India, we have a rape problem. What are we doing about it?

There is evidence globally of a growing gender divide on ideological lines. In the past decade, young women are becoming more liberal. But where are w

Trouble viewing this email? View in web browser

Sunday, March 10, 2024
By Namita Bhandare

Distressing news of the gang-rape of a tourist in Dumka, Jharkhand has led to a discussion on India’s ‘image problem’ with very little said about solving our far larger problem of rape itself. Read on (trigger warnings)…

     

The Big Story

India, we have a rape problem. What are we doing about it?

The elephant in the room: 63 countries without incident, then she came to India. (Source: Instagram feed of the Spanish tourist who was gang-raped in Jharkhand)

Fill in the blanks:

Why was she wearing ____ ?
Who told her to go to _____ ?
Wasn’t she being too adventurous in ____?

The latest horror story out of Jharkhand has inflamed social media—not so much because of the violence of the crime, but because the woman is a foreign national who has spoken about her ordeal on a now deleted Instagram post, her bruised and battered face for all the world to see.

Here's what happened. On the night of March 1, the woman travelling on a Spanish passport along with her husband, was attacked in Dumka, Jharkhand. According to the first information report (FIR), the woman has said she was gang-raped by seven men (at the time of writing all seven have been arrested along with one more) and her partner was beaten, assaulted and robbed. They were found by a night police patrol and taken to a hospital where the woman told the doctors she had been raped.

A senior journalist (male obviously) tweeted: “A single horrific assault like this can reverse a decade of efforts to talk about ‘Incredible India’ as a tourist destination.”

You can’t make this up. A woman is gang-raped and terrorised. And a man finds it appropriate to bemoan….the impact on the country’s tourism potential.

The Jharkhand high court echoed the view. Ordering financial compensation—a cheque paid to the husband amid a blaze of cameras—and a status report on the crime, the court said it would have ‘serious national and international repercussions including impacting the tourism economy’. “A sex-related crime against a foreign woman is likely to bring adverse publicity against the country and thereby tarnishing the image of India across the globe,” the court noted.

Rekha Sharma who heads the National Commission of Women decided to wade in. In response to a journalist who shared on X that the ‘level of sexual aggression’ he had witnessed in India “was unlike anywhere else I have ever been” and then went on to quote an incident in a train, she asked if he had filed ‘the incident’ to the police.

Who will tell her, if she doesn’t yet know, of the everyday aggressions and violence we face on the street, in the bus, in offices behind closed doors, in police stations and in courtrooms where those of us who seek justice must face the process as part of the punishment for daring to speak up?

So, let's get this right. Rape itself—86 cases every day or 3.5 every hour or 31,516 for 2022, according to the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB)—does not tarnish the image of the nation. It is the adverse publicity that surrounds it that does.

Perhaps we should revisit all these instances of shame—Korean vlogger sexually harassed in Mumbai, Japanese tourist molested in Delhi on Holi and female foreign tourist groped in Jaipur.

Incredible India indeed.

Understanding rape culture

Men convicted of gang-raping Bilkis Bano and murdering members of her family leaving jail on remission. It took a Supreme Court order to send them back to jail (Source: Scroll)

In 2012, the year when a student’s gang-rape in Delhi led to unprecedented public protest and an eventual change in the criminal law, NCRB recorded 24,923 rape cases. So with a far tougher law on rape, we actually have more rapes being reported, not fewer.

The spike in numbers is partially explained by a greater confidence in reporting rape—that’s the good news. But, the real number is still likely to be far higher than what is reported, given the stigma and the lack of confidence in swift and certain conviction. India remains deeply unsafe for women both outside their homes and inside them. In 2018, the Thompson Reuters Foundation said we are the most dangerous country in the world for women.

Think of Manipur where women from the ‘enemy’ tribe are stripped and paraded. Think of Sandeshkhali where it takes 55 days for West Bengal police to arrest TMC’s Shahjahan Sheikh, accused of a litany of complaints including sexual assault. Think of the Dalit girls, found strung up from a tree in Uttar Pradesh.

The rot goes beyond individuals to infect the state and government at the highest levels. The men convicted of gang-raping a pregnant Bilkis Bano and murdering her family members during the 2002 Gujarat riots are able to walk out of jail, feted and garlanded, on remission granted by the Gujarat government.

India’s most decorated wrestlers sit in public protest against sexual harassment by the Wrestling Federation head, a six-time BJP member of Parliament. The police file a charge-sheet only after intervention by the Supreme Court. Meanwhile, under scrutiny from the international community, Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh’s proxy wins the next federation elections; his son, Karan is pushed into the Uttar Pradesh body.

In the Delhi high court, two judges cannot agree on whether marital rape should be criminalised or not. The matter now lies in the Supreme Court, waiting to be heard since May 2022. Until then, it is perfectly legal to rape your wife, provided she is over 18.

Next month, my friend, the journalist Priya Ramani who joined over 20 women during India’s 2018 #MeToo movement in calling out her then editor M.J. Akbar’s predatory behaviour will be back in court. Akbar sued for criminal defamation, and lost. Now, the Delhi high court has allowed him early hearing of his appeal, listing the matter for April 26. Meanwhile, the predators named in #MeToo are busy making films, expounding on TV, creating art and generally getting on with their lives.

If this is not rape culture, supported and upheld by upstanding men and women of society, by the institutions and arms of the government, then what is it?

You can bring in all the laws, all the fast courts, death sentence even, but nothing can change unless there is a corresponding mindset change that will trigger a new way of thinking about girls and women.

We haven’t even begun the work of dismantling rape culture. We haven’t even lit the match that will burn down patriarchy.

Where do we go from here?

Source: Hindustan Times

At the end of the day, decent citizens have only their anger. In December 2012, in a less polarised world, it was possible to protest without having to wave your ideological inclinations. We had a government that listened, eventually. For a one brief moment, it felt like we were making headway.

Instead we have stalled or, worse, moved backwards.

In the name of protecting women, we now have laws that virtually ban interfaith marriages and courts that refuse to grant protection to couples who fear for their lives.

The first template in independent India for what could have been a modern uniform civil code calls for the compulsory registration of live-in relationships. At every stage the autonomy and independent agency of women is being stolen.

It’s not as if the home is always a safe place. Horror stories include incest and domestic violence. In India, which has the second-highest prevalence of intimate partner violence, 46% of women deem it acceptable under certain circumstances—disrespecting in-laws or going out of the house without permission.

For as long as we can’t change those minds, we will remain doomed to bemoan India’s loss of prestige, not because we have a rape problem, but because it looks bad on the international stage.

[Readers, let’s talk solutions. What’s the best way to tackle India’s rape problem? Write to me at: namita.bhandare@gmail.com.]

In numbers

66.7% of Indians use some form of modern contraception, including birth control and emergency contraception pills, IUDs and condoms, according to the National Family Health Survey for 2019-2020. This is significantly higher than the 40.7% for 1992-93. But the increase is primarily caused by the adoption of one method—female sterilisation.

Source: CEDA paper on female sterilisation in India found that the share of women who had undergone sterilisation increased from 26.8% to 37.9%. But of these only 58.7% were informed about the side-effects of the procedure.

Read more here.

Watch

Source: Human Rights Watch

France just became the first country in the world to enshrine abortion rights in its Constitution. The historical move, proposed by President Emmanuel Macron, is a “way to prevent the kind of rollback of abortion rights seen in the United States”, reports Politico Europe. The measure was approved 780-72 during a special session of Parliament and, when passed, received a standing ovation. In the evening the Eiffel Tower was lit up with the word: “My body, my choice”.

Watch the moment when the vote passed, and the celebrations across France afterwards.

News you might have missed

Women protest in Sandeshkhali (Source: PTI)

The angry women of Sandeshkhali

Following a public rally at Barasat in North 24 Parganas district where Sandeshkhali is located, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had a private meeting with a few women who told him about the atrocities and harassment they had been subjected to.

At his rally Modi said the anger of the ‘mothers and sisters’ at Sandeshkhali was shared by women everywhere.

Shahjahan Sheikh, the TMC strongman from the area has, along with his associates, been accused of a litany of crimes including land grabbing, a ration scam and sexual assault. He was finally arrested, after high court intervention, 55 days after an Enforcement Directorate team that was sent to search his premises was attacked. On court orders, Sheikh’s custody has been handed over to the CBI.

It’s clear now that Sandeshkhali has become a political flashpoint with the potential to dent party chief Mamata Banerjee’s image among women voters. After initially downplaying the women’s complaints, Mamata finally set up an all-women police team to hear the complaints. Taking no chances, she announced a pay hike for the nearly 200,000 women ASHA and Anganwadi workers in the state. And at a rally for women’s rights in Kolkata on Thursday, called West Bengal the safest place in the country for women.

Women voters count

After granting free bus travel, women in Delhi below taxable level incomes will receive a monthly stipend of Rs 1,000. Announced by the Aam Aadmi Party during its Budget presentation, the stipend won’t kick in until later this year and is being seen as a sop to woo the capital’s sizeable women voters ahead of the general elections.

Across party lines in Telangana, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Punjab, and West Bengal, cash transfers and other benefits like free bus travel for women are now standard offerings and testament to the fact that women have been showing up to close the gender gap in voter turnout. The 2019 general election saw, for the first time, more women (67.18%) than men (67.01%) casting their votes.

Expect: More goodies as we move closer to an election date.

Don’t expect: Significantly more women being fielded as candidates.

…And the good news

The army is set to raise two sports companies, one in Mhow and one in Pune, to promote young sporting talent among girls. Army sports companies provide talented soldiers with the facilities to focus on sport and serve as feeders to centres of sports excellence. Starting in April, they will now be open to women soldiers too.

Field notes

Menopause and the empowerment model

Representational Image (Source: Pexels)

One billion people on the planet have it and it will inevitably hit anyone with functioning ovaries. There is some literature on dealing with the more unpleasant symptoms, but very little on the psychological, social and contextual considerations of menopause.

Lancet has just published a four-part series that advocates “a new approach that goes beyond the treatment of specific symptoms, to encompass a broad model to support women transitioning this life stage, using the model of empowerment.”

What does this mean? It means actively gaining knowledge to make informed choices about care. It means breaking the silence and stigma as a period of decline and decay, creating menopause-friendly workplaces, disseminating information (before the onset of menopause) and access to a medical professional who listens with empathy.

Read more here.

The long(ish) read

Housed in hostels that restrict their movements, women comprise 80% of the workforce at the Foxconn factory in Sriperumbudur that assembles iPhones made by Apple. “By creating jobs for rural women and bringing them into the workforce, Foxconn is enabling a transition that economists say is essential for agrarian economies to transform into industrial hubs,” writes Johanna Deeksha on news website Scroll. But there is a hidden cost: living in a heavily guarded hostel where movements are restricted.

Read the story here.

Around the world

Source: @taylorswift’s Instagram feed from June 2023

Singapore’s deal with Taylor Swift to be her sole Asia venue for an undisclosed price has caused considerable heartburn in the region with neighbours calling the move ‘unfriendly’. But with 300,000 tickets at six sold-out concerts and an influx of fans from all over the region that has led to a spike in hotel rates and airfares, Singapore is unrepentant, with good reason. Economists, reports Bloomberg, have upgraded their first-quarter growth forecasts for the nation with GDP likely to expand 2.9% in the first three months ending March 31.

In Alabama, USA lawmakers have passed a bill to protect IVF clinics and doctors from criminal prosecution. The move follows the state Supreme Court’s ruling last month that frozen embryos are children and those destroying them, clinics as well as their clients, could be held liable. The new law has the overwhelming support of Republicans in a state that has one of the strictest bans on abortion, disallowing it at all stages of pregnancy.

Elsewhere, at his State of the Union address, President Joe Biden promised to “restore Roe vs Wade as the law of the land again” if re-elected to office.

        

Were you forwarded this email? Did you stumble upon it online? Sign up here.

That’s it for this week. If you have a tip, feedback, criticism, please write to me at: namita.bhandare@gmail.com.
Produced by Nirmalya Dutta nirmalya.dutta@htdigital.in.

Get the Hindustan Times app and read premium stories
 Google Play Store  App Store
View in Browser | Privacy Policy | Contact us You received this email because you signed up for HT Newsletters or because it is included in your subscription. Copyright © HT Digital Streams. All Rights Reserved

--
Click Here to unsubscribe from this newsletter.

Post a Comment

Previous Post Next Post

Contact Form