NEW DELHI (AP) — A series of recent high-profile gang rape cases in
India has ignited a debate: Are such crimes on the rise, or is it simply
that more attention is being paid to a problem long hidden within
families and villages? The answer, experts say, is both.
Modernization
is fueling a crisis of sexual assault in India, with increasingly
independent women now working in factories and offices and stepping
beyond the subservient roles to which they had traditionally been
relegated. They are also more likely than their mothers and grandmothers
were to report rapes, and more likely to encounter male strangers in
public.
"We never used to see so many cases of gang rape, and so
many involving groups of young, unemployed men," said Supreme Court
lawyer Kirti Singh, who specializes in women's issues.
While there
are no reliable statistics on gang rapes, experts say the trend, along
with the growing sense of insecurity it has brought for women, led to
recent outbursts of public anger over the long-ignored epidemic of
violence against women.
The silence broke in December, when a New
Delhi student was gang-raped on a bus in a particularly vicious attack
from which she died two weeks later. A juvenile court on Saturday handed
down the first conviction in the case, sending a teenager to a reform
home for three years for rape and murder.
The sentence, the maximum a juvenile can face, was widely denounced
as too lenient, and the girl's parents vowed to appeal. The other
suspects in the case are being tried as adults and could face execution
if convicted.
While attacks on women occur constantly across
India, often within the home, the brutality and public nature of the New
Delhi case left many shocked and shamed. Thousands took to the streets
in the capital to express their outrage. The government, pledging
to crack down, created fast-track courts for rape cases, doubled prison
terms for rape and criminalized voyeurism, stalking, acid attacks and
the trafficking of women.
The Tourism Ministry launched a
nationwide "I Respect Women" campaign after a Swiss bicyclist was
gang-raped in March in central India and an American woman was
gang-raped two months later in the northern resort town of Manali.
Yet
another high-profile gang rape last month, against a photojournalist on
assignment in Mumbai, renewed public fury and sent the media into 24-7
coverage marked by daily front page headlines and talk shows debating
how to make India safe for women. "There is very clearly a class dimension" that is compounding the sudden outrage, women's rights lawyer Flavia Agnes said.
All
five of the accused in the Mumbai attack had little to no education,
and three had previously been arrested for theft, Mumbai police said.
They lived in the slums near the abandoned textile mill where the woman
was raped. In both the Mumbai and the Delhi cases, "middle-class
people identified with these young girls, aspiring professionals, trying
to make their mark in a competitive world," said Sudha Sundararaman, an
activist with the All India Democratic Women's Association. Experts
say the rapid growth of India's cities and the yawning gulf between
rich and poor are exacerbating the problem, with young men struggling to
prove their traditional dominance in a changing world.
"These are
young men in the cities, without prospects, without hope. They feel
rage against those who are perceived to have it," sociologist Sudhir
Kakar said.
Cultural stigmas, police apathy and judicial incompetence have long made it difficult for women to even report rapes. But
if modernization is changing the risks women face, it is also giving
them the ability to speak up. In the first three months after the
December bus rape, the number of rapes reported in the city more than
doubled to 359, from the 143 reported in January-March of 2012.
Those
numbers, in a city of almost 17 million people, are still seen by
experts as far below the actual number of attacks, but the jarring
increase in just one year appeared to signal a significant change.
"The
biggest change is that women in the middle classes are reporting crimes
to police," Kakar said. They are fed up with the landscape of sexual
harassment and fear, with the constant barrage of lewd comments and even
groping — locally known as "eve-teasing" — and with being told they
should stay indoors at night."Thirty years ago, even uttering the
word 'rape' was almost taboo. That is changing," said Ranjana Kumari, a
women's activist with the Center for Social Research. "There are so
many cases, each more gruesome than the other, and people have lost
patience, especially when no justice is served."
The photojournalist attacked last month stunned the nation by telling
local media that "rape is not the end of life" — a groundbreaking
statement given that many rape victims are still often dismissed as
defiled. Many are shunned by their families, fired from jobs or driven
from their home villages. As a result, most rape victims are still
thought to remain silent. "What's wrong with the system?" Supreme
Court Justices R.M. Lodha and Madan B. Lokur said in a statement last
week, while hearing a petition from the father of a 15-year-old girl
gang-raped by three men in 2012, according to Indian media. The girl,
who is a dalit, member of the outcast community once known as
untouchables, has since been barred from her school in north India, and
her mother was killed for refusing to withdraw a police complaint about
the crime, according to Press Trust of India.
The court lambasted
India's poor record of conviction in rape cases, saying "Why are 90
percent of rape cases ending in acquittals?
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