Por Inspiración Femenina
Hoy,
una vez más india nos desgarra el corazón. Esta vez por el silencio de sus
políticos. Un articulo del new York Times nos muestra cómo a pesar de todos los
disturbios, manifestaciones, protestas y violencia ocurrida este año, los
derechos y la situación de la mujer sigue siendo la gran ausencia en las
campañas políticas. Ahora que en India los candidatos ya están presentando sus
candidaturas de cara a las elecciones del 2014, el tema de la mujer sigue sin
ser mencionado.
Desde
el pasado agosto, se han registrado 1000 violaciones, el doble de las ocurridas
el año pasado, y el acoso sexual ha aumentado cuatro veces en el último año.
¿Cómo es posible -nos preguntamos desde la Inspiración femenina-, que a pesar
de que han salido miles de personas a las calles en protesta de esta situación,
sigue siendo una ausencia en sus políticos?
Aquí
os dejamos el artículo del New York Times, para aquellos que estéis interesados
en el tema:
November 11, 2013,
India’s
Politicians Ignore Women Voters in Election Campaigns
Aijaz Rahi/Associated Press A woman waiting outside a polling station to cast her vote in Bangalore, Karnataka, on May 5. |
On the eve of Diwali, I was
walking around the inner circle of Connaught Place, a well-known shopping
center in Delhi, with a journalist friend. The business arcade teemed with
people. Suddenly loud, belligerent voices tore through the festive air. We
stopped.
Two angry middle-aged women
were seeking the help of a policeman and accusing two men hovering around them
of making lewd remarks. “He called me a whore,” said one of them, pointing her
fingers at one of the men. The accused man raised his hand to hit her.
A curious crowd gathered. The
police officers, all men, did nothing to help the women. And then I saw one
police officer pull at the clothes of one of those women and yell at her: “I
will slap you!.”
We walked through the crowd to
the police officer and identified ourselves as journalists. He seemed taken
aback by our sudden arrival. It didn’t bother the two men who had been accused
of sexual harassment. As we argued with the police officer about his failure to
act, the crowd gradually dispersed and the women walked away. Two men who had
happily joined the original harassers muttered about “women’s power” crossing
all limits these days.
The incident evokes the
everyday violence that defines the lives of women in Indian cities. According
to data compiled by the Delhi Police, over 1,000 rape cases have been reported
in the capital this year through mid-August, more than double than what was reported in the
same period last year, while molestation has gone up by nearly four times
during the same period.
But despite the routine gender
violence, India’s political leaders are conspicuously silent on the subject of
violence against women as they gear up for the national elections in 2014. Last
December, the gang rape and subsequent death of a 23-year-old student in Delhi
had spontaneously drawn thousands out on the streets of the Indian capital —
women and men, young and old. The visibility of last year’s protests against
sexual violence were expected to affect political attitudes in India, but as
Indian politicians campaign feverishly, they have once again successfully tuned
out the question of women’s rights.
The political class has always
studiously ignored women’s concerns, even when it has to do with an important
subject like safety in public spaces. Yet one would expect a different
electoral imagination for the 2014 elections because of their extraordinary
backdrop. A combination of street protests and detailed coverage by the Indian
media have pushed two topics to the top of the public discourse: corruption and
gender violence.
The governing Congress Party
finds its credibility in tatters because of a succession of scandals, which
began with the revelations of corruption in the organization of the
Commonwealth Games in 2010, followed by allegations of graft in the allocation
of wireless spectrum to telephone companies and accusations that the government
underpriced coal blocks awarded to private companies. The scams generated reams
of news and scalded the Congress Party and the United Progressive Alliance, the
governing coalition it leads.
As the news reports of
corruption within the Congress Party-led government continued, India seethed
with anger. The spontaneous anticorruption movement led by the Gandhian
activist Anna Hazare in 2011 changed the political conversation in India. The
recent formation of the Aam Admi Party, led by Arvind Kejriwal, a former civil
servant who was the most influential aide of Mr. Hazare’s before they parted
ways, has introduced the possibilities of an alternative politics in India as
the new party is making its electoral debut in Delhi’s local government elections
later in the month.
The anticorruption upsurge has
been a success in that the politicians and governments facing charges of
corruption are now finding it increasingly difficult to evade the law.
Recently, Lalu Prasad, the former chief minister of Bihar, was convicted of
siphoning funds and was sentenced to five years in prison.
But despite the mass protests
last December, gender and women’s issues remain absent from the daily
discussions of politics. The rhetoric of machismo underpinning the ongoing election
campaigns might offer an explanation for this silence.
Deepak Sharma/Associated Press Rahul Gandhi, center, vice-president of the Congress party, interacting with people during an election rally in Baran, Rajasthan, on Sept. 17. |
The protagonists of India’s
two national parties — Rahul Gandhi of the Congress Party, the heir of the
Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, and Narendra Modi of the Bharatiya Janata Party, the
chief minister of Gujarat — are squaring up against each other. The theatrical
speeches delivered by Mr. Modi and Mr. Gandhi are laced with an overdose of
machismo. Their failure to mention, let alone dwell on women’s security, throws
into sharp relief the masculinity on which Indian mainstream politics rests.
This manifests itself in both speakers’ body language, their gesticulating
hands, wild swaggers and frequent rolling up of sleeves.
Customarily, Mr. Modi is
associated with macho theatrics and political chutzpah. He is known to
articulate a rugged political power that has aided him in steamrolling dissent
within his own party and critics outside it. Mr. Modi likes to stare his
opponents down and fling cutting remarks at them. His relentless advocacy of
putting Pakistan in its place at every provocation that comes India’s way
further enhances this masculine image.
Mr. Gandhi was seen as the
reluctant torchbearer of the battered Congress Party and no match for Mr.
Modi’s display of masculine valor. Mr. Gandhi came across as diffident and
low-key, and was written off by Indian political pundits for his lack of
oratorical skillls and aggression. The constant lament about Mr. Gandhi’s
subdued campaign has of late nudged him into embracing the aggressive
finger-wagging, rostrum thumping of his male competitors and colleagues.
The reluctance or indifference
of Indian politicians to speak about the violence against women illustrates the
misogyny that binds India’ political class. India’s politicians irrespective of
political and ideological affiliations casually pepper their speech with sexist
remarks.
Not so long ago, Mr. Modi, had
“joked” that the Congress Party president, Sonia Gandhi, who is also Mr. Gandhi’s
mother, does not know “how to run a kitchen.” He also threw barbs at Shashi
Tharoor, a federal minister, for having a “50 crore [500 million] rupee girlfriend,”
referring to Mr. Tharoor’s wife, Sunanda Pushkar, who was once accused of
gaining a lucrative stake in a cricket team while she was dating Mr. Tharoor.
Mr. Modi had claimed that Ms. Pushkar had 50 crore rupees [500 million]
deposited in her bank account a month before she married Mr. Tharoor and seemed
to signal that Mr. Tharoor used his official position to get her the lucrative
cricket deal. In support of Mr. Modi, the B.J.P.’s spokesman, Mukhtar Abbas
Naqvi, said, “For an international love guru like
Tharoor, a ministry of love affairs should be created.”
On the other side of the
divide, Sriprakash Jaiswal of the Congress Party, the coal minister, commented
that “wives lose charm over time” as they become old.
His colleague in government, Sushilkumar Shinde, the home affairs minister,
casually dismissed Jaya Bachchan, an actor who is a member of the upper house
of the Indian Parliament, when she intervened in a parliamentary discussion on
sectarian violence in the northeastern state of Assam in 2012. “It is a serious
matter and not the subject of a film,” Mr. Shinde told Ms. Bachchan.
It is precisely this attitude
that has prevented the passage of the Women’s Reservation Bill, which gives
women a 33 percent quota in the Indian Parliament and state assemblies — for
over a decade. Indian politicians fundamentally believe in the mythical idea of
“vote banks” – specific sections of the population that will garner electoral
votes – and pander to what they perceive to be their interests. Unfortunately,
women are not considered a “vote bank” and are therefore free to be abused both
physically and through words.
Monobina Gupta is the national
editor of editorial pages at the Daily News and Analysis newspaper in New
Delhi.
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