Protests break out in India after two women enter temple
Source: The Guardian
Protests break out in India after two women enter temple
Court ruling allows women to offer prayers in temple in Kerala after centuries-long ban
Amrit Dhillon in Delhi
Wed 2 Jan 2019 13.58 GMT
Protests have broken out in the Indian state of Kerala, where groups of angry traditionalists waving black flags blocked traffic and staged demonstrations outside government offices to oppose the entry of two women into a Hindu temple.
Police used teargas and water cannon to disperse the protesters outside government buildings in the state capital of Thiruvanthapuram, according to local news channels. The police intervened after clashes between Bharatiya Janata party and Communist party workers.
The BJP, which rules India, opposes the entry of women into the Sabarimala temple in the southern state. The Communists, who rule Kerala, support the right of women to pray at the temple.
BJP leaders are angry that the two women entered the temple to offer their prayers in the early hours. Priests purified Sabarimala after hearing of the visit and will keep it closed on Thursday as a mark of protest.
The two women, who have been given police protection, were defying a centuries-old ban on menstruating women entering the temple. The supreme court lifted the prohibition three months ago, but protesters set on upholding tradition have stopped all attempts by the Communist government of Kerala to let female devotees enter Sabarimala.
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Read more:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/jan/02/indian-women-form-620km-human-chain-in-support-of-lifting-of-temple-ban