Column for Mathrubhumi
(Translated in Malayalam)
July 19, 2020
A woman is gang-raped. Within four days of making the complaint,
instead of the men who assaulted her being put in jail, she is. This is the extraordinary story of a
22-year-old woman in Araria, Bihar.
It is relevant above all because it exposes,
yet again, the problems women who are sexually assaulted face in dealing with
the criminal justice system.
In this case, after the rape on July 6, the
woman sought out some social workers to help her file the case. Four days later, when the case came up before
a magistrate, she was asked to sign a written statement. She refused saying she first wanted to know
what was in it, something that is a basic right. As she could not read, she
wanted the social workers who had helped her to read it out to her.
Instead of understanding the trauma that this
woman had already been through, the magistrate was offended and the woman was
charged with contempt of court and obstructing civil servants from doing their
duty. She, and the two social workers
were sent off to a jail some 250 km away.
What is worse, the woman's identity was
leaked to the local papers who reported it even though it is strictly
prohibited by the law.
And while she sat in jail, the men she had
accused were free.
This is happening in our country where,
according to the latest crime statistics (only available upto 2017), a woman is
raped somewhere in India every 15 minutes.
The Covid-19 pandemic is unlikely to have slowed down this assault of
women in this country.
The bigger tragedy is that despite
campaigns to change and strengthen the law, to make it mandatory that the
police register a complaint when a woman comes to them, to use humane methods for
the medical examination and to counsel her, the same old story keeps repeating
itself.
In the midst of all the reports of death
and disease, this particular story stood out not just because it flies in the
face of the basic criteria of justice, but that it tells us yet again that just
changing the law is not enough. We have
to find ways to make the criminal justice system work for the most
marginalised, including women.
In many ways, the protests across the
United States and other countries against the racists approach of the police, are
based on the same premise: that the justice system fails to protect the
marginalised and instead victimises them.
In this particular instance, because the
story was reported, and there was a campaign on social media, this young woman
was released on bail while the two activists who helped her were denied bail.
But think of the message such an incident
sends out to all other women who are assaulted and who try to seek
justice. As it is, if you are poor, you
fear turning to the police. Even when
you do, there is no guarantee that your case will be taken seriously. Even when it reaches the courts, it often
fails to convict the rapists because the police are too casual about collecting
evidence and making a convincing case.
At every step, it is the survivor of the rape who has to struggle to
keep up her courage and her sanity. It is hardly surprising then that so many
women still prefer not to report a rape and pursue it through the courts.
Now, after this case in Araria, even the
few who know their rights and speak up, as this young woman did, will be afraid
that they will be punished. What a state
we have come to in this country.
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