Vanishing husbands trouble India 
By MADHUR SINGH/NEW DELHI 

When Archana Sharma got married in 1999, she saw it as a chance to keep her 
family out of poverty after her father's untimely death. A strikingly beautiful 
folk dancer from the north Indian state of Haryana, the then 25-year-old had 
turned down several offers to act in regional-language films because she came 
from a conservative family, consenting instead to wed a Toronto-based 
astrologer she knew through her maternal uncle. "I agreed to marry a man I had 
never met, thinking he would take me to a better life in Canada," she says. 
"Once settled there, I would take my two younger sisters and our mother, too." 
After a six-week visit for the wedding, her husband returned to Toronto 
promising to complete the legal formalities for her to join him. But her 
tickets never came. After six years of waiting, Sharma received documents 
informing her that she had been divorced. 
Stories like Sharma's are growing increasingly common across India, as changing 
values remove some of the social stigma surrounding failed marriages and 
concern from activists and officials encourages more women to talk about it. As 
many as 30,000 women have been abandoned by their émigré husbands, according to 
one Indian government estimate; activists say the real figures are probably 
much higher as most cases still go unreported. The Ministry of Overseas Indian 
Affairs (MOIA), established in 2004 to look after the welfare of an estimated 
20 million Non-Resident Indians (NRIS), launched a scheme earlier this year to 
provide counseling and legal and financial aid for Indian wives abandoned 
abroad. Closer to home, it has published a booklet for women planning to marry 
émigrés, to help them verify the credentials of their prospective spouses and 
their families, take proper legal precautions and seek help if things go wrong. 
"More such cases are being
 reported since we started disseminating information about the scheme," says 
Sandhya Shukla, director of social services at MOIA. 
Despite impressive economic growth over the past decade, some 450,000 Indians 
emigrate to other countries to find work every year, while thousands more go 
illegally. "For some, going abroad is about seeking better opportunities and 
social mobility," says Rainuka Dagar, senior research fellow at the 
Chandigarh-based Institute for Development and Communication, "But for many, it 
is about status. It is a symbol of pride to have a member of the family living 
and earning abroad." In many communities, "marriage to an NRI is considered a 
status symbol as it gets the entire family a chance to go abroad," says Santosh 
Singh, chairperson of the government-affiliated Family Counseling Centre in 
Chandigarh. 
Most of these unions, without doubt, are successful ones. But some overseas 
marriages can be problematic. At a MOIA conference on the issue in February, 
Girija Vyas, chairperson of India's National Commission for Women, noted that 
brides going abroad can suffer from culture shock if they have had no prior 
exposure to the West. Their overseas-raised spouses, meanwhile, can find 
themselves pressured into a traditional marriage by émigré parents. The 
combination can result in loveless, incompatible relationships and eventually, 
divorce. The worst cases, however, are those "where NRI men come to India 
seeking either huge dowries or 'holiday wives,'" says Singh. "If they abandon 
their brides and return to their adoptive countries, the brides and their 
families, living in a culture of patriarchy and keen to preserve their honor, 
often do not approach the authorities. And even if they do, there are limited 
legal options before them." 
Government agencies and NGOs are working to change that. The National 
Commission for Women has demanded that the government make it compulsory to 
register all marriages, which will provide women a more solid legal standing. 
Meanwhile, activist groups are lobbying for changes in the law to criminalize 
the suppression of information about previous marriages, and urging the 
government to sign agreements with other countries to make marital fraud an 
extraditable offense. In Punjab, where many families have at least one member 
working abroad, the left-leaning Lok Bhalai Party has made the plight of 
abandoned spouses a campaign issue. 
But for Sharma, these efforts are still too little, too late. "One odd change 
of law will not make a difference," she says. "Cases like mine will keep 
happening until women's status in society improves. And that will be a slow and 
long process." 
 

___________________________
Peter-Rhaina Gwokto
Remember: "LRA leader Joseph Kony is named in 12 counts for crimes against 
humanity and 21 counts for war crimes. His deputy, Otti, is named in 11 counts 
for crimes against humanity and 21 counts for war crimes. Alleged crimes 
include rape, murder, enslavement, sexual enslavement and forced enlisting of 
children". ICC must not withdraw its indictments.
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