July 10 in 2016, a 45 year-old man tied the knot to a girl 3o years younger to him. The class X student, who was forced out of the school, was his second wife and one among the hundreds of child marriage victims in Jawadhu Hills.

With no law enforcing agency taking measures to save young girls from the clutches of the child or minor marriages, getting married at the age of 14 or 15 has become part and parcel of the lives of many girls in the tribal villages of Jawadhu Hills.

Over 70 percent of the girls, before attaining the lawful age of marriage of 18 years, have become the mother of one or more children here. However, the marriages are neatly tucked under the cover of the tribals culture and none see any wrong in it. Government officials shrug off the issue, stating that early marriage is part of their culture and lifestyle. 

Shanthi (name changed) had no say when her marriage was fixed with A Dhamodharan of Puliyamarathur village in Anaicut Taluk in Vellore district in July 2016.

She was in class X then, and discontinued from school. Her teacher found that her family had fixed the marriage only after inquiring with her brother, who was in class IV. “The groom was about 45 years-old. His family fixed the marriage with Shanthi as he did not have a child with his first wife,” said the teacher. However, the girl sent back home within a month of the marriage. She was living with her parents now in Korathur village.  

There were many like Shanthi in the 350- odd villages in the 17 panchayats in the hills in Vellore and Tiruvannamalai districts. “Over 70 percent of the married girls are victims of child marriage. They get married between 14 to 16 years,” said P Murugan of Childline in Jamunamaruthur.

They rescued a class XI girl student and XII boy student who married two months ago, he said and adding, “The entire village/community is turning against us when we try to stop child marriage. We even chased and threatened when we went to stop a child marriage in Mandaparai recently,” he said.   

Kumar (name changed), 24, a tailor in Jamunamaruthur, became father of his third child a month ago. His eldest son was studying in class II. “My wife is two years younger to me,” said Kumar. He was 16 years at the time of marriage, while his wife was 14 years. They studied upto class VIII. 

A class VI student in a government tribal residential school said that a girl of her age got married in Kovilandur two months ago. “The groom has been staying with the girl’s house for the last two months,” said the girl.

Inquiry with the locals revealed that if a boy stays in the girl’s house means that they consummated the marriage. “If the girl and the boy like each other, they can get married or stay together (living together) without getting married. It is a totally accepted practice here,” said an official in Social Welfare Department.

Child Line has an exclusive office in Jamunamaruthur to stop child marriages but its performance has been disappointing, said the official. “Last year, they managed to stop only 13 child marriages but we are not happy with the local staff, who belong to Jamunamaruthur. They prefer not to act upon complaints,” added the official.

Calling the data with health department nothing but a smoke and mirrors, a village health nurse said that they randomly entered the age of the ante-natal mother as 18 or above, to keep the records clean. “Here, the girls either lie about their age or not sure about their age. So, we will put 18 or above based on their physical appearance,” she quipped.

However, the block medical officer of Jamunamaruthur, Dr P Ram Manohar, surmising his 22 years of being in service in the hills, said that things have changed. But there is a long way to go to bail out the community from the child marriage and host of health-related issues due to early marriage.

However, there are some positive signs as many victims of child marriage want their daughters and sons to study well and escape the drudgery of the hills. “I want my daughter to study well and go for a government job. My daughter is now studying in class X,” said Kallimuthu and his wife Amutha (name changed) of Kovilanur. They got married when they were 16 and 14 years respectively.

Tribal activist and vice-present Tamil Nadu Adivasi Ammaipukkalin Kuttaiambu Leelavathi said that they have been conducting awareness programme and dissuading the practice of early marriage. However, it still prevails in several tribal communities, particularly in Jawadhu Hills, in the state. 

Graphics

32 child married in Jawadhu Hills since 2015. Of them, 13 marriages stopped in 2017. It is less than 10 percent of the total child marriages take place in the hills.  

Girls as young as 13 0r 14 years are getting married. Boys are getting married as young 16 or 17 years. Most of them consummate the marriage.

Two month ago, a class XII boy got married to class XI girl of the same school in Jamunamaruthur, according to Child Line


Theertha Kovil and Perumal Kovil in Alangayam on the foothills of Jawadhu Hills are the hotspot for the child marriage. 

Primary Health Centres in Jamunamuaruthur and Nammiyampattu records average of 45 child birth per month. A majority of mothers are victims of child marriage.
 

Village administrative officers (VAO), police and village health nurses (VHNs) are well aware of child marriages, but cease to act against the ill-practice. Thus encourage the tribals continue with their age-old practice

Health issues due to child marriage - 7 out of 10 children are malnourished in Jawadhu Hills. 40 percent of the tribals have nutrition disorder and suffer from protein deficiency anaemia, according to health department officials



Killing of woodcutters continues in AP forest, kept under dark

Killing of woodcutters continues in AP forest, kept under dark 


Jawadhu Hills:

In 2015, 20 men from Tamil Nadu were gunned down inside the red sander-rich Seshachalam Reserve Forest in Andhra Pradesh for reportedly felling and smuggling the precious logs. While AP’s Red Sander Anti-Smuggling Task Force (RSASTF) has been maintaining that there were zero killings after the 2015 twin encounters, many families in Jawadhu Hills from where smugglers get their major workforce claim that their men, who left the land for AP forests, returned lifeless or remain untraceable.

Almost a month ago, Kesavan, son of Mani, a resident of Irumbuli, had left his village along with 30 others to fell red sander trees in AP. They were reportedly taken into the forest by an agent from Melkupsanavur in Jawadhu Hills. His family said that they don’t know his whereabout and continue their search for him.

However, a man close to his family claimed that those who accompanied Kesavan informed them that he (Kesavan) and three others were shot down by the special task force in the forest near Tirupathi.

 “Another villager, who went with Kesavan, told us that he saw Kesavan dead and he suffered bullet injuries. He found three others killed in the same spot,” said a member close to Kesavan’s family.

He added that the agent who lured him, with the promise of good return, trying to placate his family and also paid them Rs 1.50 lakh to hush up the death.

Visits to various tribal villages in Jawadhu Hills revealed that many families have lost their breadwinners in the last two years. While some of them were reportedly killed, others were missing.

Twenty-two year old Settu, son of Chinnasamy, of Puliyankuppam village, went missing nearly eight months ago. The last time his family saw him was when he left with his friends.

“Settu is missing for several months now. Elders in our family tried hard to trace him remain unsuccessful. We learned from his friends that he went to AP forests to fell red sander trees. We are worried about him,” said Settu’s cousin.

For several years, tribals of Jawadhu Hills have been the workforce for the huge network of red sander smugglers in the country. The inflow from the tribal villages in Tiruvannamalai district continues even after 12 of the 20 men, who were gunned down in 2015, were from Jawadhu Hills. Many youth opt to work for red sander smugglers to make easy and quick money.

While AP police continues to make several arrests of tribals from Tamil Nadu for felling/smuggling of red sander trees, an eerie silence prevails over the fact that a handful of tribal men have ended up dead or gone missing after venturing into the AP forests.
 Insiders in the smuggling network say they prefer to cover up the killing of tribal men to avoid spotlight. Instead, they settle the issue by giving money to the family of the dead men. AP police, on their part, prefer to keep such incidents in the dark.

“Men (woodcutters) from the hills are always inside the AP forest. They pass on the information, if anyone killed. If a person caught by task force and lodged in prison, the advocates in Tirupathi, Kadapa and others areas will contact us within a couple of days. They facilitate to secure their bail. In the process, they make good money,” said a woodcutter who got bail after spending close to Rs 80,000 for advocate and two surety bond, each for Rs 15,000. 

Social worker in the hills said that the woodcutters are part of a network that has circles within the circle of the closed community. They will not reveal anything outside their circle. “Lack of employment opportunity has been force the men, even graduates, to take up the illegal and risk work. Once enter the forest, there is no turning back,” said a B.Ed graduate, who runs a petty shop-cum-photocopying shop in Jamunamaruthur. He added that more than 200 completed B.Ed, but they were remaining jobless. Many of them turned woodcutters.

Here is a list of tribal men who died inside the AP forest:

A year ago, Elumalai, aged 21, of Perunkattur, was found floating on a waterbody inside the forest. Men, who accompanied him to the forest, found his body floating four days after he went missing when trying to escape from the special task force. The men brought his body to his native village.

On April 18 last 2017, Devaraj alias Amulu of Puttur colony was reportedly electrocuted when he was fleeing from the AP police inside the forest. On being informed that her husband was died and was buried in the forest, his pregnant wife approached the police in Vaniyambadi to help bring back his body.  She also identified a man, Jalandhar, who took him to the forest for felling trees.

Two years ago, 45-year-old Mani, a resident of Kovilandur, was killed inside the AP forest. His body was brought back to his village. His relatives claimed that he was shot dead.

Govindan,40, of Nammiyampattu, died two years ago, and his body was brought home in a highly decomposed condition, villagers said.

Kasi, 45, of Palampattu village, has been missing for the last six to seven months after he went to fell trees. Villagers said that two others died while they were jailed for smuggling red sander trees in AP. 

Sources in the task force said that they opened fire for 29 times since June 20, 2015 to December 7, 2017 in Chandragiri, Tirupathi, Nagapatia east and west beat, Chittoor East and several other areas inside the forest. This was excluding the exchange of firing on April 7, 2015.  However, no causality was reported in the 29 firing incidents.
Categorically denying the reported killing of woodcutters after the twin encounters, Deputy Inspector General of Police, RSASTF, Kantha Roa told TOI that there was no killing after the encounters in 2015.

After wiping out the sandalwood trees in Jawadhu hills and the forest in Karnataka in the 80 and 90s, they are targeting the red sander logs in AP forest. “We are trying hard to prevent felling of trees. But it is a herculean task as the woodcutters are coming in hundreds,” he said

They are from Jawadhu Hills, Kalrayan and Patchaimalai in Villupuram, Yelagiri in Vellore, tribals from Dharmapuri and Salem were sneaking into Seshechalam RF and surrounding forest that spread over 14 lakh hectares. They were felling 200 to 300 trees per day
 “We have made arrest of around 10,000 woodcutters from TN in the last couple of years, besides 26 international smugglers from China and other East Asian countries,” he said.

Graphics:

Encounters: Since 2012 to twin encounters in 2015, a total of 31 woodcutters were killed in 10 encounters. Of them 18 were from Jawadhu Hills and surrounding areas in Tiruvannamalai district.

Interceptions and arrests of TN smugglers by Task Force from 2015 to 2017: a total of 10,558 woodcutters arrested. Of them, 2,631 from Tiruvannamalai, 2385 from Vellore, 1943 from Salem, 952 from Villupuram and 568 from Dharmapuri.

International smugglers: A total of 26 international smugglers have been arrested – 16 from China, three each from Nepal and Tibet and one each from Singapore, Sri Lanka, Dubai and Malaysia.

Seven stages of red sander smuggling network: woodcutters are at the bottom of pyramid style network, stage II – mastry (agent), stage III – pilot/logistic suppliers, stage IV – transporters, stage V – godown keeper, stage VI exporters and stage VII – international smugglers.

Woodcutters paid Rs 500 to 700 per kg of the dressed hardwood of the red sander. They have to cut the hardwood into transportable sizes of 6 to 8 ft and carry them from deep inside the forest to collecting point along motorable road.  The price increase tenfold when it reaches the international market.

‘A’ quality red sanders logs sold at Rs 50 to 70 lakh per tonne in black market


    

Blood Sander - They do not exist even in the records



They do not exist even in the records


 | Updated: Feb 14, 2018, 12:00 IST
Since the April 2015 shootout in which 20 men from Tamil Nadu were gunned down in the Seshachalam reserve forest in Andhra Pradesh, for reportedly felling and smuggling red sanders, the Red Sander Anti-Smuggling Task Force (RSASTF) in that state has maintained that no smuggler has been killed. People of Jawadhu Hills, who comprise the major workforce for the smugglers, have a different story. About a dozen people who left for the AP forests in the past two years were brought back dead or remain untraceable, they say.



Two months ago, an agent from Jawadhu Hills took Kesavan of Irumbuli in Jawadhu Hills and 30 others to the AP forests. There has been no word about Kesavan since then, says his family which continues to search for him.



A man close to the family, quoting one of Kesavan’s accomplices, says four people including Kesavan were shot dead by the special task force and that the agent has been allegedly trying to placate the families with compensation of Rs 1 lakh each.

Twenty-two year old Settu, son of Chinnasamy of Puliyankuppam, went missing nearly eight months ago. “Elders in our family tried to trace him in vain. We learned from his friends that he had gone to AP forests,” said Settu’s cousin.

Sources say AP police no longer publicise killings of smugglers. As brokers pay blood money, kin of the deceased do not prefer complaints.






“Whenever someone is arrested by the task force, advocates in Tirupati, Kadapa and nearby areas contact us. They help our men secure bail. In the process, they make good money,” says a woodcutter who got bail after spending Rs 80,000 on an advocate and providing two sureties of Rs 15,000 each.



Sources in the task force say the team opened fire 29 times between June 20, 2015 and December 7, 2017 in Chandragiri, Tirupati, Nagapatia east and west beats, Chittoor east and several other areas, but that no casualty was reported Kantha Rao, deputy inspector general of police, RSASTF, told TOI that there was no killing after the April 2015 twin encounters. “We are trying hard to prevent felling of trees. But it is a herculean task as the woodcutters come in hundreds,” he said. “We have arrested around 10,000 woodcutters from TN in the last couple of years, besides 26 international smugglers from China and other East Asian countries.”


A social worker in Jawadhu Hills says the woodcutters are a close-knit group and little is known about them outside their circle.

Graphics
Interceptions and arrests of TN smugglers by Task Force from 2015 to 2017: a total of 10,558 woodcutters arrested. Of them, 2,631 from Tiruvannamalai, 2385 from Vellore, 1943 from Salem, 952 from Villupuram and 568 from Dharmapuri.

International smugglers: A total of 26 international smugglers have been arrested – 16 from China, three each from Nepal and Tibet and one each from Singapore, Sri Lanka, Dubai and Malaysia.

Seven stages of red sander smuggling network: woodcutters are at the bottom of pyramid style network, stage II – mastry (agent), stage III – pilot/logistic suppliers, stage IV – transporters, stage V – godown keeper, stage VI exporters and stage VII – international smugglers.

Woodcutters paid Rs 500 to 700 per kg of the dressed hardwood of the red sander. They have to cut the hardwood into transportable sizes of 6 to 8 ft and carry them from deep inside the forest to collecting point along motorable road.  The price increase tenfold when it reaches the international market. 
‘A’ quality red sanders logs sold at Rs 50 to 70 lakh per tonne in black mark

Graphics
On April 7, 2015, 20 men gunned down in alleged encounters – 11 and 9 – in two separate places in Seshachalam Reserve Forest, AP by the Red Sander Anti-Smuggling Task Force.

Two cases (Cr No 42/2015 and Cr No 43/2015) filed in connection with the encounters in Chandragiri Police Station in Chittoor, AP following complaints from the task force.  

Lucky three: M Illango, 22, of Melkanavayur in Tiruvannamalai district escaped from the jaw of death at the hands of the task force. He and two others - Balachandran of Sitherimalai in Dharmapuri – were key witnesses in twin encounters. The trio’s statements flatten the AP’s task force encounter theory.

On April 12, 2015, Muniammal lodged a complaint against the Red Sander Anti-Smuggling Task Force for gunning down her husband and 19 others.

On April 16, 2015: Two-member bench of Hyderabad High Court – comprising Chief Justice Kalyan Jyoti Sengupta and Justice P V Sanjay Kumar - ordered re-postmortem of A Sasikumar, one of the victims, following a plea from his wife Muniammal.

On April 17, 2015, the HC bench ordered re-post-mortem of five others.

On April 20, 2015, a case was filed against the task force under sections 302 (murder), 364 (kidnap or abducting in order to murder) and 34 (Acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention) of IPC in Chandragiri Police Station in Chittoor, AP.

On April 20, 2015, Hyderabad HC ordered to constitute a special investigation team (SIT) under Ravi Shankar Ayyanar to probe into the alleged encounters.

From May 11 to 16, 2015, NHRC’s investigation team visited Tiruvannamalai, Dharmapuri and Salem districts to conduct spot inquiry with the family members of the victims

May 29, 2015: NHRC recommended to transfer the alleged encounter cases to CBI and also release an interim relief of Rs 5 lakh to the victims’ families. However, AP government obtained a stay order against the NHRC’s direction.

Now, the case is pending before the IV Judicial Magistrate Court in Tirupathi. Last hearing of the case held on Tuesday (February 13, 2018). The advocates of the victims’ families have sought the court to furnish SIT’s inquiry report to precede the case.  
The victims’ families demanding the TN government to extend legal support to defend the case and strike down the stay order obtained by the AP government against the NHRC’s recommendations./eom/shan/