This Article is From Mar 06, 2019

21 Years After Jhabua Nuns' Gang-Rape, Accused Arrested: Police

In September 1998, 26 people, mostly tribals, raped four nuns at the Priti Sharan Mission at Naupara village in the predominantly tribal district. Nauapara is 25 km from the district headquarters.

21 Years After Jhabua Nuns' Gang-Rape, Accused Arrested: Police

Kalu Limji was arrested from Aamba village in the district Monday, police said (Representational)

Jhabua, Madhya Pradesh:

Twenty one years after four nuns were raped by 26 persons in Jhabua district of Madhya Pradesh, a 45-year-old absconding accused in the case has been caught, police said Tuesday.

Kalu Limji was arrested from Aamba village in the district Monday, a police official said.

In September 1998, the accused, mostly tribals, raped the nuns at the Priti Sharan Mission at Naupara village in the predominantly tribal district. Nauapara is 25 km from the district headquarters.

Of the 26 accused, 24 were arrested immediately after the incident, police said. Nine were awarded life imprisonment by a local court, while 13 others were acquitted.

"Limji was one of the two absconding accused and was arrested at Aamba village after a tip-off," Jhabua district Superintendent of Police Vineet Jain told reporters.

Limji earlier worked as a labourer in neighbouring Gujarat, the police official said.

Police personnel in plain clothes posed as district level officers and after reaching the village began enquiring about the number of "pucca" houses there and if there was a toilet facility in each house, Mr Jain said.

"When Limji arrived there on a motorcycle, someone called him to ask if he wanted to become beneficiary of the government scheme. As soon as he came there, police arrested him," he said.

The other accused Bachchu is still absconding, he added.

The nuns - three of them were aged between 20 and 25 while the fourth was over 30 - had come from Tamil Nadu to set up Priti Sharan and had made the village their home.

The then Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Digvijaya Singh, who visited Jhabua soon after the incident, had insinuated that the gang-rape was a conspiracy by Hindu organisations against the minority Christian community.

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