India’s prostitute brides: Girls raped as temporary wives

this is horrific…

Tasleem Begum didn’t get a new dress for her wedding day. Instead, she put on her usual worn-out outfit, a white and blue shirt with pants and a long scarf, her dark hair tightly braided, and picked up the small tattered brown satchel filled with half-a-dozen Grade 8 textbooks.

Her mother said she would walk Tasleem to school. Instead, Shahnaz Begum took her to a two-storey house with tall gates, where she exchanged a few words with two men and two women in the living room. Then her mother took Tasleem to a small room for a quiet moment. There, Shahnaz told her daughter, 14 years old with almond eyes and dimples, that she was getting married. Her husband was to be a 61-year-old from Oman.

April 15, 2014, is the day Tasleem got married and divorced. Though, she didn’t know about the divorce until much later.

Her mother, Tasleem found out later, had been paid about $700 — the price of the 14-year-old’s virginity.

In Hyderabad, in southern India, Tasleem’s story isn’t uncommon. Since the 1990s, the city has been the hunting ground for men from oil-rich Arab countries seeking young, virgin brides — some as young as 11 or 12. The connection between the city’s poor Muslims and wealthy, older men from the Gulf countries was forged in the ’70s and the ’80s by expats from Hyderabad.

The situation has worsened in the past couple of years, becoming a de facto child prostitution supermarket.

But a group of women has taken justice into its own hands: they pose as desperate child-sellers while wearing burkas with hidden cameras in unorthodox “sting operations.”

In two years, they have done more than police have in two decades.

About 10 million girls under the age of 18 get married every year around the world; 40 per cent of those weddings take place in India. There are economic reasons, like poverty and marriage costs, cultural traditions, concerns about girls’ safety and family honour.

http://www.thestar.com/news/world/2014/10/13/indias_prostitute_brides_girls_raped_as_temporary_wives.html

Doc in a box – Awesome!

Ram Lakshmanan and his team were onstage at the Clinton Global Initiative annual meeting in New York on Tuesday evening. They were finalists for the Hult Prize, which each year awards $1 million to the best plan for addressing global problems. They were making their pitch for a better healthcare plan that would include something they’re calling “Doc-in-a-Box.”


This year’s prize challenge focused on proposals to improve life for the 250 million people living in slums and suffering from chronic diseases like diabetes, high blood pressure and heart disease. Slum dwellers often can’t afford medical care or live too far away to reach clinics. The care they can obtain often focuses on emergency services rather than long-term health.

The winning project, called NanoHealth, proposes hiring and training community health workers, and equipping them with “Doc-in-a-Box,” a diagnostic tool the team designed that can measure basic indicators like blood sugar, blood pressure and blood lipids and create an electronic health record for the patient.

The health workers are called saathi [friend], and are hired from the community, trained and certified by the organization. They run screening camps to diagnose patients and refer them to partner healthcare organizations, and then follow up with the patients frequently to make sure they are taking their medicines or implementing lifestyle changes.

The team originally conceived a narrower project, simply to help slum dwellers with chronic diseases stick to their prescription plans. But the students quickly discovered that many patients didn’t know what medicines they were supposed to take — if they had even been diagnosed.

“Let’s get some doctors to verify their diagnosis,” Aditi Vaish, 35, remembers thinking. “But no doctors serve these slums. So let’s get a screening device.” Once they’d conceptualized the Doc-In-A-Box, they decided to set up “camps” in the slums to meet with the residents and get their medical information.

Of necessity, their project became more holistic. “One part was not enough,” says Ashish Bondia, 32. “For the urban slum dweller, the entire healthcare journey was missing.”

“In order to have an impact in chronic care, whether that is in an urban slum or for anyone, you need to treat all the pieces of the problem,” adds Vaish. “There’s underdiagnosis, poor treatment and poor compliance.”
http://www.npr.org/blogs/goatsandsoda/2014/09/26/351515298/and-the-million-dollar-hult-prize-goes-to-a-doc-in-a-box