Is sexual violence the norm?

Are there places in your city/town that are unsafe for girls? Tell us about it and one change you think can make it a little safer. Mail us at school@thehindu.co.in (Subject: Women) along with your name and details. Selected entries will be featured on next week’s page!

June 06, 2014 01:12 pm | Updated 01:12 pm IST

In the wake of the recent gang rape in Badaun, an artist draws a painting.

In the wake of the recent gang rape in Badaun, an artist draws a painting.

A spate of legal reforms following the protests over the December 16, 2012 gang rape and murder of a young woman rejected some of the main recommendations of the Justice Verma Committee that were central to combatting sexual violence. These included recognising sexual rights, including the right to sexual autonomy and bodily integrity of women, as well as making marital rape a crime, thus ensuring consent as integral to all sexual relationships.

The failure to embrace these recommendations has continued to allow politicians, regardless of their political affiliations, to view sexual violence apologetically and through a “boys will be boys” attitude, where impunity is more the rule than the exception, and where sexual violence has come to be equated with normal sex. This attitude continues to place India in the category of one of the most violent countries in the world for women.

Testing tolerance

What is so disconcerting, or should be, is that the levels and expression of violence are moving in the direction of more brutality and viciousness.

How long will we continue to tolerate police inaction as just a part of the system? When will the level of violence become intolerable, rather than something we have come to associate as a normal part of everyday life? And when will we stop to ask ourselves why women are experiencing what appears to be such macabre and increasing levels of cruelty and torture? The viciousness of the 2012 rape and the lynching of the teenage girls in Katra village in Uttar Pradesh should compel us to confront these questions and consider how we as a society are implicated in producing such levels of ferociousness and sadism. Instead, despite these events, the violence continues unabated — with Uttar Pradesh witnessing further scenes of violence in the past few days, including a brutal attack on the mother of a rape victim and the gang rape of a 17-year-old girl by four men.

The fact that any girl or woman should now have to fear for her life while performing the simplest daily bodily function of going to the fields to relieve herself, speaks of how violence is now part of our new normal. This simple act also speaks of the lack of toilets, and how the provision of adequate sanitation and street lighting are as integral to the safety of women as speedy investigations and the successful prosecutions of the perpetrators. Sexual violence is not just about violence and the criminal law, it is also about meeting basic development needs of the most marginalised communities in our society.

Yet, when a Chief Minister reacts to a journalist’s questions about this deplorable state of affairs with statements such as “Aren’t you safe? You’re not facing any danger, are you? Then why are you worried?” it inspires little confidence that our political establishment will get it right this time.

One of the young women who were hanged had told her father that she wanted to become a doctor. This aspiration, which is one that millions of young men and women around the country hold dear, was brought to a cruel end. These dreams will remain unfulfilled for millions of women until education in our schools also includes sex education, combined with a determined effort to internalise respect for women — not as wives, mothers, sisters or daughters, but as equal citizens of this country. Otherwise, the normalising process of sexual violence will become an integral and even acceptable feature of our lives.

An epidemic

Let’s hope that we have not reached the point of no return, where gruesome rapes will remain nothing more than fodder for the media and a spectator sport, and where caste atrocities become an acceptable part of caste-based politics.

India is a country that is at war with no one — and yet, the levels of violence that are inflicted on women and that have come to be tolerated seem comparable to levels seen in conflict zones such as Syria, the Democratic Republic of Congo and South Sudan.

Sexual violence has reached the level of an epidemic, and we need to shake ourselves out of the apathy or defeatist mentality that continues to place such violence in the category of the ordinary experience of everyday life. By doing so we are all implicated in its normalisation, where women will continue to be nothing more than disposable lives.

(Ratna Kapur is Global Professor of Law, Jindal Global Law School.)

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.