Single girls at a matrimonial event in New Dehli
© AFP/File Douglas Curran
MUMBAI, India (AFP) - One man allowed his farm labourer wife, and mother of two, to stay with her boss for 8,000 rupees (175 dollars) a month, said the Times of India citing police officials.
Poor families and middlemen have also cashed in on the shortage of women by selling off their daughters to men in Gujarat, one of India's wealthiest states.
Brokers can make up to 200,000 rupees a month from finding and selling wives to single men in the state of some 50 million people, according to the newspaper.
"We cannot take action against this activity as no one comes forward to lodge a complaint," deputy superintendent of police, Naresh Muniya, at Ankleshwar in southern Gujarat, told the newspaper.
"We do not rule out the possibility of minors being married off to the rich," he said.
India's 2001 census showed there were 921 women to every 1,000 men in Gujarat. India has a widespread problem of female foeticide because of fears of the high dowry costs linked to having girls.
The practice of giving dowries, while banned in the 1980s, remains common in India's male-dominated society with families impoverished by the giving of cash and goods to the groom on marriage.
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