Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Survivors of Acid Violence Speak Out

Haseena Hussain at the CSAAAW protest in Bangalore

Last week a young woman from Mysore was doused with a bottle of hydrochloric acid and then forced to drink a mixture of acid and alcohol. No one was surprised. Her husband had abused her for years, she had even lodged a series of complaints with the police in the months before the final attack. Two days ago Hina Fathima died in a Mysore hospital.

Acid violence is increasingly common across South Asia and cases like Fathima's are common enough that they often don't even make the front page of local newspapers. The Campaign and Struggle Against Acid Attacks on Women, or CSAAAW, has recorded 61 acid attacks in Karnataka since 1999. While most of the women die from their injuries or from suicide some survivors have come out to try to change local laws that make acid cheap and easily available at any corner grocery store. The women who do survive often have to bear terrible medical costs and often lose their eyes, noses, ears and any semblance of facial expression.

Last week I traveled to Bangalore to meet with the founding members of CSAAAW and do a short story for NPR about the prevalence of acid violence and interviewed key people in the campaign. So far the government isn't really taking the problem seriously. They contend that only a handful of women who are victims of these attacks are not a pressing enough problem. The state sponsored fund meant to pay for the women's medical care is hardly enough to cover the costs of two or three patients, let along the scores of women in the state who desperately need treatment.

The real danger of acid violence isn't only the effects that it has on victims, but in the role that it plays in Indian society as a threat. The mainstream media often shows angry men threatening their lovers with acid. Many women I know live in fear that they could be targets of some acid wielding assailant. For 18 rupees anyone can buy a bottle of acid that is 32% concentrated--it's a weapon that just about anyone can afford and ruing someone's life is as easy as splashing it in their face.

Click here to listen to the NPR story


I have also posted a small gallery of photos that I took while at the protest that show the range of activists and survivors who have come out to support CSAAAW. I am thinking of taking another trip up to Bangalore to take more photos of these women.

If you want to get in touch directly with CSAAAW contact Sanjana at csaaaw@redifmail.com.

Labels: , ,

3 Comments:

At August 23, 2007 12:05 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Scott, thanks for your support in taking this struggle forward.
If its alright, here's a couple of comments.

Acid attacks are ghastly - no denying that. But really the strength and the courage that the survivors have shown in dealing with this, is one of the reasons that activists like me go on with the struggle.

Not a single survivor we have met has committed suicide unable to deal with life. That speaks for their strength, really. We should be recognising the effort it takes for them to come out and participate in protests.

The women who have died (and thats 6 out of the 61 we have met) have died from medical complications.

Second, the state government's allocation of funds is meant to cover not only medical costs but also long term relief and rehabilitation measures for the survivors - including jobs for them, education for their children, etc.

By any standard this is insufficient as you have pointed out.

 
At September 29, 2007 12:44 PM, Blogger Rita Banerji said...

The way violence on women and female homicide works in India -- is that someone tries it -- and if the law lets him get away with -- then you have hundreds of other men trying the same method. Like dousing women with kerosene and setting them fire! Just in over a decade it has gone from about 5000 murders to about 30,000 dowry related murders now. It's a social and legal permissiveness that acculturates murder. All these cases needed to be tried either for homicide or attempted homicide. I don't think we should make 'acid attacks' a separate case from the pattern of violence on women that is so pervasive in India. There are 50 million women who have been eliminated from its population -- and at the base of it is a raging misogyny. Please check out the international campaign '50 Million Missing' at www.50millionmissing.com

 
At October 03, 2007 1:05 PM, Blogger Jason B said...

Scott - your article is excellent and if I can ever do anything to help let me know!
Best wishes
Jason
Here is my story...


WATCH VIDEO: Music artist Jason B has met a lot of people on his concert tours but nothing could prepare him for the day he met a woman with no face.

www.jasonb.org/woman.htm

Jason B was on tour in India when he accepted an invitation to find out how a hospital provides health and medical care for the poor.

"A doctor and a volunteer nurse took me to a room used for plastic surgery," Jason says. "At first I wondered if people would be getting nose jobs like back home. I was to discover how this hospital was saving a poor woman's life...."

Jason was standing before a woman with no face.

He heard the shocking story of how she became a victim of a crime called an acid attack.

The woman's husband had thrown acid on her and her child. After the attack, like many poor people, she could not afford the health and medical care she needed.

"I could not imagine how this could happen," Jason B says.

"We need to raise awareness and help people trying to stop acid attacks around the world."

"I'd love to hear from you..."

www.myspace.com/jasonbofficial
www.youtube.com/jasonbmusic

 

Post a Comment

<< Home