User:CabobytheBeach/sandbox1

"Satya Rani Chadda" (Hindi: सत्यरानी चड्डा) is an Indian human rights activist, who pioneered the anti-dowry movement in the country.

Early life
Satya Rani was born in Lahore, Pakistan, in 1928. Her family moved to Delhi, India in 1947 during the India-Pakistan partition. She was married to Suraj Parkash Chaddha with whom she had a daughter and a son. A housewife for the most part of her life, Satya Rani became an activist after losing her daughter in a dowry-related death.

Daughter's death
Satya Rani’s daughter, Shashi Bala also known as Kanchan was around 20 years old when she married Subash Chandra, a manager at a shoe company. In 1979, around ten months after the wedding, a 6-month pregnant Shashi Bala was found dead. She had received 100% burns. It was alleged that the kerosene stove that she was using erupted in flames. Shashi Bala was reported dead when she arrived at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS).

At the time of Shashi Bala's wedding, her husband and in-laws had demanded a scooter, refrigerator and television. However, due to lack of resources, Satya Rani's family could not fulfill their demands, Shashi Bala was continuously taunted by her husband's family. Just two days before Shashi Bala's death, her husband, had asked for a scooter as a "gift for the unborn" and warned Satya Rani's family, that failure to fulfill his demand could result in dire consequences for Shashi Bala.

Shashi Bala died at a time when deaths caused by the issue of dowry, were instead routinely passed off as having been caused by kitchen accidents. Dowry deaths were called ‘bride burning’.

Anti-dowry activism
Satya Rani, along with Shahjehan ‘Apa’, who too had lost her daughter to a dowry death, established Shakti Shalini, a women’s rights organisation and shelter for women who had survived domestic and dowry-related violence based in Delhi. These women became the most prominent voices in the anti-dowry movement in the country.

The image of Satya Rani holding her daughter's graduation photograph and sitting on the steps of the Supreme Court became synonymous with the anti-dowry protests in the country. These were instrumental in bringing about two vital amendments to the anti dowry law of the nation, thus strengthening the rights of women and girls.

Achievements of the anti-dowry movement
The anti-dowry campaign eventually lead to the government passing stricter laws against dowry deaths. The Criminal Law (Second Amendment) Act 1983, amended the definition of dowry, and introduced Section 498A into the Indian Penal Code. This section created a new offence that holds husbands and their close relatives culpable for the cruel treatment of married women. For this crime, the maximum term of imprisonment was set at three years. The offense was classified as cognisable and non-bailable.

In 1986, Section 113A was introduced to the Indian Evidence Act 1872, which raised the presumption of cruelty (as defined by Section 498A Indian Penal Code) against a husband and his relatives if a married woman dies an unnatural death within seven years of marriage. Special cells to monitor crimes against women were set up in police stations.

Justice for her daughter
Satya Rani reported the murder of her daughter to the police. However, the police were reported to have been “incompetent” and negligent in their collection of basic evidence. At the time, the police charged Subash Chand under the Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961. In those days, the Indian law defined dowry specifically as a ‘consideration of marriage’. In 1980, the Supreme Court upheld the ruling of the lower court, which stated that since Chand’s demands were made after the marriage and Shashi Bala died ten months after the marriage, he could not be convicted for a dowry death.

Following the Supreme Court judgment, Satya Rani filed a suit of murder and abatement to suicide against Subash. Nearly 20 years later, in 2000, Subash was convicted of the charge of abetting suicide. He filed an appeal with the Delhi High Court. In March 2013, the High Court upheld the conviction and directed him to surrender and serve a seven-year sentence. However, by that time, he had simply disappeared and despite an arrest warrant against him, he was never found.

Continued work
Throughout her life, Satya Rani continued to support families who had lost their daughters to dowry-related deaths.

Her greatest regret was that even though her movement helped so many women across the country, she was not able to achieve justice for her daughter. "'I lost my daughter 35 years ago but in that process I saved thousands and thousands of others. But in the end, what did I get? He is alive, married and absconding, he is not in prison, but my daughter is dead. This disillusionment with law will always stay with me. '"After battling with cancer and dementia for years, she passed away in July 2014, at the age of 85.