The Hindu, Sunday Magazine, June 24, 2012
Looks, they say, can be deceptive. At first glance, Kerala’s capital city, Thiruvanananthapuram, is not just incredibly green and beautiful but also clean. The latter, in particular, seems a singular achievement given the monuments of uncleared garbage that mark practically all cities, big and small, in India. Yet, open a local newspaper and you read about malaria and dengue, hospitals spilling over with cases and politicians almost coming to blows over the garbage crisis. “So where is the garbage?” I ask the taxi driver. “It is dumped on the inside roads”, he informs me, so that casual visitors like me will not see the ugly sight.
Looks, they say, can be deceptive. At first glance, Kerala’s capital city, Thiruvanananthapuram, is not just incredibly green and beautiful but also clean. The latter, in particular, seems a singular achievement given the monuments of uncleared garbage that mark practically all cities, big and small, in India. Yet, open a local newspaper and you read about malaria and dengue, hospitals spilling over with cases and politicians almost coming to blows over the garbage crisis. “So where is the garbage?” I ask the taxi driver. “It is dumped on the inside roads”, he informs me, so that casual visitors like me will not see the ugly sight.
The garbage crisis in Thiruvananthapuram has reached epic proportions.
In a state where there is little uninhabited space, creating dumpsites
for urban waste has become a challenge. People living in villages such
as Vilappinshala near the state capital are refusing to allow dumps or
waste processing plants to come up in their vicinity. Not in my
backyard, they are saying. So whose backyard will handle the increasing
tonnage of urban waste? That is a question that all cities will need to
ask — and resolve.
But just as Thiruvananthapuram’s surface cleanliness hides the true
story of uncleared garbage and the spread of disease, the experience of
women in Kerala also stands out in marked contrast to the popular myth
about their status.
We all know that there are more women in Kerala than men — an exception
in a country where girls are being eliminated before they are born. We
also know that women in Kerala are more educated, have longer life
expectancy, and get married later than women in the rest of India. Yet,
ask them whether they feel safe, and they will tell you a story that
speaks of disempowerment, of helplessness, of anger.
Revelatory
Sakhi, a women’s resource centre, and several other women’s groups set
out to survey women’s perception of safety in public spaces in four
cities in the state — Thiruvananthapuram, Kozhikode, Kochi and Thrissur.
Their findings blow the lid off the myth about the power of women in
Kerala.
The overwhelming majority of women surveyed in these four cities said
that sexual harassment was their main safety concern. They routinely
experienced verbal and physical harassment. Buses that the majority of
working women are forced to use were a primary site for such harassment.
Women passengers were groped, pinched, leaned upon. Apart from male
passengers, even the conductors took their chances.
Girl students in particular had a torrid time. One student reported how
someone who stood behind her sliced her dress from top to bottom with a
sharp instrument. Another spoke of the abusive language used by bus
conductors. Other women talked of being leaned upon, about men
“accidentally” falling on them when the bus took a turn, of men using
every opportunity to touch parts of their bodies.
Auto-rickshaws were not a particularly happy alternative as auto drivers
would refuse women a ride much of the time and especially in the
evenings when they most needed it. In any case, most women said they did
not feel safe venturing out after dark.
While women in many cities have to suffer this kind of daily assault,
what was striking was how most women felt unsafe in public parks,
beaches, theatres and even standing at ticket counters. Cities like
Thiruvananthapuram have beautiful parks that would be the envy of people
in cities like Mumbai where we are starved for open spaces. Yet, in the
verdant surroundings of Kanakakunnu Palace in the state capital, you
rarely see women, or even groups of women. Men accompany the few that
come there. My friends tell me that if a group of women decide to break
the norm, they will be stared at as if they are entering forbidden
territory.
Absence of infrastructure
Apart from the sexual harassment, for women the question of safety was
also linked to the infrastructure in these cities. For instance, the
majority of women complained about the complete absence of clean and
safe public toilets. The few toilets available were filthy and almost
routinely used by men. The approach to such public toilets was such that
women would feel afraid to go anywhere near them.
Poorly lit roads, uneven pavements, open drain covers — everything that
makes the public space difficult for the elderly, for children, for the
disabled also impacts women’s sense of safety. Here is an important
lesson for urban planners. Make cities safe for women and the most
vulnerable and they will be safe for everyone.
Ironically, even the women conducting this safety audit were harassed,
stared at, touched, hit and followed. They also found it difficult to
persuade women to speak about being harassed because of the dominant
perception that only “bad women” get sexually harassed. Hence, the women
being surveyed felt that if they admitted to being harassed, they would
be considered “bad women”!
How women are treated in the public space provides a true reflection of
women’s status and how they are valued by society. You can educate
women, give them health care and give them jobs. But if they cannot step
out of their homes and offices without the fear of being assaulted for
no other reason than their gender, then clearly there is something very
wrong.
(To read the original, click http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/columns/Kalpana_Sharma/article3562199.ece)
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