Wednesday, 19 December 2012
Delhi bus gang rape: 'What is going wrong with our society?
Tens of thousands of demonstrators took tothe streets across India on Wednesday, calling on authorities to stem the country's rising tide of violent sexual attacks on women , after a 23-year-old medical student was raped and beaten by six men on a Delhi bus.
The incident on Sunday night has convulsed India, sparking fierce criticism of the police, rows in parliament, blanket coverage in the media and even a debate on the role in sexual violence of revealing outfits wornby stars of Bollywood films.
The country's biggeststar, Amitabh Bachchan, called on allIndians to become"vigilantes".
"What is going wrong with our society, our people?" he asked in a Facebook post .
Sonia Gandhi, the president of the rulingCongress party, visited the victim in hospital where she is still in a critical condition after a series of emergency operations to treat serious injuries sustained in the attack.
In a letter to Sheila Dikshit, the chief minister of Delhi, Gandhi spoke of the"painful regularity" of such incidents and said it was "a shame that ... our daughters,sisters, mothers are unsafe in the capital city".
Ministers have scrambled to shuffle blame elsewhere whilesenior police officers have promised tough action. Politicians have called for the imposition of the death penalty for rape.
So far four men – aged between 25 and 33 – have been arrested. Two more are still being sought. Several of the allegedattackers were living in a slum in the south of the capital. They include a bus driver, a fruitseller and a gym instructor.
The men are accused of attacking the girl and a male friend after the pair boardeda private, unlicensed bus on their way home from watching a film in south Delhi. Themen, on what Indian newspapers have described as a"joyride", raped and tortured the girl and beat her friend with iron rods and other weapons, the police have said. They werestripped, robbed and dumped on the roadside near the city's main airport.
The incident is only the latest such attack.In one of the most infamous, a woman returning from work at a call centre in Gurgaon two years ago was raped by multiple attackers. The case has still to reach court. Newspapers frequently report incidents of abduction and rape as well as sexual harassment, known locally as "eveteasing".
The response of authorities – especially the police –is frequently to blame the victims .
Demonstrators in Delhi, a city of at least15 million people where there were 572reported rapes last year – though the true total is believed to be much higher – said the harassment was getting worse"day by day".
"Every time I go out I am hearing lewd remarks," said Asheeta Rudra, a 23-year-old student.
Shagufta Yasmin, 26, from the poor northern state of Bihar, said the problem was the sameeven when she went home.
"It's not just Delhi, even if it's bad here. It's everywhere," shesaid.
In one incident last year in the commercialcapital, Mumbai, a 24-year-old man was stabbed to death after reprimanding men who were harassing a female friend.
"It is a huge social problem. Men are just taught to respect their elders but not women," Jason Temasfieldt, the dead man's cousin, told the Guardian.
Temasfieldt, 25, now campaigns to raise awareness. "Sixty to 80 people stood by and watched my cousin being stabbed," he said."They didn't intervene. If you try and stop harassment on a train or in the street then you are the one who people get angry at."
This summer a TV crew filmed a 45-minute assault on a woman in a street innorth-eastern India but made no attempt to intervene.
Much of the debate has focused on reinforcing legislation.However, many point out that the national conviction rate in rape cases brought tocourt is lower than 25%.
Others say deep discrimination is to blame. In many parts of India, female infants and foetuses have been routinely killed for decades, leading to a huge demographic imbalance and a shortage of sexual partners for young men. At the same time,education and economic change has meant new roles, aspirations and independence for many women.
"It's not about laws orenforcement. It's about a psyche, a mindset. That's what has to change," said Smita Sharma, a senior TV journalist.
Local gun campaignershave said that womenshould be able to defend themselves with firearms.
"The only effective deterrent is if women are armed and prepared to use the firearm in self-defence," said Abhijeet Singh, of Indians for Guns.
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