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Archive for category INDIA’S HINDUISM

The Elephant in the Room

 

The Elephant in the Room

The biggest pain in Asia isn’t the country you’d think.

BY BARBARA CROSSETTE | JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2010

Think for a moment about which countries cause the most global consternation. Afghanistan. Iran. Venezuela. North Korea. Pakistan. Perhaps rising China. But India? Surely not. In the popular imagination, the world’s largest “democracy” evokes Gandhi, Bollywood, and chicken tikka. In reality, however, it’s India that often gives global governance the biggest headache.

 

Of course, India gets marvelous press. Feature stories from there typically bring to life Internet entrepreneurs, hospitality industry pioneers, and gurus keeping spiritual traditions alive while lovingly bridging Eastern and Western cultures.

But something is left out of the cheery picture. For all its business acumen and the extraordinary creativity unleashed in the service of growth, today’s India is an international adolescent, a country of outsize ambition but anemic influence. India’s colorful, stubborn loquaciousness, so enchanting on a personal level, turns out to be anything but when it comes to the country’s international relations. On crucial matters of global concern, from climate change to multilateral trade, India all too often just says no.

India, first and foremost, believes that the world’s rules don’t apply to it. Bucking an international trend since the Cold War, successive Indian governments have refused to sign nuclear testing and nonproliferation agreements — accelerating a nuclear arms race in South Asia. (India’s second nuclear tests in 1998 led to Pakistan’s decision to detonate its own nuclear weapons.)

Once the pious proponent of a nuclear-free world, New Delhi today maintains an attitude of “not now, not ever” when it comes to the 1968 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and the 1996 Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. As defense analyst Matthew Hoey recently wrote in theBulletin of the Atomic Scientists, “India’s behavior has been comparable to other defiant nuclear states [and] will undoubtedly contribute to a deteriorating security environment in Asia.”

Not only does India reject existing treaties, but it also deep-sixes international efforts to develop new ones. In 2008, India single-handedly foiled the last Doha round of global trade talks, an effort to nail together a global deal that almost nobody loved, but one that would have benefited developing countries most. “I reject everything,” declared Kamal Nath, then the Indian commerce and industry minister, after grueling days and sleepless nights of negotiations in Geneva in the summer of 2008.

On climate change, India has been no less intransigent. In July, India’s environment minister, Jairam Ramesh, pre-emptively told U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton five months before the U.N. climate summit in Copenhagen that India, a fast-growing producer of greenhouse gases, would flat-out not accept binding carbon emissions targets.

India happily attacks individuals, as well as institutions and treaty talks. As ex-World Bank staffers have revealed in interviews with Indian media, India worked behind the scenes to help push Paul Wolfowitz out of the World Bank presidency, not because his relationship with a female official caused a public furor, but because he had turned his attention to Indian corruption and fraud in the diversion of bank funds.

By the time a broad investigation had ended — and Robert Zoellick had become the new World Bank president — a whopping $600 million had been diverted, as the Wall Street Journal reported, from projects that would have served the Indian poor through malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, and drug-quality improvement programs. Calling the level of fraud “unacceptable,” Zoellick later sent a flock of officials to New Delhi to work with the Indian government in investigating the accounts. In a 2009 interview with the weekly India Abroad, former bank employee Steve Berkman said the level of corruption among Indian officials was “no different than what I’ve seen in Africa and other places.”

India certainly affords its citizens more freedoms than China, but it is hardly a liberal democratic paradise. India limits outside assistance to nongovernmental organizations and most educational institutions. It restricts the work of foreign scholars (and sometimes journalists) and bans books. Last fall, India refused to allow Bangladeshi and Sri Lankan journalists to attend a workshop on environmental journalism.

India also regularly refuses visas for international rights advocates. In 2003, India denied a visa to the head of Amnesty International, Irene Khan. Although no official reason was given, it was likely a punishment for Amnesty’s critical stance on the government’s handling of Hindu attacks that killed as many as 2,000 Muslims in Gujarat the previous year. Most recently, a delegation from the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, a congressionally mandated body, was denied Indian visas. In the past, the commission had called attention to attacks on both Muslims and Christians in India.

Nor does New Delhi stand up for freedom abroad. In the U.N. General Assembly and the U.N. Human Rights Council, India votes regularly with human rights offenders, international scofflaws, and enemies of democracy. Just last year, after Sri Lanka had pounded civilians held hostage by the Tamil Tigers and then rounded up survivors of the carnage and put them in holding camps that have drawn universal opprobrium, India joined China and Russia in subverting a human rights resolution suggesting a war crimes investigation and instead backed a move that seemed to congratulate the Sri Lankans.

David Malone, Canada’s high commissioner in New Delhi from 2006 to 2008 and author of a forthcoming book, Does the Elephant Dance? Contemporary Indian Foreign Policy, says that, when it comes to global negotiations, “There’s a certain style of Indian diplomacy that alienates debating partners, allies, and opponents.” And looking forward? India craves a permanent seat on the U.N. Security Council, seeking greater authority in shaping the global agenda. But not a small number of other countries wonder what India would do with that power. Its petulant track record is the elephant in the room.

 
 

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The truth about Gandhi: he was a wily operator, not India’s smiling saint

PATRICK FRENCH: TELEGRAPH, UK: The truth about Mahatma Gandhi: he was a wily operator, not India’s smiling saint

The Indian nationalist leader had an eccentric attitude to sleeping habits, food and sexuality. However, his more controversial ideas have been written out of history

Although Gandhi may have looked like a saint, in an outfit designed to represent the poor of rural India, he was above all a wily operator and tactician

Although Gandhi may have looked like a saint, in an outfit designed to represent the poor of rural India, he was above all a wily operator and tactician Photo: AFP
 
 

This week, the National Archives here in New Delhi released a set of letters between Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi and a close friend from his South African days, Hermann Kallenbach, a German Jewish architect. Cue a set of ludicrous “Gay Gandhi” headlines across the world, wondering whether the fact the Mahatma signed some letters “Sinly yours” might be a clue (seemingly unaware that “sinly” was once a common contraction of “sincerely”).

The origin of this rumour was a mischievous book review two years ago written by the historian Andrew Roberts, which speculated about the relationship between the men. On the basis of the written evidence, it seems unlikely that their friendship in the years leading up to the First World War was physical.

Gandhi is one of the best-documented figures of the pre-electronic age. He has innumerable biographies. If he managed to be gay without anyone noticing until now, it was a remarkable feat. The official record of his sayings and writings runs to more than 90 volumes, and reveals that his last words before being assassinated in 1948 were not an invocation to God, as is commonly reported, but the more prosaic: “It irks me if I am late for prayers even by a minute.”

That Gandhi had an eccentric attitude to sleeping habits, food and sexuality, regarding celibacy as the only way for a man to avoid draining his “vital fluid”, is well known. Indeed, he spoke about it at length during his sermons, once linking a “nocturnal emission” of his own to the problems in Indian society.

According to Jawaharlal Nehru, independent India’s first prime minister, Mahatma Gandhi’s pronouncements on sex were “abnormal and unnatural” and “can only lead to frustration, inhibition, neurosis, and all manner of physical and nervous ills… I do not know why he is so obsessed by this problem of sex”.

Although some of Gandhi’s unconventional ideas were rooted in ancient Hindu philosophy, he was more tellingly a figure of the late Victorian age, both in his puritanism and in his kooky theories about health, diet and communal living. Like other epic figures from the not too distant past, such as Leo Tolstoy and Queen Victoria, he is increasingly perceived in ways that would have surprised his contemporaries. Certainly no contemporary Indian politician would dare to speak about him in the frank tone that his ally Nehru did.

Gandhi has become, in India and around the globe, a simplified version of what he was: a smiling saint who wore a white loincloth and John Lennon spectacles, who ate little and succeeded in bringing down the greatest empire the world has ever known through non-violent civil disobedience. President Obama, who kept a portrait of Gandhi hanging on the wall of his Senate office, likes to cite him.

An important origin of the myth was Richard Attenborough’s 1982 film Gandhi. Take the episode when the newly arrived Gandhi is ejected from a first-class railway carriage at Pietermaritzburg after a white passenger objects to sharing space with a “coolie” (an Indian indentured laborer). In fact, Gandhi’s demand to be allowed to travel first-class was accepted by the railway company. Rather than marking the start of a campaign against racial oppression, as legend has it, this episode was the start of a campaign to extend racial segregation in South Africa. Gandhi was adamant that “respectable Indians” should not be obliged to use the same facilities as “raw Kaffirs”. He petitioned the authorities in the port city of Durban, where he practised law, to end the indignity of making Indians use the same entrance to the post office as blacks, and counted it a victory when three doors were introduced: one for Europeans, one for Asiatics and one for Natives.

Gandhi’s genuine achievement as a political leader in India was to create a new form of protest, a mass public assertion which could, in the right circumstances, change history. It depended ultimately on a responsive government. He figured, from what he knew of British democracy, that the House of Commons would only be willing to suppress uprisings to a limited degree before conceding. If he had faced a different opponent, he would have had a different fate. When the former Viceroy of India, Lord Halifax, saw Adolf Hitler in 1938, the Führer suggested that he have Gandhi shot; and that if nationalist protests continued, members of the Indian National Congress should be killed in increments of 200.

For other Indian leaders who opposed Gandhi, he could be a fiendish opponent. His claim to represent “in his person” all the oppressed castes of India outraged the Dalit leader Dr BR Ambedkar. Gandhi even told him that they were not permitted to join his association to abolish untouchability. “You owe nothing to the debtors, and therefore, so far as this board is concerned, the initiative has to come from the debtors.” Who could argue with Gandhi the lawyer? The whole object of this proposal, Ambedkar responded angrily, “is to create a slave mentality among the Untouchables towards their Hindu masters”.

Although Gandhi may have looked like a saint, in an outfit designed to represent the poor of rural India, he was above all a wily operator and tactician. Having lived in Britain and South Africa, he was familiar with the system that he was attempting to subvert. He knew how to undermine the British, when to press an advantage and when to withdraw. Little wonder that one British provincial governor described Mr Gandhi as being as “cunning as a cartload of monkeys”.

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Pakistanis Will Never Forget for 1000 years. They Will Get Even: No matter how many times India hides or deny its treacherous role in breaking-up United Pakistan

.Wily Hindu is an apt title given by the British to Hindus and Gandhi
 
AS MAKAAR HINDU INDIA REMOVES TRACES OF ROLE IN BREAKING UP OF PAKISTAN THROUGH ITS MUKTI BAHINI INFILTRATORS IN 1971
 
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Truth lost? Most military records of Bangladesh war missing
 
Josy Joseph, TNN, 
NEW DELHI: May 9, 2010
 
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The history of the 1971 India-Pakistan war will never be fully written. Most of the official records of the war that led to the liberation of Bangladesh have been destroyed. The destroyed files include those on the creation of the Mukti Bahini — the Bangladesh ‘freedom fighters’ — all appreciation and assessments made by the army during the war period, the orders issued to fighting formations, and other sensitive operational details.
 
Authoritative army sources said all records of the period, held at the Eastern Command in Kolkota, were destroyed immediately after the 1971 war. This has remained secret until now. According to at least two former chiefs of the Eastern Command and other senior army officers TOI spoke to, the destruction may have been deliberate. 
 
They say the destruction may have happened when Lt General Jagjit Singh Aurora, the Indian army’s commanding officer on the eastern front, headed the Eastern Command. If true, this would be at odds with Aurora’s image as the hero who led his men to victory and the Pakistan army’s surrender in Dhaka.
 
The sensational fact that the files were missing became known only recently when the Eastern Command was searching for details of the Mukti Bahini camps in order to organize a reception for Bangladeshi veterans. The Indian Army had housed the freedom fighters (Mukti Bahini) in different camps across India, where army instructors trained them in warfare. Later, Mukti Bahini fighters were part of the operations led by the eastern command.
 
A senior army source told TOI, “We were looking for the details of Mukti Bahini camps. We wanted to know where all the camps were, who were in charge etc. When those files were not available, the eastern army command launched a hunt for the records of the war. That is when we realized that the entire records are missing.”
 
Lt Gen (retd) JFR Jacob, who was chief of staff of the eastern command during the war and later its head, admitted the records were missing, when asked if this were true. ”When I took over as Eastern Army commander in August 1974 I asked to see the records. I was told that they have been shredded,” he told TOI. He refused to discuss who ordered the destruction of the records.
 
The army headquarters and various units of the army may have some records of the war, a senior army officer said. But the picture will never be complete, he said, adding that military records maintained at the nerve center of operations are crucial if one is ever to construct the full picture. The details are significant as this operation is one of the great success stories ofIndian intelligence and the army.
 
Josy Joseph, TNN, 
NEW DELHI: May 9, 2010
 
The history of the 1971 India-Pakistan war will never be fully written. Most of the official records of the war that led to the liberation of Bangladesh have been destroyed. The destroyed files include those on the creation of the Mukti Bahini — the Bangladesh ‘freedom fighters’ — all appreciation and assessments made by the army during the war period, the orders issued to fighting formations, and other sensitive operational details.
 
Authoritative army sources said all records of the period, held at the Eastern Command in Kolkota, were destroyed immediately after the 1971 war. This has remained secret until now. According to at least two former chiefs of the Eastern Command and other senior army officers TOI spoke to, the destruction may have been deliberate. 
 
They say the destruction may have happened when Lt General Jagjit Singh Aurora, the Indian army’s commanding officer on the eastern front, headed the Eastern Command. If true, this would be at odds with Aurora’s image as the hero who led his men to victory and the Pakistan army’s surrender in Dhaka.
 
The sensational fact that the files were missing became known only recently when the Eastern Command was searching for details of the Mukti Bahini camps in order to organize a reception for Bangladeshi veterans. The Indian Army had housed the freedom fighters (Mukti Bahini) in different camps across India, where army instructors trained them in warfare. Later, Mukti Bahini fighters were part of the operations led by the eastern command.
 
A senior army source told TOI, “We were looking for the details of Mukti Bahini camps. We wanted to know where all the camps were, who were in charge etc. When those files were not available, the eastern army command launched a hunt for the records of the war. That is when we realized that the entire records are missing.”
 
Lt Gen (retd) JFR Jacob, who was chief of staff of the eastern command during the war and later its head, admitted the records were missing, when asked if this were true. ”When I took over as Eastern Army commander in August 1974 I asked to see the records. I was told that they have been shredded,” he told TOI. He refused to discuss who ordered the destruction of the records.
 
The army headquarters and various units of the army may have some records of the war, a senior army officer said. But the picture will never be complete, he said, adding that military records maintained at the nerve center of operations are crucial if one is ever to construct the full picture. 
 

 

Reference

 

 
 

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VIDEO: SHINING INDIA

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MUMBAI
February 23, 2011 | Shreya Bhandary , TNN
MUMBAI: The father of a 13-year-old schoolboy accused of posting obscene messages on his principal’s Facebook page has not only denied the charge, but has also alleged that the principal replied to the posts with more abusive language. The father said a friend of his son-who is a class VIII student of M P Shah High School, Vile Parle-posted the messages. He also said his son had been expelled from school. However, the principal denied that the boy was handed a leaving certificate, but…
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March 16, 2013 | TNN
MADURAI: A gang of six went on a rampage, vandalising couple of the streets in Kamarajapuram area on Thursday night. The gang not only caused damage to vehicles and houses in the area but also injured a few residents. Ponnusamy, 64, who was sleeping outside his house was attacked with a stone residents in the area said. They added that the aged man’s hand was fractured in the incident. The public in the area said the gang used abusive language and demolished every object they found on the streets,…
 
PATNA
April 18, 2009 | TNN
PATNA: BJP spokesman Ravi Shankar Prasad on Saturday condemned RJD supremo Lalu Prasad for allegedly using abusive language against NDA’s prime ministerial candidate L K Advani at Darbhanga, and also asked PM Manmohan Singh to dismiss Lalu from his cabinet to show for one last time that he was “not a weak PM. ” Prasad also said that the Election Commission (EC) should take notice of what Lalu has said, and accordingly, it should take appropriate action on the matter, since his language was…
RAJKOT
December 14, 2011 | TNN
RAJKOT: A complaint has been filed against leader of opposition in Bhavnagar Municipal Corporation (BMC) Rajesh Joshi under Prevention of Atrocities against Schedule Castes and Schedule Tribes Act. According to B Division police station officials in Bhavnagar, the complaint was filed on December 12 by a Dalit living in Anandnagar area of the city Dayabhai Chauhan against Joshi, who is a Congress councillor from Krushnanagar area. Chauhan has alleged that Joshi used abusive…
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March 2, 2013 | Hiren Kotwani , TNN
Apart from earning acclaim for his films like Saheb Biwi Aur Gangster and Pan Singh Tomar, director Tigmanshu Dhulia was also praised for the aesthetically shot love-making scenes in the movie. Ironically, the filmmaker admits that he’s in fact, very uncomfortable while shooting such intimate love-making sequences. Asked about it, Tigmanshu attributes it to being restricted by “our own culture. ” He explains, “Let me tell you that today’s actors are a lot more evolved….
BHUBANESWAR
February 22, 2013 | TNN
BHUBANESWAR: The CPM on Thursday condemned the alleged misbehaviour by Bhubaneswar DCP Nitinjeet Singh’s against party state general secretary Janardan Pati and four other activists, who were waiting to meet speaker Pradip Kumar Amat, outside the Odisha assembly. They demanded immediate suspension of DCP Nitinjeet Singh for allegedly abusing a senior political leader like Pati. Addressing a joint press meet, CPI leader Dibakar Nayak said, “When the protest…
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July 9, 2011 | Deepika Sahu , TNN
Superstar Amitabh Bachchan says he is not comfortable using abusive languages either in his personal life or on silver screen. But he says, each to his own. Elaborating this, he adds, ” India is a free and democratic country. Our Constitution has guidelines on freedom of expression. People have their creative freedom to do films. And we have a censor board too. So, I am not here to pass judgement on what should be done and what should not be done. I can only talk about…
VADODARA
July 10, 2010 | PTI
VADODARA: A city-based convent school has suspended six girl students of class X and XII for a week for allegedly using ‘abusive’ language on the social networking site Facebook. After learning about the incident, the district education officer has ordered an enquiry into the incident. However, it was not clear when the students were suspended. Talking to PTI on phone on Saturday , the Jesus and Mary school …
MUMBAI
December 24, 2012 | Mateen Hafeez , TNN
MUMBAI: The Malabar Hill police arrested a BJP member for using derogatory remarks while talking to a woman hawker. The accused, Mohan Saini, was arrested three weeks after the victim complained to the police. He was arrested and released on a surety of Rs 15,000, police sources said. Senior police officials at the Malabar Hill police station said that the victim, a fish vendor, had lodged a complaint against Saini, the local BJP member, stating that he had used abusive…
PUNE
July 13, 2012 | Syed Rizwanullah , TNN
AURANGABAD: The Aurangabad commissioner of police Sanjay Kumar recently suspended police inspector Rajendra Singh Dhobal, posted at the Jinsi police station here for allegedly creating scenes and using abusive language against senior police officers and fellow policemen on the police commissionerate premises. Police said that inspector Dhobal, who was posted as second PI (police inspector) at the Jinsi police station, had some grievance…
INDIA
October 25, 2002 | PTI
NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee on Friday made an oblique attack on VHP leader Pravin Togadia whose certain remarks against Congress president Sonia Gandhi had sparked off a major controversy recently. Without naming the VHP leader, Vajpayee said that there was no place for violence or abusive language in politics. “One should not cross the limits of decency and decorum and only civilised language should be used,” he said addressing a rally to…
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February 21, 2013 | TNN
PUNE : Tension prevailed in Rahatvade village in Havelitaluka on Wednesday afternoon, after two men, accused of thrashing a pregnant woman on Sunday, were released on bail. A group of women gathered at the Rajgad police station and demanded stringent action against the duo. The police promised to take preventive action against the youths, Rajendra Dardige and Sonya Chorge, both 21 years old. Investigating officer Pradip Jadhav told TOI that the complainant, who…
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM
February 16, 2013 | TNN
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: The One Billion Rising (OBR) campaign held at Sanghumukham on Thursday had an interesting culmination. Amrita Mohan, a college student, who led a bike rally and presented karate and kalaripayattu (traditional form of martial art that started in Kerala) at the event, had to deal with two men who abused her after the programme. In tune with the OBR campaign, which urges women to ‘Strike, dance and rise’ against violence, she beat them up and filed a complaint. “After…
KANPUR
January 30, 2013 | Faiz Rahman Siddiqui , TNN
KANPUR: Image of the city police has been sullied again with a former student of the Indian Institute of Technology being allegedly beaten up mercilessly in full public view because he protested against a policemen using foul language at the Bada Chauraha crossing. The police, however, claimed that the youth had jumped a traffic signal and did not stop when he was asked to.The incident took place on Monday afternoon when Aman Singh, a resident of Barra area of the city and an IIT-K pass-out, was…
BHOPAL
January 26, 2013 | TNN
BHOPAL: Police booked an MBA student and an aspiring chartered accountant (CA) on charges of beating up their roommate, an engineering student, in Saket Nagar locality on January 22. A case has been registered at the Bagh Sewania police station on Thursday evening. Victim, Prakash Gautam and the accused- Ravindra Singh and Dharmendra- were roommates. Police said the dispute started after Ravindra’s lost his mobile phone from the room and he suspected Gautam of…
MUMBAI
January 26, 2013 | V Narayan , TNN
MUMBAI: The Mulund police registered two non-cognizable offences in the complaint filed against a software engineer by a 48-year-old chartered accountant, both residents of Willow Twin Towers in Mulund (West). The complainant had alleged that on January 23 and 24, the accused fought with her over a parking place and used abusive language. The accused reportedly also threatened her that she would meet the same fate as Delhi’s Nirbhaya for complaining against him. The police visited the engineer’s...

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STOP DEGRADATION OF WOMEN IN INDIA: How India can end the sexual attacks on women and children

Sex scandal ‘swamy’ Nithyananda named ‘Mahamandaleshwar’

 

By NitiCentral Staff on February 14, 2013

 

 Sex scandal 'swamy' Nithyananda named 'Mahamandaleshwar' Nithyananda, who was in the centre of a sex scandal, has inexplicably been conferred the honorific title of ‘Mahamandaleshwar’.

The Mahanirvani Akhara of ‘naga’ sadhus has conferred this title on controversial self-styled godman Nithyananda.

“Swami Nithyananda is a prominent seer who has been taking part in all the Kumbh congregations. He was conferred with the title of Mahamandaleshwar at a ceremony held at our camp in the ongoing Kumbh Mela Wednesday night,” Sachiv (secretary) of Mahanirvani Akhara Mahant Ravindra Puri told newspersons on Thursday.

The move was aimed at dispelling the notion that seers from the south were not given due representation in akharas, he said.

Asked about the controversies surrounding Nithyananda, Puri said “Akharas believe in giving people an opportunity for redemption. Moreover, the allegations against him are his personal matter and have nothing to do with the Mahanirvani Akhara.”

Swami Narendra Giri of the Niranjani Akhara said the title of ‘Mahamandaleshwar’ is conferred in the presence of representatives of all the 13 akharas. “In this case, the formality was not observed and hence conferring of the title cannot be said to have been in order,” he said. He, however, evaded a direct reply when asked about the propriety of conferring the title on the controversial godman.

Meanwhile, the self-styled godman who had been staying in the Kumbh Mela for the past fortnight, has left for Varanasi, sources in the Mahanirvani Akhara said.

 

 

 
 

Leaving gaps

The picture is similarly shocking for women across India. In 2011, 65% of men surveyed said they thought it was OK to beat a woman; last month, after the brutal Delhi gang rape, a survey showed that 92% of men in Delhi knew someone who had harassed or sexually assaulted a woman.

The temporary ordinance just signed by India’s President Pranab Mukherjee toughens penalties for rape (in fact, it allows for the death penalty, against the recommendation of the panel headed by Jagdish Sharan Verma, former chief justice of India, who was tasked with suggesting revisions to the rape laws). It also adds penalties for stalking, acid attacks and trafficking of women and children.

But the ordinance ignores recommendations from the Verma committee to criminalise marital rape and remove barriers to prosecuting soldiers for rape.

It also changes the legal term rape to sexual assault, making it gender neutral. That might seem a progressive move; many countries, including the UK and the US, already have legal language that makes sexual violence a crime, whether perpetrated by males or females. But many activists fear that India’s notoriously slow and ineffective legal system will become bogged down as men accused of rape file counter charges against their victims, saying the women sexually assaulted them.

These omissions in the new law leave big gaps in protection for women and leave many wondering whether the government is at all serious about ending the epidemic of violence against women and girls.

Laws are not enough

At root, all these horrors grow from cultural attitudes that see women and children as worth less than men. And it’ll take more than changes in the law to make the key shift here.

The child sex abuse epidemic demands that there be training for police, courts, social workers and medical personnel so they know how to properly respond to child sex abuse. There must be reliable monitoring, oversight and enforcement of the law and related policies – and above all, perpetrators must know that sexual abuse of children will be punished.

Meanwhile, Avaaz has proposed a massive, sustained public education campaign across India to cure the epidemic of violence against women by driving home the message that it’s always wrong. The effort would enlist top celebrities from the worlds of sport and entertainment, as well as social leaders across the board, in a high-profile programme of media outreach and engagement focused on transforming people’s attitudes.

It won’t be cheap; to be effective, this campaign will likely cost about 50 rupees (about $1) per person per year. That works out to $1.2bn annually for at least four years running – and core education programmes should carry on for decades.

But look at the price, in money as well as human suffering, of the current situation. Keeping India’s women and children under a state of siege has untold costs, from stifling economic growth to the emotional and psychological stresses of constant fear and uncertainty.

 

Avaaz activists in India drove a symbolic pink bus through New Delhi to demand a mass public education campaign to cure India’s rape epidemic (Avaaz)

 

This type of campaign can change even deeply entrenched social attitudes. In the US, drink driving – once seen as relatively harmless – is now widely frowned upon. Cigarette smoking – once something a majority of adults did – has been socially stigmatised and continues to shrink. In India, the Bell Bajao campaigndramatically increased awareness of laws and discussion on domestic violence.

So by continuing to strengthen legal protections for women and children, as well as embarking on a focused, sustained campaign to shift cultural attitudes, India can end the culture of impunity for abusers – and help set the global standard for how a just and compassionate society treats them.

There may never be a better moment to fix this problem, and make sure that something good finally comes from an appalling tragedy on a Delhi bus.

Read more: Check out Curing India’s Rape Epidemic: The Education Option, Avaaz’s forward-looking proposal for making the difference for women in India. Then pledge below to help end the global war on women – and share this with everyone.

Sources: Avaaz, India Today, Wall Street Journal, Al Jazeera, Association for Democratic Reforms, CNN, Unicef, Christian Science Monitor, Human Rights Watch, International Centre for Research on Women, NDTV, IBN Live, Times of India, First Post, Tehelka, Washington Post, National Institutes of Health, Bell Bajao

http://en.avaaz.org/1334/how-india-can-end-the-attacks-on-women-and-children?utm_campaign=sexual-violence&utm_source=post_action&utm_content=4668&utm_medium=avaaz_core

http://www.niticentral.com/2013/02/14/sex-scandal-swamy-nithyananda-named-mahamandaleshwar-46769.html

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