Nepal’s female soldiers break taboos to tackle COVID crisis – South Asia Time

Nepal’s female soldiers break taboos to tackle COVID crisis

 December 8, 2020  

Kathmandu — Four female soldiers in protective gear lift the body of a coronavirus victim at the Pashupati crematorium in Nepal’s capital, Kathmandu, and hand it over to crematory workers – a scene unimaginable in the conservative country in recent years.

Women touching a dead body is still a cultural taboo in Nepal, but this barrier has been broken during the current crisis. The soldiers carrying corpses were deployed for the first time as the nation of 30 million people tries to manage the number of bodies of COVID-19 victims.

The rights and status of women have improved since the majority-Hindu country emerged from a decade-long conflict in 2006 and abolished its centuries-old feudal monarchy two years later.

“I feel privileged and happy for being given a chance to do the work that was done only by the males so far,” said one of the female soldiers, 25-year-old Corporal Rachana, who asked to be identified by just one name. “Society is changing … I have not been to my family since I started my new duty, but my friends are happy. They thank me and say, ‘You have performed a difficult task carefully and maintained your personal safety. Thank you’. I feel happy.”

On their first day on the job last month, the four soldiers moved six bodies from a hospital to a crematorium.

Nepal Army spokesman Shantosh B Poudyal said the 95,000-strong force was putting female soldiers in new roles as part of a programme to empower them.

“Women were deployed in combat duty, hospitals, ordnance, engineers and disasters before. This is the first time they are managing the bodies from hospitals and transporting them to the crematorium,” Poudyal told Reuters. “You can say it is breaking the borders … breaking the glass ceiling.”

Nepal’s army is responsible for managing the bodies of coronavirus victims across the nation.

The pandemic has killed 1,508 people in the country and infected 233,452 since the virus was first detected in January, according to official data.

On Monday, 29 people were reported dead from COVID-19, the highest number of daily fatalities since November 4, health ministry data showed.

Keeping track of infections and deaths is a challenge, as testing is limited, and experts say the real numbers could be far higher than the official data. A panel is looking into discrepancies, authorities say.

REUTERS