Opinion

Current regime communalising violence against women

In India, the misogyny and patriarchal values that prevail are being reinforced by the open advocacy of Manu Smriti and caste hierarchies by the right-wing Hindutva forces

IANS Photo
IANS Photo 

The United Nations’ call to observe November 25 as International Day for ‘Elimination of Violence against Women’ has got wide media coverage after the UN Secretary General, Antonio Guterres, presented a chilling fact sheet that across the world, every 11 minutes a woman or a girl is killed by an intimate partner or family member.

He called violence against women and girls as the most pervasive human rights violation in the world.

Domestic violence is an undeclared war against women which has taken more victims through the years than any conventional war. So-called developed countries, that are the epicentres of capitalism, hold the worst record according to country-wise data available on the UN website.

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In India, the situation is grave. On an average, every day the National Crime Records Bureau 2021 reports that 86 women are raped and whose cases are registered. Every hour there are 49 offences committed against women registered under the IPC, every day on an average 18 women lost their lives in dowry related domestic violence— 6,589 dowry deaths registered in a single year.

The National Family Health Survey- 5 shows that one third of all women surveyed said they had faced domestic or sexual violence.

These are statistics which should make any country hang its head in shame. But in India there has not been a single word from the government. Some people have described this as a pandemic— in fact violence against women has become endemic in our social systems. Dalit women face the worst kind of violence inflicted by aggressive casteist practices.

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One of the causes is that perpetrators of violence have immunity granted to them by a casteist and patriarchal system due to which 75 per cent of perpetrators of violence against women remain unpunished. This low rate of conviction is directly a result of biased investigations by the police, long delays in the court system and social pressures on the survivors of violence to compromise.

Cultures that normalise domestic violence have got new life under the present regime with the promotion of notions of the ideal woman as one who adjusts to violence by her husband or his relatives as part of the way a good woman behaves. The refusal of the government to recognise marital rape as a criminal offence on grounds that it would be disruptive of the family is a reflection of that mentality. This manuwadi culture is a big barrier to democratise family relations and to protect women's equality.

Even more dangerous is the communalisation of every rape case depending on the religious affiliation of the victim and the accused. In the Bilkis Bano case, the affidavit of the Gujarat government in the petition opposing the release of the gang rapists and killers specifically mentions that before their release, sanction was given by the Union home ministry. In other words, Home Minister Amit Shah is directly involved in the release of these killers and rapists in a most heinous crime based on their religion, their political affiliation.

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It is no coincidence that when Muslims are the accused, the ruling party and its sangh cohorts remember the need for justice for women.

This was exemplified by the recent and highly condemnable statement of the Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma in reference to the Shraddha Walkar case. He said that you need to vote for Modi, “a strong man, “to prevent Aftabs in every city”.

The horrific crime of murder and dismembering of the body of Shraddha being allegedly perpetrated by her Muslim partner is being used for the most vicious communal propaganda and claims of ‘love jihad’.

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Around the time this terrible crime was detected in Delhi, in Azamgarh in Uttar Pradesh, a young woman was killed and cut into six parts by her ex-boyfriend. Another woman in Sitapur district was killed by her husband and her body hacked into pieces and dumped in a field. Not a single word was uttered by the BJP leaders in both these cases as the accused and the victims belonged to the Hindu community.

When Dalit girls are raped or killed by upper caste men, not a word is said.

This communalisation of violence against women in India is a highly dangerous weapon which will further subvert the judicial process and rendering of justice.

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It is clear that capitalism and its social structures have supported and helped patriarchal notions and practices to grow across the world, based on a social and cultural system which promotes the subordinate status of women to exploit cheap female labour.

It is on this fundamental basis that women across the capitalist world face discrimination and violence, some more than others.

In India, the misogyny and patriarchal values that prevail are being reinforced by the open advocacy of Manu Smriti and caste hierarchies by the right-wing Hindutva forces. This in turn strengthens the forces in the minority communities who enforce further subordination of women.

The struggle to defend the rights of women guaranteed in the Constitution and to enforce the laws against violence on women must be waged with renewed vigour.

(IPA Service)

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