Published in Scroll.in on October 5, 2019
(https://scroll.in/article/939216/one-year-after-indias-metoo-campaign-difficulties-of-finding-legal-justice-become-clear)
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A year ago, in a television interview, actor
Tanushree Dutta reiterated an accusation she had first made in 2008 against
well-known actor Nana Patekar: that he touched her inappropriately during practice
for a dance sequence.
In 2008, few paid heed to her charges. But
in 2018, she was heard. The reason: by then,
thanks to the #MeToo campaign that began in the US in 2017, women were speaking
out on social media platforms and calling out powerful men. Echoes of that had
just begun to be heard in India. Dutta's
story, in many ways, opened the floodgates of #MeToo in India.
However, though Dutta has been heard now, her
complaint has not been heeded. In June
this year, the police
complaint she filed against Nana Patekar last year was closed due to lack
of evidence. She plans to pursue the case in the Bombay High Court.
Perhaps one year is too short a time to
assess the impact of a campaign that forced out the ugly reality of predatory
men and the women they felt entitled to harass.
But the closure of Dutta's case, and several other related developments
in different courts, points to the difficulties in proving sexual harassment through
the justice system.
In fact, the very nature of the #MeToo
campaign illustrates this challenge. It is probably the reason most women
survivors preferred outing their harassers through social media rather than
hoping the law would deliver justice.
This apart, one year later we must
acknowledge that the #MeToo campaign has convincingly exposed the inequality of
power in work situations that makes women vulnerable to sexual predators. It has shown how that very inequity deprives
women of the confidence to face their harassers. It has also demonstrated that
when a few women do find the courage to speak up, most often they are the ones who
are victimised, disbelieved and forced out of jobs while the perpetrators
continue untouched.
Also, thanks to the campaign, there is
greater awareness of the law, the Sexual Harassment of Women in the Workplace
(Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013. Organisations are now under
greater pressure to set up the mandated Internal Committee (IC) to address
women's complaints. Of course, the composition and functioning of the ICs is
still far from what is desired.
In the end though, we have to ask whether the
reality of sexual harassment is being acknowledged today? Has the campaign
forced us to accept that sexual harassment is not just bad behaviour, or an
occasional slip of judgment? That it is a crime that diminishes and scars women,
and punishes them when they dare to confront the perpetrators?
The jury is still out on that. There is no
doubt now that sexual harassment cannot be ignored, that women are determined
to speak out and that they have built solidarities of support because of the
campaign. A woman who wants to speak up
today knows that she is not alone.
Yet, it is also becoming increasingly
evident that it is not so easy disempowering the men accused of harassment or
proving a case against them.
It is the women, particularly those who
have had the courage to go public with their accusations, who are paying the
price. Women like journalist Priya
Ramani who has been charged with criminal defamation by former editor and
now politician M. J. Akbar.
Akbar's case is still being heard. But on September 18, the Delhi High Court disposed
of a suit filed by well-known Indian artist Subhodh
Gupta against the Instagram page Scene and Herd (@herdsceneand).
Gupta alleged that the page had posted
defamatory content against him last year when two women accused him,
anonymously, of sexual harassment. He has asked for the pages to be taken down
on Instagram, for all URLs linked to the page to be removed by Google and for a
"token" amount of Rs 5 crores to be paid to him in damages by those
who manage the page.
Scene and Herd posts anonymous complaints
of sexual harassment against people in the art world. Its home page states, "We choose
anonymity". Apart from Gupta, there are several other artists and men in
the art world who have been named through these anonymous posts.
In Gupta's case, the Delhi High Court has
given an ex parte injunction, restraining
Scene and Herd from posting anything about Gupta until the next hearing, asking
Google to take down all the URLs referring to the sexual harassment charges
against Gupta and also asking Facebook, which owns Instagram, to do the same with
the posts on Scene and Herd. Both
companies have apparently agreed.
The judge, Rajiv Sahai Endlaw, stated in
his order, "Prima facie, it
appears that the allegation as made in the allegedly defamatory contents,
cannot be permitted to be made in public domain/published without being backed
by the legal recourse. The same if
permitted is capable of mischief."
More worrying is the judge's order asking
Facebook, to hand over to the court in a sealed envelope, "the particulars
of the person/entity behind the Instagram account 'Herdsceneand'."
Although this is an interim injunction, it
could have several repercussions. It
cuts to the heart of the #MeToo campaign where the very fact of anonymity
encouraged many women to come out with their stories. If the identity of the
handlers of such pages is made public, the confidence of the women posting
their accounts will be undermined.
It is known that One of the main criticisms
of the #MeToo campaign was the anonymity of the accusers. Was it fair to name a perpetrator without the
accuser making herself known? How would
the former be able to defend himself?
To which, the answer given was that the
women survivors were vulnerable in the face of the men they were calling
out. Even if at the end of the exercise
there was no justice, the women felt it was important to publicly identify the
men who had preyed on them for years.
Yet, the question remains: is publicly
naming and shaming sexual predators the only, or the best way, to address the
problem of sexual harassment.
Also, are the powerful men charged with
sexual harassment acknowledging it as a crime? Or do they continue to brazen it
out, to use their power to bully and diminish the women who have spoken out?
These questions become even more relevant
in the face of the ease with which many of those who were named have managed to
either clear their names, or be accepted back in jobs, or positions of
authority, because, as Justice Endlaw said, the allegations were not
"backed by the legal recourse".
The problem, as women like Tanushree Dutta
now know, is that even when you do turn to the law, you are at a disadvantage. Sexual
harassment is probably one of the most difficult crimes to prove in court.
Unless there is a paper trail, or witnesses, it becomes one woman's word
against a man, usually someone with much greater power.
Furthermore, the law does not accept that
it might take a woman years, even decades, to proceed against her harasser.
On September 16, the Bombay High Court set
aside criminal proceedings against investor Mahesh
Matthai, who had been accused by several women of sexual harassment. One of
them filed a criminal complaint last year. But the court has dismissed it
because of the lapse of time between when the alleged offence took place and
the FIR.
As
for Bollywood, after the initial ripple triggered by Tanushree Dutta's
accusations, it appears to be business as usual. Even an actor generally deemed
to be sympathetic to gender concerns, Aamir Khan, has justified working with Subhash
Kapoor, a director accused of sexual harassment. And Vikas Bahl, of Phantom films (that was
dissolved shortly after the accusations against him) has been cleared by
Reliance Entertainment of all charges after an internal inquiry and is back
directing films.
The experience of Chinmayi Sirpada is
especially discouraging. After she accused the well-known lyricist Vairamuthu
of sexual harassment, she was denied work as a dubbing artist and few were
willing to believe her. Vairamuthu, on
the other hand, remains virtually unaffected and has been selected to write the
lyrics for Mani Ratnam's new film.
Sirpada tweeted
her frustration when she wrote: "Let me reiterate this. Almost a year since my outing
Vairamuthu as a molester. Not ONE Newspaper or Publication has asked him ANY
questions. How do the MJ Akbar’s and Vairamuthus escape any and All questions,
get mollycoddled and party with the powerful? None of it makes sense."
In fact, it does make sense. While social
media facilitated the outing of these men, the systems to actually address
sexual harassment as a crime are still not working. Even the women who have
found the courage to go public and turn to the law face an uphill battle.
The cloak of anonymity was believed to be
the only option in such a situation. That
is the reason so many women chose to use it. But even that could prove
difficult given the Delhi High Court's interim injunction.
The questions raised when the campaign
began remain the same. How do we address
sexual harassment? How do we give women the tools and the strength to fight it?
How do we change male attitudes so that women are treated as equal human beings
and not sexual prey? How do we dismantle entrenched patriarchal attitudes and
structures?
It will take many more iterations of #MeToo
before we get anywhere close to answering those questions.
1 comment:
Motilal Nehru once said- Jawaharlal’s daughter would fill the place of 100 men and Indira Gandhi lived up to his forecast.
The country’s first police officer Kiran Bedi is a living example of how women can overcome odds and remain a force to reckon with.
Several women civil servants have come out boldly while at work by instilling fear in the minds of their colleagues, peers, seniors, friends, neighbors of other gender to exercise care in speech and caution in behavior while transacting with them.
There are no two or multiple options to protect women. They need to learn self defence. The next step is protect their children. Women who become proficient in skills related to these two and stand united become a heavy force impenetrable. Such women can not only save themselves and their families but our nation too in a significant way. As long as women look upon men or leaders or government to come out with measures to safeguard them, abuse against women will remain a subject of discussion with improvement visibility not commensurate to time.
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