Had done this piece for Femina magazine in 2010. Posting it here now because it is still relevant.
It isn’t hard to picture – a raped woman seeks justice but is humiliated and harangued further as her ‘virtue’ is called into question. It sounds like a tacky 1980s Bollywood film plot, doesn’t it? The great tragedy is that if they didn’t get anything else right, in this one respect, filmmakers did stay close to the truth. Despite theoretically sound laws and a string of empowering judgments from the highest courts in the land, a rape trial inIndia
remains a deeply traumatic experience for Indian women and their families. An
Indian rape survivor continues to be examined by misinformed doctors. Her past
relationships, real or alleged, continue to be dragged into courtrooms. She
continues to face threats of further violence.
India ’s
popping economic muscles have not done much to curb violence against women.
Between 1990 and 2008, rape statistics showed an increase of 112 percent.
According to the National Crime Records Bureau, 21,467 rapes were reported in
2008, but most researchers believe the figures are much higher since most women
don’t go the police. Of the limited number of cases where the trial is
completed, the conviction rate is only 26%.
Aruna Kashyap, who researched and authored ‘Dignity on Trial’, says defining the law in terms of modesty is very problematic for it presumes women are modest. “Ideas of good girl and bad girl need to be challenged. The law should protect women’s rights. You also need doctors, police, prosecutors and judges to be trained to grow aware of these rights.”
It isn’t hard to picture – a raped woman seeks justice but is humiliated and harangued further as her ‘virtue’ is called into question. It sounds like a tacky 1980s Bollywood film plot, doesn’t it? The great tragedy is that if they didn’t get anything else right, in this one respect, filmmakers did stay close to the truth. Despite theoretically sound laws and a string of empowering judgments from the highest courts in the land, a rape trial in
Unscientific,
unusable, unnecessary.
Starting from the moment a rape survivor
picks herself up and goes to a hospital, her trauma multiplies if she is made
to undergo a ‘finger test’, which is supposed to assess whether the victim is a
virgin or ‘habituated to sexual intercourse’.
Describing it as ‘unscientific, inhuman and
degrading’, a recent Human Rights Watch report titled ‘Dignity on Trial’ points
out that the finger test has no forensic value. It is also legally irrelevant
since the Supreme Court has ruled that a woman’s ‘habituation to sexual
intercourse’ is immaterial. Yet, earlier this year, the Delhi
and Maharashtra governments introduced a new
forensic examination template for rape survivors which seek details about
‘hymenal orifice size’.
The report found at least three government
hospitals in Mumbai, “including one where more than a thousand rape survivors
are examined every year” continue to conduct the test. As if that wasn’t
enough, they found that survivors make “grueling trips from one hospital or
ward to another, and receive multiple examinations at each stop. Medical
workers frequently collect evidence inadequately or insensitively, and it may
then be lost, poorly stored, or subject to processing delays, rendering it
unusable.”
While the ‘finger test’ is technically
irrelevant, it does impact trials. Courts do make comments about the victim’s
character. In a 2009 rape case, the Supreme Court made remarks like: “the
prosecutrix appears to be a lady used to sexual intercourse and a dissolute
lady.”
Veena Gowda, a women’s rights lawyer,
points out that law is a subjective field since it manned by people, usually
men. “Look at the whole thing of getting a rapist to marry his victim,” she
says. “It is a patriarchal society’s way of morally resolving the issue. It
still looks at rape as a violation of a woman’s ‘purity’ instead of violence
done to her.”
V for
Violation, V for Violence
Against this constant dissection of her
morals, it takes a woman almost super-human courage to trust the judicial
system and get the rapists punished. Monica Sakhrani, a criminal lawyer and a
teacher, believes that the construction of rape law is slightly problematic
since it hinges on a women’s consent. “It puts the woman in the dock. You start
looking at who she is, where she comes from. Her relationship with the rapist
is questioned. But the man’s behaviour is rarely in the dock unless the victim
is a child, or the man is from a lower class.”
Defense lawyers often imply that
familiarity with a man automatically translates into consent. Even police
statistics say that in 91% of rape cases, the victims knew the accused. Monica
illustrates what an impossible situation this creates for women by referring to
the infamous Jalgaon case of the 90s. “In 2000, the Bombay High Court acquitted
a man in a case where the girl was 17, since she had gone to the man’s house.
The assumption is: ‘What do you expect when you go to the man’s house alone?’
So if you can only expect sex, then they assume consent was given.”
The
New Guard for a Newer Generation
Despite current problems, Monica doesn’t
despair. There have been progressive judgments and the women’s movement had its
successes. Since 2005, a woman’s sexual history is no longer admissible in
court as evidence in rape cases. A survivor can also hire lawyers to assist the
public prosecutor. This is a huge step forward since prosecutors are underpaid,
overworked and rarely trained to deal with gender violence. Besides, they
might have prejudices about what kind of woman gets raped. A ‘watching
advocate’ allows the victim a voice.
Women’s collectives are helping the
government draft a new definition of sexual violence. Currently, the assumption
is that the worst kind of violence is penetrative. Rape laws are restricted to
penile-vaginal penetration. Sections 354 and 509 of the IPC deal with anything
ranging from ‘obscene’ singing to fondling of breasts – everything encompassed
by ‘outraging a woman’s modesty’.
Aruna Kashyap, who researched and authored ‘Dignity on Trial’, says defining the law in terms of modesty is very problematic for it presumes women are modest. “Ideas of good girl and bad girl need to be challenged. The law should protect women’s rights. You also need doctors, police, prosecutors and judges to be trained to grow aware of these rights.”
Sadly, even minor girls aren’t spared the
moral posturing as was shamefully evident after a
nine-year-old Russian girl was raped in Goa .
The state’s Deputy Director of Tourism, Pamela Mascarenhas went on record to
say: “walking on the beaches half-naked is bound to titillate the senses.”
There have also been
instances of the finger test being performed on girls as young as six. Maharukh Adenwalla, who has often worked as a watching advocate for
minors, says children face court procedures they don’t always understand. Many
children don’t yet have the language to explain what happened. She recalls a
cases where a 10 year old was raped. “She testified when she was 13. There were
three men accused and each had his own lawyer. Each lawyer cross-examined the
girl. She was in the witness box for six days and just couldn’t understand why
they were making her out to be a liar.”
Truth
and Trauma
Any woman would be shattered by the
allegation that she is lying about the brutality she suffered, but defense
lawyers often badger even children. Anuja Gupta of RAHI,
an organisation that works with survivors of child abuse, has heard
horror stories about children being made to stand on benches to give testimony,
like they were being punished.
The law has little understanding of trauma,
according to Anuja. “Victims cannot retell the story in a clear, sequential
manner. The story might change. That is the nature of trauma. It doesn’t mean
it didn’t happen. But judges aren’t trained to deal with trauma.”
RAHI is part of a collective that sent suggestions for criminal law amendments to the
home ministry. The collective wants rape laws to include ‘persons other than
women’ so adult men and transgendered people can seek justice too. It also
wants the children’s section to be gender-neutral.
In the meantime, a first progressive step
forward would be to do away with the finger test. CEHAT (Centre for Enquiry
into Health and Allied Themes) has come up with a rape toolkit called SAFE to
collect forensic evidence and conduct medical examinations.
Padma Deosthali, a senior researcher at
CEHAT, says their chief concern is treatment and evidence collection. “We intervene
in rape cases reported in three hospitals in Mumbai. More than 50% cases are of
non-penetrative assault. The other issue is that hospitals ask for police
intervention. Their primary job is to provide treatment and follow-up care. The
victim’s injuries may show up later and are an important part of the evidence.”
Another major gap is our lack of a witness
protection regime. Padma says she was horrified while visiting a six year old
victim in hospital. “The mother of the accused came into the ward and
threatened the victim’s mother, saying ‘if your girl hasn’t been raped yet, we
will ensure she is raped later’. In India , most rapists have easy
access to victims and parents.”
The law needs to protect and assist people
who report violence. Finally, it also needs to address sexual violence within
marriage and amongst sex workers. In both instances, consent is taken for
granted. But even here, change can be wrought.
Meena Seshu, who works with commercial sex
workers through SANGRAM, remembers, “When I began work with the sex workers,
even murder was not reported. If they tried to report violence, the police
wouldn’t even put it in the diary. They’d take money from both parties and call
it a ‘negotiation’. Now sex workers are organised, and violence does get
reported.”
Marital rape is almost never reported
though. Married women might talk of husbands ‘using force’ or ‘not listening’
but they don’t go to the police.
It might take years before India finds a
way of investigating marital rape. For now, Veerappa Moily must answer the
activists who wrote to him saying: “Change in the structure of humiliation
which typifies rape trials is not possible unless medical jurisprudence
textbooks and procedures are changed.”
Indeed, Mr Law Minister. If you cannot
prevent rape, stop the public humiliation of women and children. You owe the
nation that much.
BOX:
Things to remember about rape law and
investigative procedures:
- Courts have held the
finger test ‘obsolete’ and ‘violative’ of your fundamental rights.
- Victim’s sexual
history is inadmissible as evidence.
- Women cannot be taken into custody after sunset and before sunrise.
- When women are arrested or interrogated,
a policewoman must be present.
- There are legal precedents allowing a
delay in reporting the crime.
- In cases of statutory rape, there are
legal precedents for hearings in a judge’s chamber, or for a screen to be
placed between the victim and the accused.
- If a child is involved, the law has
provisions for the defense lawyer to put questions through the judge, who will
address the victim in a non-threatening way.
- A rape survivor can hire her own lawyer
to assist the prosecution
1 comment:
Here goes my first blog post and my story..I hope u like it.
http://padhyb.blogspot.in/2013/04/ABiggerBeggar.html
Thanks,
Bibaswan Padhy
Post a Comment