New Delhi, Jan 11 : When Preeti Joshi heard of the gang
rape of a fellow student, she joined a movement of thousands of outraged young
Indians who have taken to the streets of New Delhi almost every day protesting
for justice and security for women.
Beaten and raped by five men and a
teenager on a moving bus in the capital on December 16, the 23-year-old student
died from her injuries, her plight shaking the conscience of many urban middle
class Indians who consider gender rights as important as poverty
alleviation.
India's politicians, seen as out of touch with the
aspirations of the urban middle class, have been caught off guard by the
protests. For the first time, they head into national elections due by May 2014
with women's rights as an issue.
Even so, the issue is unlikely to be the
defining one.
Massive rural vote banks have been untouched by demands for
gender equality and the fury across India's cities may fade, just as
unprecedented protests in New Delhi over corruption did 16 months
ago.
"Rural populations in this country are more concerned about basics
such as development," said Ranjana Kumari, director of the Centre for Social
Research, a Delhi-based gender rights think-tank.
This jars with what
urban protesters like Joshi want.
"I thought we lived in the world's
biggest democracy where our voices counted and meant something. Politicians need
to see that we need more than bijli, sadak, paani (power, roads, water)," said
Joshi, 21, a student of social sciences at Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru
University.
Sexual violence against women in largely patriarchal India is
widespread, say gender rights activists, and crimes such as rape, dowry murders,
acid attacks, honor killings, child marriages and human trafficking are
common.
But the savagery of this crime - where the victim was raped for
an hour and tortured with an iron rod which did serious damage to her internal
organs - has stirred national debate and put gender issues on the political
agenda.
The victim's name has not been released. Her alleged attackers
have been detained in connection with the crime and police are likely to press
murder charges this week. Prosecutors are expected to seek a death sentence for
the adults.
"The girl's assault and death were the lancing of wounds that
have festered for years. Women had shut up for fear of social pressures but now
there's a collective voice to demand change," says Renuka Chowdhury, a
parliamentarian and spokeswoman for the main ruling Congress Party and former
minister for women and child development.
"This is for the first time,
perhaps, that politicians are seeing women as a constituency. People will slowly
learn to accept that a woman's vote will matter in times to come."
The
government's initial response to the attack drew criticism.
It angered
protesters by trying to throttle the largely peaceful demonstrations by imposing
emergency policing laws, barricading roads and closing down underground train
stations.
And it was a week before Prime Minister Manmohan Singh made a
statement, in which he appealed for calm and promised to create a safer
environment for women.
"We will examine without delay not only the
responses to this terrible crime but also all aspects concerning the safety of
women and children and punishment to those who commit these monstrous crimes,"
Singh said in a rare televised address to the nation on December 24.
One
senior government official who did not want to be identified said Singh had been
waiting for the home minister and the Delhi authorities to deal with the issue
first.
Many protesters have also expressed disappointment at the low
profile of younger politicians such as Rahul Gandhi, seen as the Congress
Party's prime ministerial candidate in the 2014 elections and who could have
helped bridge the gap between the demonstrators and the political
establishment.
His first comment, extending sympathy to the victim's
family and urging respect for women, came after the student had
died.
Analysts said the slow and bumbling response from the elite
illustrated how India's politicians are out of touch with the demands of the
country's urban youth.
"Whatever the trigger, one thing is absolutely
clear: India's political class has been left bewildered by the street protests
involving large numbers of mostly apolitical and leaderless individuals," wrote
political pundit Swapan Dasgupta in the Times of India.
But gender rights
are unlikely to make a significant dent in India's elections. Similar street
protests in August 2011 over corruption fizzled due to the inability of
organizers to maintain public pressure and keep the media
interested.
Despite gender sensitive laws being in place for decades,
including those outlawing practices such as dowries and child marriage, they
have been poorly implemented largely due to a lack of political will, activists
say.
Many of India's legislators are elderly men who rely on the support
of the rural masses, where deep-rooted patriarchal attitudes mean blame is often
first assigned to the victims of sex attacks.
One of the most powerful
female figures in Indian history is former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. Her
daughter-in-law, Sonia Gandhi, mother of Rahul, heads the Congress Party and
there are also more than one million female politicians in village councils.
Yet only 11 percent of seats in India's lower and upper houses of
parliament are held by women, ranking it 110th out of 145 countries, below less
developed nations such as Niger and Pakistan, says the Inter-Parliamentary
Union, a Geneva-based union of national parliaments.
For almost 18 years,
moves to give women greater power at the national and state level through the
Women's Reservation Bill, which would guarantee 33 percent of seats to women at
those levels, have been blocked by male legislators.
"Political parties
give tickets for fighting elections on the basis of electoral calculations. How
many women are there in Indian politics who can get elected time after time?
Very few, right?" said Nirmala Sitharaman, spokeswoman for the main opposition
Bharatiya Janata Party.
Gender rights activists also point out that
political parties have allowed male legislators who themselves face rape charges
and other crimes against women to represent them.
Six serving state
legislators have been charged with rape, while 36 others including two national
parliamentarians have faced charges of sexual harassment, molestation or assault
on a woman before holding an assembly seat, according to the Association for
Democratic Reforms, a Delhi-based think-tank.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Analysis: Young, urban Indians find political voice after student's gang rape
Analysis: Young, urban Indians find political voice after student's gang rape
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