Wed or I’ll shoot: Inside the criminal world where young men are forced to marry at gunpoint
The government job that should have been Avinash Mishra’s ticket to a better life has become his nightmare. The 28-year-old teacher from Munger, in the impoverished northern Indian state of Bihar, spends his evenings scanning the streets for unfamiliar vehicles and unknown faces, in fear that he could be kidnapped by his in-laws.
“They want me to consummate a marriage that happened at gunpoint,” Mishra said in a trembling voice. “How can they call it a marriage when I was kidnapped and forced to perform rituals with a gun to my head?”
Bihar is currently facing the problem of Pakadua Byah, or shotgun weddings, where a groom is kidnapped and forced to marry a girl at gunpoint. It is because of the age-old tradition of dowry, where a groom’s family will demand money before agreeing to a marriage; the bride’s family is helpless. In Bihar, one of India’s poorest states, the problem is especially exacerbated by the rigid caste pyramid, family feuds, and socio-economic pressure.
According to journalist Indrajit Singh, shotgun weddings first saw a major spike in the 1970s, when dowries became a serious problem. Unemployment was high, so a young man with a job was in high demand. It peaked in the 1980s and continued until the 2000s; there was a sharp decline after 2009. But now, the kidnappings are back.
Rajesh Kumar, 32, an engineer with the state electricity board, shared a similar story. “They followed my routine for weeks. They knew when I left for work, the tea stall I visited, and even my sister’s college timing,” he said. He now lives in a different city under a cloud of constant fear. “The gang showed my family photos of their armed members outside my sister’s college. The message was clear: cooperate or consequences would follow.”
The state crime record bureau saw a pattern of 7,194 cases of forced marriage reported from January to November 2020, following 10,925 cases in 2019 and 10,310 in 2018. But these numbers only scratch the surface.
“For every case reported, at least three go unreported,” Subodh Kumar, a senior police officer in central Bihar, said. “Most victims stay silent, fearing retaliation from criminal gangs or social stigma.” He saw a disturbing trend in the recent surge in government job appointments, which has created a fresh pool of “desirable targets” for these gangs.
The unemployment paradox
Bihar’s unemployment crisis has become an unexpected catalyst for forced marriages. With the unemployment rate among young people (15-29) at 13.9% – significantly higher than the national average of 10% – a government job is a golden ticket, providing a prime target for gangs of kidnappers.
“It’s a perfect storm,” Dr. Alok Singh, an economist at Patna University, said. “The state’s recent recruitment drives have created islands of employment in a sea of joblessness. When a young man secures a government position, he’s not just getting a job – he’s getting a target on his back.”
Job scarcity has also transformed how these gangs operate. Santosh Singh, who recently escaped a kidnapping attempt, described their sophisticated surveillance techniques. “They maintain databases of recent government recruits, monitor (job exam) coaching centers, and even track social media for job announcement celebrations,” he said, now preparing to leave the state despite his new position.
Inside the marriage mafia
In the dimly lit office of his non-governmental organization in Patna, the state capital, Ram Kumar Mishra unfolded what looked like a business document. “This is their rate card,” he explained, pointing to meticulously categorized prices. “Engineers: 800,000 to 1 million rupees [$9,328 to $11,660]. Doctors: 1.2 million to 1.5 million rupees [$14,000 to $17,500]. Government officers: 500,000 to 700,000 rupees [$5,830 to $8,162]. They even offer EMI (equated monthly instalments) options to families.”
The gangs have evolved from crude kidnappings to sophisticated enterprises. “They maintain safe houses across districts, have lawyers on retainer, and even employ local photographers to document the marriage for legal validity,” a police officer requesting anonymity revealed. “Some gangs offer ‘packages’ that include protection services, legal documentation, and even ‘adjustment counseling’ for reluctant grooms.”
Manoj Sharma, a gang member turned-police informant, provided chilling insights. “Each operation involves weeks of planning,” he said. “We had people inside coaching centers, government offices, even local chai (tea) shops. The target’s entire routine would be mapped before making a move.”
The upper caste conundrum
“The irony is brutal,” Dr. Nawal Kishor, professor of political science at Delhi University’s Rajdhani College, said. “Upper-caste families, traditionally the ones demanding a hefty dowry, are now using these gangs to catch grooms without paying a dowry.”
Kishor traces the practice’s roots to Begusarai’s Swaraj Mela or Saurath Sabha, a traditional assembly or gathering held in Saurath village in Bihar. It is historically a unique matchmaking event for the upper-caste Maithil Brahmins, where the family lineage and astrological compatibility of prospective brides and grooms are scrutinized.
The business of ‘success’
“Now gangs don’t just promise marriage; they guarantee its success,” veteran journalist Indrajit Singh said. “They monitor the groom post-marriage, ensure he doesn’t flee, and even mediate family disputes. It’s a package deal.”
This commercialization has transformed what was once a declining practice into a sophisticated criminal operation. While some attribute the recent spike to the popularity of a web series, ‘Pakadua Vivah’ (kidnapping marriage), depicting these forced marriages, police officer Kumar disagrees: “It’s about economics, not entertainment. The state’s recent hiring spree has created more targets.”
The gangs have also adapted to modern times. “They now use digital surveillance, track social media, and even set up fake job-consulting firms as fronts,” cyber cell officer Rakesh Kumar said. “Recently, we uncovered a gang using job portals to identify potential targets.”
Breaking the cycle
Former Indian Police Service officer Amitabh Das, who served in Bihar’s most affected districts, saw a complex web of social and administrative failures behind the continuing practice.
“The problem isn’t just criminal, it’s deeply social,” he said. “These gangs exploit a system where government jobs are seen as the ultimate security, dowry demands make marriages unaffordable, and caste hierarchies still dictate social mobility.”
Das points to the ineffectiveness of current police measures. “Setting up anti-forced marriage cells in districts looks good on paper, but ground reality is different. These gangs have informants everywhere – from local tea shops to government offices. They know when a new batch of officers is recruited, where they’re posted, and their family backgrounds. Often, by the time police get involved, the marriage is already solemnized and becomes a ‘family matter.’”
“The real tragedy,” he added, “is how this practice has evolved from isolated incidents to an organized industry. We’ve seen cases where gangs maintain detailed dossiers of potential targets, complete with family trees, financial status, and career trajectories. Some even have political protection.”
For Avinash Mishra, these revelations offer little comfort. His newly issued appointment letter sits in his drawer, a reminder that in Bihar, success can sometimes be your biggest vulnerability.
“I spent years preparing for this job,” he said, looking out his window at the setting Sun. “Now I spend every day preparing for the next threat.”