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Swetha, a Hindu woman, says she was forcefully confined in a ‘yoga centre’ in Ernakulam for 22 days, where the staff, paid by her family, had one agenda: To force her to abandon her husband, a Christian.
The 28-year-old says that the yoga centre is actually an ‘anti-conversion clinic’ for women who married outside their faith or converted to Christianity or Islam to marry a man of their choice. She says that the staff at the centre subjected her to days of ‘counselling’, asking her to either abandon her husband, or convince him to embrace Hinduism.
She further alleges that there are several more people locked up in the anti-conversion clinic – and one of the inmates she saw there was Athira, a woman who converted back to Hinduism from Islam recently.
Swetha, a native of Kannur district, is an ayurveda doctor. She was in a relationship with Rinto Isac, a photographer who resides in Thrissur district. Rinto is a practicing Christian and Swetha's family objected to their wedding.
After being in a relationship for three years, Swetha left home on 8 November 8 2016 and the duo got married in a private temple ceremony in Peechi in Thrissur. Rinto's parents accepted their relationship and the couple began living together in Thrissur. After a few months, they registered their marriage under the Special Marriages Act.
"For 10 months after our wedding, we lived happily," Swetha says.
Meanwhile, Swetha's parents began speaking to the couple.
On 28 July, Swetha went to her sister's house in Moovattupuzha, for the sister's house-warming ceremony. Their parents had come down from Kannur for the ceremony. Things took a horrific turn on 31 July, Swetha says.
A second round of ‘counselling’ was given to Swetha and her mother. Following this, the counsellor spoke to her in private.
While Swetha tried running away from the place, all the doors were shut, she says.
Siva Sakthi Yoga Centre functions out of a house in Kandanadu. Swetha alleges that the two-storey house had about 65 inmates, 59 women and 6 men, who either converted to other religions or married outside their religion.
The 15 staff members of the centre, too, lived in the house. The inmates were barred from going to the first floor. On the ground floor where they were kept, there were two large rooms that doubled up as dormitories for the inmates to sleep. They slept on the floor.
She says that the inmates were barred from interacting with each other and that the staff had threatened them saying that the whole building was under CCTV surveillance and there were voice recorders installed.
She says that the bathrooms at the centre didn't have any locks, as the staff claimed that it was a precautionary measure, since many girls had attempted to kill themselves in the past.
For the initial 3-day counselling, Swetha says that her parents paid Rs 15,000. When her mother left after the third day, she paid an additional Rs 5,000.
Meanwhile, for her husband Rinto, repeated efforts to contact Swetha went in vain. Her mobile phone was found to be switched off and her parents only told him that Swetha had gone for a counselling course.
On 10 August, still unable to speak to his wife, Rinto filed a habeas corpus petition, but the petition was only heard by the court on Tuesday, 26 September, after Swetha had come back home.
"On 21 August, they finally let me go," says Swetha.
This was only after Swetha promised that she would convince her husband to convert.
"By then I knew that there was no way out for me if I didn't oblige to their demands. So I acted as if I am convinced by whatever they told me. That's how they let me go," Swetha says.
On 11 September, after staying at her sister's house after being released from the centre, Swetha returned to Rinto's house in Thrissur.
Once she returned home, Swetha filed a complaint with the Udayamperoor police, and a team visited the yoga/anti-conversion centre on Monday and issued a stop memo.
According to reports, the police have booked Manoj, the director of the yoga centre, Sujith belonging to Perumbalam, and Smitha, Lekshmi and Sreejesh. They have been booked under IPC sections 120 (B), 323, 354, 357, 366, 342, 403, 506 and 34 for wrongful confinement, kidnapping, outraging modesty, criminal intimidation and misappropriation of property, and are absconding, say reports.
After Swetha's allegations flared up into a controversy, Athira, a woman from Kasargod, who had converted to Islam and returned to Hinduism recently, refuted the allegations against the centre.
In a press meet held in Ernakulam last week, Athira had claimed that she had "returned" to her own religion and that her Muslim friends had "misguided" her into embracing Islam.
One Pratheesh Vishwanath uploaded a video of Athira and her father refuting allegations against the centre in Ernakulam.
(Names used with permission)
(This article was first published on The News Minute)
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