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How to shame the shameless sexual predators

By Raghothama C
January 02, 2013
It'll be another sad day if the outrage over the Delhi gangrape withers away without achieving anything, says Raghothama C

The recent case involving the rape of the 23-year-old in Delhi and the subsequent events have laid bare our systemic failures, and the government's handling of the situation has only added to the general feeling of negativity in the country.

In spite of daily reports of rape and violence against women, it took a bestial incident in the national capital to provoke the conscious of the nation. And the government, having been rudely awakened from its slumber, while announcing cosmetic measures seems to be just playing the waiting game for the outrage to peter out. And being an unorganised and leaderless movement without any stated objectives, it is anybody's guess as to how long it might survive. It'll be another sad day if this outrage withers away without achieving anything.

True, it is beyond the means of NGOs and the public to systematically and scientifically address the issue of rape (crimes against women in general). It is for the government to research rape cases to get a better understanding on the crime, like: age group of the rapists, their socio-economic status, upbringing and motives, week and time of the day when such incidents tend to happen, and geography. But what the NGOs and the general public can do is complement government actions.

And before I put forth my ideas on what society (NGOs and the public together) can do, a general observation about rapes and crimes against women is in order.

Some studies in other countries on behavioural characteristics of rapists suggest that the motives can range from enhanced feelings of power to anger to sexual gratification. The 2011 crime data on National Crime Records Bureau records motives for murder and cybercrimes but not for rape (at least I didn't come across such data).

But the motives may not be too different compared to other countries. The NCRB data is also revealing, in that it shows that in more than 90 pc of the cases the rapists knew their victims and in more than 80 pc of the cases the rapists were either neighbours or "other known persons" (though it doesn't say anything about the quality of such acquaintances). The numbers suggest that other crimes against women like dowry deaths, cruelty by husband and relatives, sexual harassment etc are over eight times the number of rape cases.

And as for the issue of rape itself, I'm of the opinion that in most cases these rapists didn't get the courage to indulge in such acts overnight. They probably first indulged in eve-teasing and when that didn't face any opposition, they then graduated to such acts as groping, feeling women in packed trains or buses for titillation, and again when nothing happened, they got emboldened to indulge in such heinous acts as rape.

Our society being patriarchal in structure with a feudalistic background, it is not unreasonable to say that the mindset of men is the main reason for crimes against women in our country. And what adds to the problem is that when women are subjected to violence (domestic or otherwise) or treated as objects of sexual gratification, it rarely goes punished – either legally or socially.

Would such crimes happen so rampantly if society were to discourage young boys/teenagers/men from harbouring fancy thoughts about eve-teasing, molesting women or treating them as objects of sexual gratification before such thoughts even graduate and take more dangerous form as rape?

To put it another way, is it possible that by tackling the issues of minor offences against women we can reduce if not prevent more serious crimes against women? There is not enough data to suggest one way or another, but personally I feel it will make a difference.

And when it comes to punishment, the legal aspect should be handled by the government and that's a matter for different discussion but as a long-term effort society can start doing its bit by taking interest in initiating a culture of social punishment.

And in that regard, my thoughts (as a matter of idea, not details) are about initiating, in phases, a social culture of shaming the shameless: maybe starting with Delhi, then Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai and other big cities and then slowly years later to second tier cities.

This is what I call Shaming the Shameless. The public is already doing it but to a very limited extent in the form Twitter handles. So why not organise it and give it a shape and structure and enlarge the scope? I don't say this is easy or that it can be done in a month or two. It may take a few years but if it contributes in reducing, even by half, the harassment and torture women have to go through, isn't it worth trying?

Not necessarily these very ideas but any idea/s that names and shames these sexual predators.

The writer is an engineer by profession and takes interest in strategic affairs and issues of governance in general
Raghothama C

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