HOW should one judge the lot of
women in India, a country that is in many ways progressive, modern, tolerant
and yet by turns repressive and hostile? Women hold the highest political
positions (the presidency, speaker of parliament, leader of the ruling party,
leader of the opposition in parliament, several chief ministers of large
states) and in theory they are protected by a variety laws promoting equality.
Though development indicators remain
dire, just about all statistics show their lives improving. Women are more
literate than ever (last year’s census suggests two-thirds of them can read,
compared with fewer than two-fifths in 1991). They are becoming less likely to
die in childbirth (well under half the rate of 1990). And they live much
longer: at 66 years, India’s female life expectancy outstrips the male one by
some three years. Like men, on average they live in better homes than they did
in previous years, with more access to health care and schools, telephones and
transport.
Yet weigh against such trends the
dismal persistence of discrimination, violence and other forms of hostility
against girls and women. A cultural preference for boys, combined with modern
technology such as ultrasound scanners, allows parents to identify and abort
unwanted female fetuses at a terrifying rate. Millions of girls are missing
from the demographic norm. Despite laws against sex-selective abortion (or even
finding out the sex of your unborn child), in many places the child sex-ratio is growing
dangerously skewed.
It is tempting to hope that progress
is only a matter of time: that, for example, in the more urban, modern bits of
India the lot of women is clearly getting better. In some ways, that must be
true: access to medicine, education, paying jobs and more are easier in town.
Yet not all is better. Abortion of girl fetuses appears to happen most
frequently in semi-urban areas, not villages. In India’s cities violent attacks
against women, and their harassment generally, are depressingly common. Nor is
the habit of paying dowries (in effect the family of the husband being paid for
the burden of taking on a daughter-in-law) dying out.
Perhaps most dispiriting of all,
however, is to see women let down by the very institutions and political
leaders who should know better. In February the government of West Bengal
reacted to the gang-rape of a young woman who had left a posh nightclub in
Kolkata by accusing the victim of having plotted a conspiracy to discredit the
chief minister of the state. The policewoman who then tracked down the perpetrators
was herself punished, being transferred to an unpopular post.
As shocking, this week a deputy
inspector-general of police in the state of Uttar Pradesh was shown on
television encouraging villagers to shoot a 14-year-old girl who had been
abducted earlier by elder men. Her family had asked the policeman, Satish Kumar
Mathur, to send officers to help rescue her. He responded, instead, by advising
“if she has eloped, you should be ashamed of it and end your life. I would have
committed suicide or killed my sister if she had eloped.” On May 10th the
policeman was reassigned, presumably to be kept out of sight until the public
fuss dies down.
Such murders as Mr Mathur
recommends—misnamed as “honour killings”, since the victims are typically
killed by relatives who believe they somehow preserve family reputation by
doing so—remain depressingly common in India and the region. By one estimate
over 1,000 Indians (both men and women) fall victim to it each year. Another
suggests that roughly as many Pakistanis die this way each year.
India’s most recent national records
show increasing reports of crimes against women in the years to 2010. These
include rape, abduction, dowry death (women murdered or committing suicide when
their dowries go unpaid), molestation and trafficking, with cruelty by husbands
and relatives accounting for a large proportion of offences. Yet whether the
rate of crime against women is rising is hard to judge: the figures could
possibly, more hopefully, reflect the fact that such offences, taken more
seriously than before, are reported better.
Banyan, for The Economist (Picture credit: Wikimedia Commons)
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