By Sajjad Shaukat
Indian hegemonic designs and lust for military power has
resulted in brazenly ignoring socio-
economic factors behind the menace of rape, as sexual
assaults are direct outcome of ignored
Fundamentalist government of the BJP led by Prime Minister
Narendra Modi still prefers military spending instead of improving social
fabric of Indian society. Rising number of rapes are attributable to religious
fanaticism, nation’s patriarchy, widespread poverty and lack of law Now, India
has become an eternal ordeal for women, and every 23 minutes a lady is raped.
In this respect, some women lodge a complaint or FIR, while most of them avoid
it, considering In this regard, some major rape cases are notable. On April 14,
2015, an officer of Indian Administrative Service, SN Roy in Haryana has been
sent on leave after being accused of sexually abusing a woman who complained to
the police. On March 28, a woman from Bengaluru filed a complaint with Delhi
police against an immigration officer who sexually harassed her at Indira
Gandhi International Airport. On March 21, a court in Delhi granted bail to environmentalist
R.K. Pachauri who was facing a case of sexual attack on a woman research analyst.
On March 18, the naked body of a 75-year-old woman was found at an ashram in
West Bengal’s Burdwan district—a second rape of a senior citizen in West Bengal
within a week.
Besides, in a number of rape cases, targeting foreign women
have come to the surface in India in 2013. In March 2013, a 38 year old Swiss
woman was gang-raped in a forest near Datia town by six Indians. In January
2013 a South Korean student was drugged and raped by the son of owner of the
hotel where she was staying. Regrettably, a British holidaymaker in the
northern city of Agra suffered a leg injury when she jumped out of the hotel
window to save her honor, as two men entered her hotel room with the intent to
molest her. In February 2013, a Chinese woman working in Gurgaon, was raped by
an Indian acquaintance. In May 31, 2013, a young Irish woman was raped by a man
in a house in Kalighat area. The 21 years old young girl came into with
acquaintance, an Indian native named Sujay Mitra in the city of Kolkata where
she was celebrating her birthday.
In a notorious case, five years ago, 15-year old British
schoolgirl Scarlett Keeling was raped and left to die on a beach in the tourist
resort of Goa. In another shameful case, in June 3, 2013, a US national was
gang-raped by three men in a truck in Manali. The woman was attacked, after she
accepted a lift by three men in a truck. Police said the men drove the woman to
a secluded spot where they raped her and robbed her. This practice continued in
2014. Taking cognizance of sexual assaults on the tourist ladies, British and
Swiss governments including those of other countries have already issued instructions
to women tourists to refrain from going to India due to growing risks of
insecurity In this context, The New York wrote in June 10, 2013, “Visits to
India by female tourists dropped 35 percent in the first three months of this
year compared with the same period last year.
That three-month period came after the fatal gang rape of a
23-year-old student in New Delhi in December…every day women face the
harassment and intimidation in India.” It elaborated, “Although the per capita
rate of rapes reported to the police in India is below, as many sexual attacks
go unreported and that the actual number is far higher…sexual offense law in
March that imposes stronger penalties for violence against women and
criminalizes actions. But attacks on women have continued with an alarming
regularity. While Indian women are most often the targets, foreign tourists
have been victims as well.” Sumit Galhotra, a journalist who specializes in
human rights in South Asia, said that he has noticed, “While some rape cases in
India have received widespread coverage in the local media, but others have
not, particularly rape cases in rural India, which are routinely ignored in the
press…despite the pervasiveness of India’s rape problem, only a few cases get
international In fact, the fast-track court system in India is still not fast
enough. In this context, the Indian judicial system moves at a glacial pace,
because the prosecution’s primary focus has, instead, been on barring foreign
journalists from proceedings.
In this connection, on March 29, 2015, a report under the
caption, “Pakistani girl molested, Pune cop held”, published in Indian
newspaper, “The Hindu” said that a Pune policeman has been booked for molesting
a minor Pakistani national at her residence. Anand Gidde, attached to the Pakistan
desk of the Foreigners Registration Office, visited the 13-year-old’s house on
March 24 ostensibly for verifying documents and molested her. Nevertheless,
rape of a Pakistani Hindu minor girl is driven by general acrimony of Indians against
Pakistan. Despite repeated demand of Pakistani High Commission in India, no
action has been taken against the culprit Anand Gidde who has also managed a
bail before arrest. Reportedly, the minor girl was raped by the Pune Police
official on instance of Indian secret agency, RAW officials to humiliate the
family of the victim after they refused to work for RAW.
The incident is an eye opener for foreigners, particularly
Hindu and Sikh families aspiring to visit India for pilgrimage or other
purposes. Undoubtedly, major reason for increasing cases of rape is
callous attitude of Indian government and political leaders who behave
insensitively to these ugly crimes. Hence, foreign governments and media must
pay a greater attention regarding growing evil of rape against women in India, denouncing
it forcefully and uncovering negligence of Indian police and law-enforcing
agencies. Otherwise, sexual assaults on Women in India will continue.
Email: sajjad_logic@yahoo.com
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