Of course, violence against women in systematic in every country, and India need not be singled out on that count. But how the Indian Government deny the very existence, in our country, of systematic, wide-spread gender violence that is tolerated by State and society? Are Indian women also highly prejudiced when they protest against gender discrimination and violence?
Matters are made worse when people in responsible, elected positions, or the police force, trivialize rape or blame women for rape. The Finance Minister Arun Jaitley recently said, in a public speech, One small incident of rape in Delhi advertised world over is enough to cost us billions of dollars in terms of global tourism.� So, in the eyes of the Finance Minister, rape is small, media coverage of rape is advertisement; rapes cost can be counted only in terms of its loss of crores of tourism revenue, not in terms of its loss to womens rights. Jaitley did not even regret his remark, he only regretted that others had misconstrued his remark.
Modi never loses an opportunity to boast of his Gujarat model which he promises to implement in India. The Gujarat police, in Porbander, are speaking the voice of the khaps. They issued a poster on Womens Empowerment, advising girls not to wear jeans and T-shirts, and likewise advising parents to monitor their daughters cell phones. One wonders if the Gujarat polices interest in snooping on womens cell phones stems from their experience of snooping for Saheb. The PMs silence and tacit approval for these measures proves that in his Independence Day speech, he was not opposing but in fact rationalizing restrictions on girls.
In order to cover up the shameful state of affairs on the front of womens rights and safety, the Modi Government is now pushing to roll back rights of children. It is proposing changes in the Juvenile Justice Act, in the name of severe punishment for juvenile rapists, that will in fact promote crime in society, rather than deter it.
In the name of empowering women, the Modi Government is also moving to make changes in labour laws to allow night shifts for women. This gift horse also needs to be looked at carefully before blindly accepting it.