MYSORE/BANGALORE:
This is a story of a teenager who was forced to undergo a sex change
surgery and face a traumatic life as a girl.
Manju, (19), a native of Mysore taluk, turned a girl in a few months and wears feminine clothing. Like other children, he had dreams of pursuing higher education and leading a normal life, but his fate took a turn for the worse after an encounter with two eunuchs in Mysore city, about six months ago, when he came for admission into a PU college.
Manju, (19), a native of Mysore taluk, turned a girl in a few months and wears feminine clothing. Like other children, he had dreams of pursuing higher education and leading a normal life, but his fate took a turn for the worse after an encounter with two eunuchs in Mysore city, about six months ago, when he came for admission into a PU college.
The eunuchs pounced upon him that afternoon and bundled him into a
four-wheeler on Sayyaji Rao Road, before being taken to Mumbai via
Chennai.
He did not know what had happened to him for nearly three months after his abduction as he was sedated continuously without being allowed to regain consciousness. Later, he realized to his shock that a forced surgery had been performed on his genitals.
"I was served only two chapattis and coffee every day. But, when I gained conscious, I was shocked to see that my genitals had been amputated," he recalls, adding that the trauma he underwent was unimaginable. "I writhed in pain for many days."
Manju managed to escape from the clutches of the "hijras " in Mumbai only five days ago and reached Mysore taluk. But the incident came to light only on Sunday, after the district police visited his house to pursue the case of "missing person" his parents had filed in July, two months after he went missing.
Manju, now Manjula, said: "It was on May 6, when I was kidnapped by a gang of six 'hijras' from Sayyaji Rao Road. I was intercepted by two of them when I was visiting a college to enquire about admissions to first PU.
"They took me to a house in Mysore and later shifted me to Chennai the same night. Before that, a group of hijras served me rice, probably mixed with some sedatives. But when I regained conscious I was handed over to them in Chennai, who later shifted me to Mumbai few days later."
A tearful Manju recounted how he was put to sleep for three months inside a closed room. "At that time, I was not aware about the surgery. They also administered hormonal injections on my chest to develop breasts. Later, after a few weeks, I was let out along with a group of hijras to beg on the streets of Mumbai.
In the meantime, I befriended a Marwari from Karnataka during my visit to the shops there. On 12 November, I escaped from them on pretext of washing hands after having a lunch at a hotel. The Marwari helped me to reach Bangalore and later funded to go his village," said Manju.
According to the police, they came to know of it only after a visit to his house to check whether "the missing boy" had reached home or not.
The police said they would crack down on eunuchs in the city, so that it may lead them to solve some more cases of missing children.
source: http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2008-11-20/bangalore/27896444_1_mysore-eunuchs-hijras;
He did not know what had happened to him for nearly three months after his abduction as he was sedated continuously without being allowed to regain consciousness. Later, he realized to his shock that a forced surgery had been performed on his genitals.
"I was served only two chapattis and coffee every day. But, when I gained conscious, I was shocked to see that my genitals had been amputated," he recalls, adding that the trauma he underwent was unimaginable. "I writhed in pain for many days."
Manju managed to escape from the clutches of the "hijras " in Mumbai only five days ago and reached Mysore taluk. But the incident came to light only on Sunday, after the district police visited his house to pursue the case of "missing person" his parents had filed in July, two months after he went missing.
Manju, now Manjula, said: "It was on May 6, when I was kidnapped by a gang of six 'hijras' from Sayyaji Rao Road. I was intercepted by two of them when I was visiting a college to enquire about admissions to first PU.
"They took me to a house in Mysore and later shifted me to Chennai the same night. Before that, a group of hijras served me rice, probably mixed with some sedatives. But when I regained conscious I was handed over to them in Chennai, who later shifted me to Mumbai few days later."
A tearful Manju recounted how he was put to sleep for three months inside a closed room. "At that time, I was not aware about the surgery. They also administered hormonal injections on my chest to develop breasts. Later, after a few weeks, I was let out along with a group of hijras to beg on the streets of Mumbai.
In the meantime, I befriended a Marwari from Karnataka during my visit to the shops there. On 12 November, I escaped from them on pretext of washing hands after having a lunch at a hotel. The Marwari helped me to reach Bangalore and later funded to go his village," said Manju.
According to the police, they came to know of it only after a visit to his house to check whether "the missing boy" had reached home or not.
The police said they would crack down on eunuchs in the city, so that it may lead them to solve some more cases of missing children.
source: http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2008-11-20/bangalore/27896444_1_mysore-eunuchs-hijras;
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