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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Mar 19, 2013 AT 15:20 IST
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Edited At: Mar 19, 2013 15:20 IST
The Telegraph, Calcutta, reports on the serious points raised by many of our senior netas as the cabinet cleared the criminal law (amendment) bill retaining 18 as the age of consent for sex, some of whom rued that the “stricter” provisions would rob the country of romance at the consensus-seeking all-party meeting, where leader after leader seemed to betray the utmost incomprehension of terms such as “stalking”, “voyeurism” and “trafficking”:
“Mohabbat to ab khatam hi ho jaayega. Ladka jab ladki ke taraf dekhega nahi aur uska peechha nahi karega to mohabbat hoga kaise (Romance will die out now. If a boy doesn’t look at a girl or follow her, how can romance happen)?” Yadav said, according to a senior politician who was present but didn’t wish to be quoted...
...Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav took the prize. He claimed people resorting to “transfer and posting” of women at workplaces could be jailed under the bill’s provisions. Met with a chorus of denials, he held his ground and insisted he could prove it.
When he showed the “relevant portion” to leader of the Opposition Sushma Swaraj, it left her speechless for some time.
The source told The Telegraph that Mulayam actually pointed towards the portion of the bill that deals with trafficking of women. The former chief minister had apparently confused “trafficking” with “transfer”.
“Ye mahilayon ke gair kanooni tareki se le jana aur gair kanooni kaam me lagana ke liye hai. Transfer-posting ke liye nahin (This is about illegally taking women away and forcing them into illegal professions. This is not about transferring or posting women employees),” Sushma explained. Mulayam nodded and the rest tried to suppress smiles.
Read the full report at the Telegraph: Tragedy of errors at rape law meet
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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Mar 19, 2013 AT 15:20 IST, Edited At: Mar 19, 2013 15:20 IST
POSTED BY Buzz
ON Jan 06, 2013 AT 01:48 IST
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Edited At: Jan 06, 2013 01:48 IST
The home ministry had announced the special 181 Helpline number for women with much hype as a part of the 'Action taken by Government in Delhi Rape Case'. Kavita an activist with the Stree Mukti League described her ordeal with this helpline in Hindi, on January 2, 2013 on her blog - 'Der Raat ke Raag' and on Sanhati. An update was published on her blog on January 5, 2013 and now Shuddhabrata Sengupta has translated it on Kafila:
After several attempts, finally, we were able to get through to the new Delhi police helpline number 181 at 9:03 pm that night. The person at the other end of the line at 181 told us that our complaint has been filed, but that they were not in a position to give us a tracking number for ‘follow up’ on the complaint. To obtain this number, we were told to call at 12 pm the following day. Upon insistence, we were given another two numbers – 27891666 and 1096. We were told that we could try calling on these two numbers ( 27891666 and 1096) We called several times on 1096 (the dedicated helpline number for reporting stalkers and obscene callers) but each time we got a message that we had reached an ‘invalid’ number. Finally, at 9:11 pm, we got through to 297891666, (the other number that we had been given by the policeman) and we were given a complaint tracking number – 36A-1. Despite this, the obscene and threatening calls from 8505898894 continued. Sickened by this continuing harassment, I tried calling again on 181. I got through once. But the person who received the phone cut the call without letting me finish what I was saying. I tried calling 181 several times after that, but no one picked up the phone.
The next morning, I called 181 at 9:17 am and 9:18 am. But there was no response. Finally, I called the chief public relations officer of Delhi Police, Rajan Bhagat, at 9:30 am on his mobile number. I told him all that had happened and gave him the complaint tracking number that I had been given the night before. I told him that I am a social activist and a journalist. He told me that I should register a complaint on 1096 and give him the complaint number. Subsequently, I called 1096 from three different phones but I still got the ‘invalid number’ message. When I called Rajan Bhagat again to tell him that this is what had happened, he shrugged the matter off by sang that what I was saying was simply not possible. When I told him that I had already filed a complaint last night, and that I had given him the complaint number, and asked why he could not follow up on the basis of last night’s complaint, he cut the phone.
Then I went to the Delhi Police website and looked up an ‘alternative number’ for the 1096 helpline number. This ‘alternative number’ is 27894455. When I called this number, I got through to a police-woman. She was the same lady who I had spoken to when I called the number (297891666) that I was given by the person manning 181 the previous evening. She told me that the process of ‘number tracing’ could take 2-3 days, because the police has to send an email to the phone company, and the phone company takes time to respond, etc., etc...
Read the full translation at Kafila
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POSTED BY Buzz
ON Jan 06, 2013 AT 01:48 IST, Edited At: Jan 06, 2013 01:48 IST
POSTED BY Buzz
ON Jan 05, 2013 AT 20:05 IST
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Edited At: Jan 05, 2013 20:05 IST
Swaang Songs, which describes itself as "a Bombay based cultural group, whose members include actors, writers, music directors, musicians and producers all in the grips of the market driven Bombay film industry, but whose hearts continue to pull towards progressive politics!" put out this song written by Ravinder Randhawa in memory of the unknown citizen and as "a token of protest against the increasing violence against women in India" 
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POSTED BY Buzz
ON Jan 05, 2013 AT 20:05 IST, Edited At: Jan 05, 2013 20:05 IST
POSTED BY Buzz
ON Jan 01, 2013 AT 00:59 IST
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Edited At: Jan 01, 2013 00:59 IST
The shocking gang-rape has been making news not only in India. In London press, Libby Purves writes in the Times: Indian women need a cultural earthquake :
Britain, in particular, tends to sentimentality about India and it has been easy, despite brave voices from within the country, to ignore the ugly faultline in the world’s biggest democracy. For murderous, hyena-like male contempt is a norm here too. Despite its modernisations, the country has taken little care to promote serious cultural change where women are concerned. A newspaper editorial there charitably describes a “twilight zone” where traditional social and religious norms are fading “while modern values based on individual liberty have not yet gained acceptance”.
But as a corrective for just this sort of view, Owen Jones had pointed out in the Independent a couple of days earlier: Sexual violence is not a cultural phenomenon in India - it is endemic everywhere:
But, in the West, Damini’s death has triggered a different response: a sense that this is an Indian-specific problem. “The crime has highlighted the prevalence of sex attacks in India,” says the Daily Telegraph; “India tries to move beyond its rape culture,” says Reuters. Again, it’s comforting to think that this is someone else’s problem, a particular scandal that afflicts a supposedly backward nation. It is an assumption that is as wrong as it is dangerous.
This is what is echoed in Emer O'Toole's widely cited article in the Guardian where she offers a critique of the press coverage ("commentators here are using the event to simultaneously demonise Indian society, lionise our own, and minimise the enormity of western rape culture"): Delhi gang-rape: look westward in disgust
Neatly excised from her account however is the relationship between poverty, lack of education and repressive attitudes towards women, and, by extension, the role of Europe in creating and sustaining poverty in its former colonies. Attitudes towards women in the east were once used by colonialists to, first, prop up the logic of cultural superiority that justified unequal power relations (the "white man's burden") and second, silence feminists working back in the west by telling them that, comparatively, they had nothing to complain about...
Elsewhere, the message is subtler, but a misplaced sense of cultural superiority shines through. For example, this BBC article states, as if shocking, the statistic that a woman is raped in Delhi every 14 hours. That equates to 625 a year. Yet in England and Wales, which has a population about 3.5 times that of Delhi, we find a figure for recorded rapes of women that is proportionately four times larger: 9,509.
Heather Timmons and Sruthi Gottipati in the New York Times: Indian Women March: ‘That Girl Could Have Been Any One of Us’
The government does not keep statistics on gang rape, but over all, rapes increased 25 percent from 2006 to 2011. More than 600 rapes were reported in New Delhi alone in 2012. So far, only one attack has resulted in a conviction.
Sociologists and crime experts say the attacks are the result of deeply entrenched misogynistic attitudes and the rising visibility of women, underpinned by long-term demographic trends in India.
After years of aborting female fetuses, a practice that is still on the rise in some areas because of a cultural preference for male children, India has about 15 million “extra” men between the ages of 15 and 35, the range when men are most likely to commit crimes. By 2020, those “extra” men will have doubled to 30 million.
“There is a strong correlation between masculinized sex ratios and higher rates of violent crime against women,” said Valerie M. Hudson, a co-author of “Bare Branches: The Security Implications of Asia’s Surplus Male Population.” Men who do not have wives and families often gather in packs, Ms. Hudson argues, and then commit more gruesome and violent crimes than they would on their own.
Others point to the gains that women have made as triggers for an increase in violent crimes. “Women are rising in society and fighting for equal space, and these crimes are almost like a backlash,” said Vijay Raghavan, chairman of the Center for Criminology and Justice at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences in Mumbai. If poverty and unemployment were the only reason for these crimes, rates would already be much higher, he said, because both are constants in India.
Meanwhile, in the Hindu, Ananth Krishnan writes: In China, Delhi gang rape spurs online debate, then censorship:
The incident and the protests in New Delhi in recent days have received wide attention in China. While the brutal attack was initially highlighted by Communist Party-run outlets as indicative of the failures of India’s democratic system to ensure stability, the following protests in New Delhi triggered calls from pro-reform bloggers for the Chinese government to learn from India and to allow the public to express its voice.
The rape case was one of the most discussed topics in Chinese microblogs over the past week, prompting thousands of posts and comments. By Sunday, however, the authorities appeared to move to limit the debate: on Monday, a search for the topic triggered a message on Sina Weibo – a popular Twitter-equivalent used by more than 300 million people – saying the results could not be displayed according to regulations. The message is usually seen as an indicator of a topic being censored by the authorities.
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POSTED BY Buzz
ON Jan 01, 2013 AT 00:59 IST, Edited At: Jan 01, 2013 00:59 IST
POSTED BY Buzz
ON Dec 30, 2012 AT 15:52 IST
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Edited At: Dec 30, 2012 15:52 IST
Amitabh Bachchan on Facebook:
With the passage of time, the candles shall burn out and lose their flame ..
The flowers offered with devotion, shall in the absence of water, get dry and weathered out …
The voices of protest both vocal and silent, shall lose their strength ..
But the ‘fearless’ ( nirbhayata ) fire that has been ignited, shall rekindle the flames in our hearts ..
The waterless dry and weathered flowers, shall be brought to life drenched by the tears in our eyes ..
With a burning throat the soul of ‘Damini’ and ‘Amaanat’, shall be voiced in the entire universe ..
That I am the Mother, sister and daughter of my Bharat ..
Respect and dignity are my birthright possessions ..
Bharat the country is my Mother ..
Forget about me, become at least the recognised worthy face of your Mother ..!!
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POSTED BY Buzz
ON Dec 30, 2012 AT 15:52 IST, Edited At: Dec 30, 2012 15:52 IST
POSTED BY Buzz
ON Dec 26, 2012 AT 20:30 IST
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Edited At: Dec 26, 2012 20:30 IST

Image courtesy, The Telegraph
On December 25, when the news of a Delhi constable's death was the only thing Delhi Police wanted to talk about, trying to discredit all protests as "violent", a group of girls, aged between 16 and 19, had a harrowing time in the heart of Delhi.
Most of those gathered at Jantar Mantar were meeting for the first time and were marching towards Parliament Street where prohibitory orders were in force when two girls were hauled off to Parliament Street Police Station —"dragged by the hair" —on charges of "inciting the crowd" to violence.
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POSTED BY Buzz
ON Dec 26, 2012 AT 20:30 IST, Edited At: Dec 26, 2012 20:30 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Dec 25, 2012 AT 23:59 IST
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Edited At: Dec 25, 2012 23:59 IST

Much has been made by Delhi Police about the violent protests and stone-pelting by anti-rape protesters which, according to them, was responsible for the unfortunate death of Constable Subhash Tomar.
Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit, along with many senior Congress leaders today showed up at Tomar's funeral, which was attended by Delhi's top-cops, while repeatedly condemning the violent nature of protests. Minister of state for home, RPN Singh, also demanded severe punishment for those who were responsible for Tomar's death.
However, Yogendra, a journalism student at Ambedkar College came forward and told NDTV India today that he was an eyewitness to Tomar falling down while running, and that there were no injury marks on his body:

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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Dec 25, 2012 AT 23:59 IST, Edited At: Dec 25, 2012 23:59 IST
POSTED BY Buzz
ON Dec 22, 2012 AT 14:49 IST
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Edited At: Dec 22, 2012 14:49 IST
POSTED BY Buzz
ON Dec 22, 2012 AT 14:49 IST, Edited At: Dec 22, 2012 14:49 IST
POSTED BY Buzz
ON Dec 20, 2012 AT 16:41 IST
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Edited At: Dec 20, 2012 16:41 IST
Pramod Kumar Singh in the Pioneer: ‘Hafta diary’ helps cops zero in on rape bus
It was the corrupt practice of allowing transporters to illegally run their buses after-hours that helped the police zero in on the vehicle used in Sunday's gangrape, sources say.
A traffic policeman had reportedly recorded the registration number of the bus in a 'hafta' diary - a record of illegally-plying buses for which bribes have been paid for exemption of prosecution. That immunity from police, however, is seen as the sole reason the gangrape was not detected as no cop intercepted it while it circled the area slowly.
The cop identified the bus when the police relayed the description provided by the victims. It finally led the police to zero in on two transporters with Yadav as their surnames. The bus was culled from a list of 370 chartered buses and the owner Dinesh Yadav was picked up by the police from his Noida Sector 62 residence and brought to verify the description of driver Ram Singh and also identify him after his arrest.
The very fact that the bus was plying illegally for hours on Sunday night with impunity suggests the active collusion of traffic police personnel.
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POSTED BY Buzz
ON Dec 20, 2012 AT 16:41 IST, Edited At: Dec 20, 2012 16:41 IST
POSTED BY Buzz
ON Dec 20, 2012 AT 01:50 IST
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Edited At: Dec 20, 2012 01:50 IST
Kavita Krishnan, Secretary, All India Progressive Women's Association (AIPWA), protesting in front of Delhi CM Sheila Dikshit 's house, against the gang-rape in a Delhi bus on December 16.
Today, we demonstrated outside (Delhi Chief Minister) Sheila Dikshit’s house. We are deamndin her resignation. And there is need to understand Why we are demanding her resignation.
It is true that Ms Dikshit made a statement saying the incident (gangrape) occurred on a private bus, not a DTC (Delhi Tourism Corporation) bus, so how could it be her responsibility? This is what we are here to teach her: If a bus containing iron rods and such barbarians is plying openly in the city with no rules and regulations, if it can pick up passengers any time, anywhere, then madam, you alone are responsible for it, no one else is.
If that girl is fighting for her life today, you are responsible for it. Why was that iron rod in that bus that day? It is something that only you can answer, no one else can. You can't blame anyone else for it.
But there is an even more pressing matter than this, something that we have been talking about, that we are here to talk abut today: When that journalist Soumya (Vishwanathan) was murdered, Sheila Dikshit had said, “If she (Soumya Vishwanathan) was out at 3 am in the morning, she was being too adventurous.”
We are here to tell her that women have every right to be adventurous. We will be adventurous. We will be reckless. We will be rash. We will do nothing for our safety. You don't tell us how to dress, or when to go out at night, in the day, or how to walk or how many escorts we need.
There's another thing. When Neeraj Kumar was newly appointed as Delhi Police Commissioner, he held a press conference and said: Look, how can the police do anything about incidents of rape? Most rapes, he said, are committed by people known to the woman. This is true; it is a fact. But shouldn’t that make it easier to catch the rapist? If the woman knows who raped her, apprehending the rapist should be that much easier. Our question for the police is not why they didn’t prevent rapes from happening, but what we want to know is this: Who is responsible for the fact that the conviction rate has gone down from 46% in 1971 to 26% in 2012?
The fact is that there is a huge gap in the police’s investigation, there is a dangerous lack: there is no procedure in place for how to deal with an incident of rape. All the women here know that the Delhi Police has only one way of dealing with such a situation. If you were to walk into a police station today and complain that you have been a victim of sexual violence, the first thing they will tell you is not to file a complaint. All sorts of people will suddennly materialise in the police station out of nowhere to “explain” to you, “Beta, don’t file a complaint”. Until you don’t directly speak to the DCP and say that you are from a student body, or a women’s organisation, nothing will be done.
I think this is a fairly routine matter. I doubt that there is a single woman in Delhi who has gone to the Delhi Police and found otherwise. I don’t know which rule book says this, but this procedure exists.
Another statement that Neeraj Kumar made at his press conference was that women shouldn’t roam around alone, that they should take some escort along, and that if you walk around the streets at two in the morning then how can you expect us to come and save you? This is what he said. But what has happened is obviously a contradiction: It did not occur late at night; the girl was, in fact, with a male friend.
But that is not what I wish to argue. My argument is that whether it is late at night or not, women should not need any justifications for walking out on the streets alone, such as, "She has to work late hours" or that "She was coming home from a BPO job or a media job". If a woman just wants to go out at night, -- to go out and buy a cigarette or go for a walk on the road -- is this a crime? We do not want to hear this defensive argument that women only leave their homes for work, poor things, what can they do, they are compelled to go out. Regardless of whether she is at home or outside, whether it is day or night, for whatever reason, however she may be dressed, women have a right to freedom. And that freedom without fear is what we need to protect and to guard
I am saying this because I feel that the word ‘safety’ with regard to women has been beaten far too much, we women know what this ‘safety’ refers to, we have heard our parents use it, we hear it from our families, we hear it from our communities, we hear it from our principals, we hear it from our wardens. We women know what ‘safety’ means. It means: You behave yourself. You get back into the home. You don’t dress in a particular way. Do not live by your freedom, that is what is meant by "you are safe". A whole range of patriarchal rules and laws are served to us in the guise of keeping us ‘safe’. We reject this entire served up notion. We don’t want it.
Why have we come here to say? We are here to say that if the Delhi Police is running an ad campaign about violence against women -- you must have seen the large hoardings near ITO and everywhere -- why is there not a single woman in these ads? They have instead a Hindi film actor, Farhan Akhtar, saying, "Be a Man, join me in protecting women". I want to ask, what about the brother who cuts his sister’s head off when she dares to marry into a different community? Is he not playing the role of a brother, a male protector too? This machismo is not any solution but the root of the problem of violence against women. It is the root of the problem itself. This is what we need to think about.
Other than the women’s movement, everything else in this country -- the government, the police, the political parties, the judiciary -- when they speak of women’s ‘safety’ they are speaking from within a specific patriarchal perspective of the term. No one is talking about protecting her ‘bekhauf azaadi’, the unqualified freedom, or the woman's freedom to live without fear.
I hope these protests on the streets today continue and grow, because this is where the answer lies. The answer lies not with CCTV cameras, the answer lies not with the death penalty nor with chemical castration. I am saying this because even though our anger is justified, I am very afraid of some of the solutions that are being offered. If the conviction rate for rapists is low, how can death penalty be the solution to the crime? In your entire procedure, the one person you have failed to take seriously is the complainant who was raped. It is an entirely different matter that the laws for rape are also extremely weak and flawed. For example, if an object is inserted into a woman’s genitals, it is not included within the definition of rape. A bir part of the recent incident of the rape on the Munirka bus when it is tried in court, will not be covered -- that the men inserted an iron rod into the woman's vagina, which is one of the big reasons for her life-threatening condition today.
I heard Sushma Swaraj say something in Parliament yesterday on television that I found abhorrent and highly condemnable. She said, “If this girl survives, she will be like a walking corpse,” Why? If this girl survives, I believe she will live with her head held high, just as she fought off her assailants with her head held high. She struggled, she fought against sexual violence and that is why she was raped-- to teach her a lesson. We all know, and there would hardly be a woman here who would not have at some point fought and struggled on the streets of Delhi, or in its buses or not found herself alone in such a situation, and not been told that to do this is to do this is to invite trouble and run the danger.
But to me it seems, or at least I have read –- and I don’t know if this is true -– that when the girl regained consciousness in the hospital she asked if the rapists had been caught. Her will to fight is still alive. It is not dead. Her will to fight is alive. She is not a living corpse. We salute her will, and say that those who survive rape are not living corpses. Rape survivors are complete, strong, fighting women and we salute the spirit of all such women.
I want to say another thing. There are many people who say not to mix politics with rape and that we should not bring politics into such incidents. But I feel that politics is not a cheap commodity, we cannot dismiss it as insignificant. I feel we do need to bring politics into it. Because I feel that the culture of our country justifies rape, as it defends the act through the words of people like many senior police officers of Delhi such as KPS Gill who said that women who wear tight clothes invite rape. And there are many other senior high ranking officials like him, all over the country. If we are to change any of this, we need to make rape into a political issue. We must articulate what women are saying about what is being done to them and force the government to listen. Coming into the Parliament and shedding some crocodile tears is not enough, it is not enough to scream ‘death penalty’ as that would not help solve the problem. I find it laughable that the BJP talks about death penalty for the rapists, but where it runs its governments, its own goondas chase down girls for wearing jeans or falling in love with Muslim or Christian boyfriends, saying that women must adhere to ‘Indian sensibilities’, or else. We need to create a counter culture against this goondaism and create a counter politics, one that asks for the right for women to live freely without fear. We are asking for that.
I don’t want to say more. But I do wish to say something about the police which seems ready and waiting to fire water cannons at us here. After witnessing protests everywhere in the city today, shouldn’t the government have learnt at least this much that our anger will not be doused by water cannons, or beaten out of us with lathi-charge. It is shameful that the government and the police who are ever willing to provide arguments defending the actions of rapists should now be ready to attack those fighting for the rights of women.
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POSTED BY Buzz
ON Dec 20, 2012 AT 01:50 IST, Edited At: Dec 20, 2012 01:50 IST
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