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Mar-16-2014 17:18printcomments

Gender and Caste Discrimination in India

Although all women in India face discrimination and sexual intimidation, according to the UN the “human rights of Dalit women are violated in peculiar and extreme forms.

India caste system
Special thanks to Redress News & Analysis

(London Redress News & Analysis) - A suffocating patriarchal shadow hangs over the lives of women throughout India. From all sections, castes and classes of society, women are victim of its repressive, controlling effects. Those subjected to the heaviest burden of discrimination are from the Dalit or “Scheduled Castes”, known in less liberal democratic times as the “Untouchables”. The name may have been banned but pervasive negative attitudes of mind remain, as do the extreme levels of abuse and servitude experienced by Dalit women. They experience multiple levels of discrimination and exploitation, much of which is barbaric, degrading, appallingly violent and totally inhumane.

Women and “Untouchables”

The divisive caste system – in operation throughout India, “Old” and “New” – together with inequitable gender attitudes, sits at the heart of the wide-ranging human rights abuses experienced by Dalit or “outcaste” women.

“Discriminatory and cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment of over 165 million people in India has been justified on the basis of caste,” according to Human Rights Watch (HRW).

Caste refers to a traditional Hindu model of social stratification, which defines people by descent and occupation. It is defined as

    a system of graded inequality in which castes are arranged according to an ascending scale of reverence, and a descending scale of contempt… i.e. as you go up the caste system, the power and status of a caste group increases and as you go down the scale the degree of contempt for the caste increases, as these castes have no power, are of low status, and are regarded as dirty and polluting.

Hence the term “untouchable”.

Despite what Navi Pillay, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, states as India’s “far-reaching constitutional guarantees and laws which prohibit caste-based discrimination”, Dalit women are the victims of a collision of deep-rooted gender and caste discrimination, resulting in wide ranging exploitation. They are “oppressed by the broader Indian society, men from their own community and also their own husbands and male members in the family”, according to the UN. Practices like Devadasi, whereby girls as young as 12 years of age are dedicated to the Hindu goddess Yellamma and sold into prostitution; honour killings; sexual abuse, including rape; appalling working conditions; and limited access to basic services such as water, sanitation and employment are commonplace.

Although all women in India face discrimination and sexual intimidation, according to the UN the “human rights of Dalit women are violated in peculiar and extreme forms. Stripping, naked parading, caste abuses, pulling out nails and hair, sexual slavery and bondage are a few forms peculiar to Dalit women.” These women live under a form of apartheid: discrimination, and social exclusion is a major factor, denying them access ”to common property resources like land, water and livelihood sources, [causing] exclusion from schools, places of worship, common dining, inter-caste marriages”.

The lower castes are segregated from other members of the community, prohibited from eating with “higher” castes, from using village wells and ponds, entering village temples and higher caste houses, wearing sandals or even holding umbrellas in front of higher castes; they are forced to sit alone and use different crockery in restaurants, prohibited from cycling a bicycle inside their village and are made to bury their dead in a separate burial ground. They frequently face eviction from their land by higher “dominant” castes, forcing them to live on the outskirts of villages often on barren land.

This plethora of prejudice amounts to apartheid, and it is time – long overdue – that the “democratic” government of India enforced existing legislation and purged the country of the criminality of caste- and gender-based discrimination and exploitation.

Exploitation and patriarchal power

The power play of patriarchy saturates every area of Indian society and gives rise to a variety of discriminatory practices, such as female infanticide, discrimination against girls and dowry-related deaths. It is a major cause of exploitation and abuse of women, with a great deal of sexual violence being perpetrated by men in positions of power. These range from higher caste men violating lower caste women, specifically Dalits; policemen mistreating women from poor households; and military men abusing Dalit and Adivasi women in insurgency states such as Kashmir, Chhatisgarh, Jharkhand, Orissa and Manipur. Security personnel are protected by the widely criticized Armed Forces Special Powers Act, which grants impunity to police and members of the military carrying out criminal acts of rape and indeed murder; it was promulgated by the British in 1942 as an emergency measure, to suppress the Quit India Movement. It is an unjust law, which needs abolishing.

In December 2012 the heinous gang rape and mutilation of a 23-year-old paramedical student in New Delhi, who subsequently died from her injuries, garnered worldwide media attention, throwing a momentary spotlight on the dangers, oppression and appalling treatment women in India face every day. Rape is endemic in the country. According to India’s National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), registered rape cases increased by almost 900 per cent over the last 40 years, to 24,206 incidents in 2011. With most cases of rape going unreported and many being dismissed by police, the true figure could be 10 times this. The women most at risk of abuse are Dalits: the NCRB estimates that more than four Dalit-women are raped every day in India. A UN study reveals that “the majority of Dalit women report having faced one or more incidents of verbal abuse (62.4 per cent), physical assault (54.8 per cent), sexual harassment and assault (46.8 per cent), domestic violence (43.0 per cent) and rape (23.2 per cent)”. They are subjected to “rape, molestation, kidnapping, abduction, homicide physical and mental torture, immoral traffic and sexual abuse.”

The UN found that large numbers were obstructed from seeking justice: in 17 per cent of instances of violence (including rape) victims were obstructed from reporting the crime by the police; in over 25 per cent of cases the community stopped women filing complaints; and in over 40 per cent women “did not attempt to obtain legal or community remedies for the violence primarily out of fear of the perpetrators or social dishonour if (sexual) violence was revealed”. In only 1 per cent of recorded cases were  the perpetrators convicted. What “follows incidents of violence”, the UN found, is “a resounding silence”. The effect when it comes to Dalit women specifically, but not exclusively, “is the creation and maintenance of a culture of violence, silence and impunity”.

The Indian constitution makes clear the “principle of non-discrimination on the basis of caste or gender”. It guarantees the “right to life and to security of life”. Article 46 specifically “protects Dalits from social injustice and all forms of exploitation”. Add to this the important Scheduled Castes and Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act of 1989, and a well-armed legislative army is formed. However, because of “low levels of implementation”, the UN states, “the provisions that protect women’s rights have to be considered empty of meaning”. It is a familiar Indian story: judicial indifference (as well as cost, lack of access to legal representation, endless red-tape and obstructive staff), police corruption, and government collusion, plus media indifference causing the major obstacles to justice and the observation and enforcement of the law.

Unlike middle class girls, Dalit rape victims (whose numbers are growing) rarely receive the attention of the caste/class-conscious urban-centric media, whose primary concern is to promote a Bollywood shiny, open-for-business image of the country.

I was in India in January 2014 when a 20-year-old Dalit woman from the Santhal tribal group in West Bengal was gang-raped, allegedly “on the orders of village elders who objected to her relationship (which had been going on in secret for five years) with a man from a nearby village in the Birdhum district”. The violent incident occurred when, according to a BBC report,

    the man visited the woman’s home… with the proposal of marriage, villagers spotted him and organized a kangaroo court. During the ‘proceedings’ the couple were made to sit with hands tied… the headman of the woman’s village fined the couple 25,000 rupees (400 US dollars;  GBP 240) for “the crime of falling in love. The man paid up, but the woman’s family were unable to pay.

Consequently, the “headman” and 12 of his cohorts repeatedly raped her.

Violence, exploitation and exclusion are used to keep Dalit women in a position of subordination and to maintain the patriarchal grip on power throughout Indian society.

The cities are dangerous places for women, but it is in the countryside, where most people live (70 per cent) that the greatest levels of abuse occur. Many living in rural areas live in extreme poverty (800 million people in India live on less than 2.50 dollars a day), with little or no access to health care, poor education and appalling or non-existent sanitation. It is a world apart from democratic Delhi, or Westernized Mumbai: water, electricity, democracy and the rule of law are yet to reach into the lives of the women in India’s villages, which are home, Mahatma Gandhi famously declared, to the soul of the country.

No surprise, then, that after two decades of economic growth, India finds itself languishing 136th (of 186 countries) in the (gender equality adjusted) United Nations Human Development index

Repressive ideas of gender inequality

Indian society is segregated in multiple ways: caste/class, gender, wealth and poverty, and religion. Entrenched patriarchy and gender divisions, which value boys over girls and keep men and women and boys and girls apart, combine with child marriage to contribute to the creation of a society in which sexual abuse and exploitation of women, particularly Dalit women, is an acceptable part of everyday life.

Sociologically and psychologically conditioned into division, schoolchildren separate themselves along gender lines; in many areas women sit on one side of buses, men another; special women-only carriages have been installed on the Delhi and Mumbai metro, introduced to protect women from sexual harassment or “eve teasing” as it is colloquially known. Such safety measures, while being welcomed by women and women’s groups, do not deal with the underlying causes of abuse, and in a sense may further inflame them.

Rape, sexual violence, molestation and harassment are rife, but, with the exception perhaps of the Bollywood Mumbai set, sex is a taboo subject. A poll by India Today conducted in 2011 found that 25 per cent of people had no objection to sex before marriage, providing it was not in their family.

Sociological separation fuels gender divisions, supports prejudicial stereotypes and stokes sexual repression, which many women’s organizations believe accounts for the high rate of sexual violence. A 2011 study, carried out by the International Centre for Research on Women, of men’s attitudes in India towards women produced some startling statistics: one in four admitted having “used sexual violence (against a partner or against any woman)”, one in five reported using “sexual violence against a stable [female] partner”. Half of men don’t want to see gender equality, 80 per cent regard changing nappies, feeding and bathing children to be “women’s work”, and a mere 16 per cent play any part in household duties. Added to these inhibiting attitudes of mind, homophobia is the norm, with 92 per cent confessing they would be ashamed to have a gay friend, or even be in the vicinity of a gay man.

All in all, India is blighted by a catalogue of Victorian gender stereotypes, fuelled by a caste system designed to subjugate, which trap both men and women into conditioned cells of isolation where destructive ideas of gender are allowed to ferment, causing explosions of sexual violence, exploitation and abuse.

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Analese Hernandez April 1, 2014 11:35 am (Pacific time)

In this article it talked about how these girls were named 'unwanted'. I don't agree with how these girls were treated but in a way I can understand why the parents did this. However it doesn't make it right. I can connect personally on feeling unwanted for my own dad left me when I was born. Making me feel as though it was my fault and I was unwanted. I am glad though that these girls got a new chance in life.

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