Nurse's rape and
murder in Bangladesh: Where is the Human Right?
The rape and murder of a nurse in
Bangladesh just weeks after a female student was burned to death has sparked
ongoing protests and renewed calls for greater protection for women in the South
Asian country.
Shahinoor Akhter Tania, 24, who worked
as a nurse in a hospital in Dhaka, according to a medical report, was raped and
pushed off a bus, while heading towards her hometown in Kishoreganj, about 100 kilometres away, on Monday.
The police have since arrested five
individuals but are still investigating the incident.
Tania’s
death comes as the country is still reeling over the killing of Nusrat Jahan, a
student burnt to death last month for not withdrawing a sexual harassment
complaint, according to the police, leading to protests calling for women’s
safety.
“We should be treating this as something
of the highest national priority, not just in terms of arresting people but in
terms of making sure another woman doesn’t go through it,” said Sara Hossain, a
Bangladeshi lawyer and a human rights activist.
“Nusrat’s case was very extreme. But why
do these cases keep on happening? One of the reasons is the kind of impunity
that exists, so people can get away (with these crimes),” she added.
About 950 women were victims of rape
last year, according to a study conducted by the Bangladesh Mahila Parishad, a
women’s rights organization in Dhaka.
“The number is on the increase. In April
this year, we found 401 cases of violence against women, out of which many were,
rape cases,”
“We say that women can work, but when
they step outside, this is the kind of things they have to face. You can’t
solve this problem by addressing individual issues, we need to address this
problem in totality,” she said.
Following Tania’s death, protests took
place this week in both Kishoreganj and Dhaka.
The police have arrested the driver and
the conductor of the bus Tania was travelling
on, but has refused to comment on the event before their investigation is
completed.
The medical team that examined Tania’s
body said it believes that the 24-year-old was raped.
“There was an injury in the vaginal region and it was also bleeding. There were
defensive wounds and bruises on her face, hand and neck,” said Dr Habibur Rahman, Kishoreganj’s civil surgeon,
quoting the preliminary autopsy report.
“We believe that she died because of the
wound behind her head. We feel that that took place because she was pushed out
of the bus. We will be conducting more tests,” added Rahman.
The youngest among six siblings, Tania,
according to her brother, was the “brightest amongst them.”
“My mother passed away in December.
Tania wanted to come home to spend the first few days of Ramadan with my father
because she knew he felt lonely,” Shafiqul Islam Sujon, Tania’s elder brother
said.
“She had the knack to win over people’s
hearts, no matter who she talked to. She took care of us both mentally and
financially. And now she is gone. My heart pains whenever I think about her,”
Sujon said.
We pray to God, may God keep you in peace
in the hereafter. We are so sorry about you
(Tania).
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