Village elders ruled that women found using a mobile phone outside their homes would be fined INR21,000 ($325) -- a sum it would take most rural Indians several months to earn.
Facebook should be banned until blasphemous content removed: IHC
The ruling was issued on Tuesday in Madora, a mainly Muslim village in the conservative northern state of Uttar Pradesh.
"We have received reports about the Khap ordering the ban on women using mobile phones," local police chief Arun Kumar Singh told AFP, referring to the informal village councils known as khap panchayats in India. "Such orders are against the constitution and we will take action."
The council believes that mobile phones are helping unmarried women to elope and that a ban will limit their interaction with men. The council also imposed fines on people caught slaughtering cows -- illegal in most Indian states -- or smuggling liquor.
"We do support their measures against illegal activities but won't allow them to curb the freedom of women," Singh said.
Punjab mulls ban on soft drinks in schools
Khap panchayats are mostly run by male village elders. Although illegal, they have considerable influence in rural north India. They are known for issuing diktats aimed at upholding the socially conservative traditions that have long held sway and resisting modernisation -- such as banning women from wearing jeans. But they have also been blamed for ordering serious crimes, including the so-called 'honour killing' of couples who marry outside caste or religion.
Critics accuse them of acting like kangaroo courts and handing down public beatings and other punishments for perceived crimes.
COMMENTS (1)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ