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Outrage as Indian judge calls alleged rape victim 'unbecoming'

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An Indian judge is under pressure to delete comments from a court order that questioned the behaviour of a woman who alleged she was raped.

Granting bail to the rape accused last week, Justice Krishna S Dixit of the Karnataka High Court said he found the woman's statement "a bit difficult to believe".

Justice Dixit went on to ask why the woman had gone "to her office at night - at 11pm"; why had she "not objected to consuming drinks with him"; and why she had allowed him "to stay with her till morning".

"The explanation offered by her that after the perpetration of the act she was tired and fell asleep is unbecoming of an Indian woman," the judge said, adding that it was "not the way our women react when they are ravished".

His remarks set off a storm of protest. Outraged Indians asked if there was a "rulebook" or a "guide" to being a rape victim. An illustration was widely shared online which, drawing on several recent court rulings, mocked up "An Indian judge's guide to being the ideal rape survivor".

Aparna Bhat, a senior Delhi-based lawyer, wrote an open letter to the chief justice of India and the three female judges of the Supreme Court in response to the ruling.

"Is there a protocol for rape victims to follow post the incident which is written in the law that I am not aware of?" she wrote. "Are 'Indian women' an exclusive class who have unmatched standards post being violated?"

Appealing to the Supreme Court judges to intervene, Ms Bhat said the judge's remarks showed "misogyny at its worst", adding that not condemning them would "amount to condoning".

Madhu Bhushan, a women's rights activist in Bangalore, where the Karnataka high court is located, described the language used by the judge as "shocking" and "absolutely uncalled for".

"His comments are objectionable at several levels," she told the BBC. "What does he mean by 'our women'? And 'ravished'? It's so Victorian, so outdated, it takes away from the seriousness of the issue, which is violence against women."

Ms Bhushan said she was not questioning the order itself, but asked "why did he have to pass these comments on her conduct?"

"It's preposterous to say women don't behave like this. It has nothing to do with law, it's judging her behaviour," she said.

Ms Bhushan is among dozens of civil liberties activists, writers, actors, singers and journalists who wrote an open letter to Justice Dixit saying his ruling had "deeply disturbed and disappointed" activists and demanding that he expunge the comments.

"Women who make decisions to live independently and make choices regarding their own lives, including their intimate/ sexual lives are still viewed as women with loose morals and character," the letter said.

Ms Bhushan said the language in the court order normalised sexual violence and enforced the idea that rape was a woman's fault.

"If it proves that the allegation of rape is false, so be it, but why pre-judge it? Why put the woman on trial? It is not expected of a high court judge," she said.

Rape and sexual crimes have been in the spotlight in India since December 2012, when the brutal gang rape - and the subsequent death - of a young woman on a bus in Delhi sparked days of protests and made global headlines.

According to government data, thousands of rapes take place every year in the country and the numbers have been rising over the years.

Latest figures from the National Crime Records Bureau show police registered 33,977 cases of rape in 2018 - an average of a rape every 15 minutes.

And campaigners say the actual number is much higher, because cases of sexual violence are grossly under reported.

Ms Bhat, who has worked on hundreds of cases of sexual assault over the years, said research showed that survivors of sexual assault generally do not seek justice, "primarily to avoid the secondary trauma" of a criminal trial.

"Sexual violence is associated with stigma, and when a woman goes to testify, there's the feeling that most people in the room will not believe her," she said.

And she said the remarks made by Justice Dixit could further deter women from coming forward.

This is not the first time the Indian judiciary has been criticised for court orders seen as patriarchal and misogynistic.

In a a 2017 ruling, judges castigated a gang-rape victim for drinking beer, smoking, taking drugs and keeping condoms in her room, and called her "promiscuous". Speaking to the BBC at the time, Supreme Court lawyer Karuna Nundy said the ruling implied the woman "had no right not to be raped".

And in a 2016 order, a woman who had alleged abduction and gang-rape was questioned about her "noticeably unusual conduct and movements post the assault".

"Instead of hurrying back home in a distressed, humiliated and a devastated state, she stayed back in and around the place of occurrence," the judge said, adding that the fact that "she was accustomed to sexual intercourse… before the incident also has its own implication".

They are just two examples from a long list of cases in which the judiciary has shamed the victims of rape and sexual assault.

"A judge is not supposed to make such remarks, no matter what the provocation," Professor Upendra Baxi, emeritus professor of law at University of Warwick and Delhi, told the BBC. "As a judge, you ought to think about it before you speak. You might hold those views but you should not articulate them."

The judge's remarks in the Karnataka high court reflected a bias against women and stereotyped them, Prof Baxi said.

"Women are equal citizens and you cannot do anything to undermine her dignity. Doing your job as a judge doesn't include passing remarks on a large group of people, stigmatising them," he said.

Decades ago, Prof Baxi and three of his lawyer colleagues fought a similar battle to ensure personal biases of judges did not find their way into court orders.

In 1979, they wrote an open letter to the then-chief justice of India, after the Supreme Court overturned the conviction of two policemen who were found guilty of raping Mathura, a "14-16-year-old" tribal girl, in a police station.

In his ruling, the Surpreme Court judge said that Mathura was used to sex because she was in a relationship, and that her medical report showed she had no injuries and she had "invented" the story of rape.

"In our letter, we said we saw patriarchal tendencies in the Supreme Court and we pushed for it to change," Prof Baxi said.

In the wake of the Mathura case, violence against women became a matter of national debate and new rape laws were passed in India.

In 1983, the parliament amended the rape law - shifting the burden of proof from the victim to the accused and stating that the past sexual history of the victim should not be a factor.

But 40 years later, the comments of Justice Dixit and other judges finding fault with the behaviour of victims show that the past sexual history of a woman is still a factor in many courts adjudicating rape cases.

"The judicial process needs to exorcise itself of these beliefs. These prejudices have to be dismantled from the outside or cleaned out from within," said Ms Bhushan.

"We have asked Justice Dixit to expunge his remarks. If he does that, it will be a great service to egalitarian gender-just jurisprudence," she said.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-53261239
 
I wonder at what point authorities will start punishing and cracking down on the actual rapists rather than always focusing on and criticising the victim. Just a thought.
 
I wonder at what point authorities will start punishing and cracking down on the actual rapists rather than always focusing on and criticising the victim. Just a thought.

In desi culture, the victim is at fault and they need to be dealt with for bringing shame to the family.
 
In desi culture, the victim is at fault and they need to be dealt with for bringing shame to the family.

It always baffles me. In every single crime ever, you can blame the victim, they shouldn't have done this or that, shouldn't have walked on that street or at that time. Never is the same energy given to preventing the rapist from raping people.

Imagine if your house got robbed, you called the police and they told you "If you had stronger locks then it wouldn't have happened" then they just walk off.
 
Sexist remarks aside, it was a bit of a weak answer to why she stayed with him until morning. She was tired and fell asleep?
 
Online hate campaign targets Indian streaming stars

There was little fanfare when Rasbhari landed on Amazon Prime on 25 June. The Indian TV series, about a seductive teacher arriving in the small Uttar Pradesh city of Meerut, touched wryly on issues of teenage sexuality, sexual repression and the double standards for Indian men and women, but was absent of nudity or graphic scenes.

Only 24 hours later, a campaign of hate had built online. The show’s star Swara Bhasker, a Bollywood actor known for being outspoken against the Indian government, was inundated with thousands of tweets and threats, accusing the show of being obscene, of vulgarity, of being anti-Indian and anti-Hindu. Figures from the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) were among those tweeting their disgust.

On IMDb, the website where authorised accounts can rate TV series and films, thousands of damning and, it seems, coordinated reviews poured in. The show currently ranks 2.1 out of 10, with 80% voting for the lowest possible score: one.

Over the past year in India, streaming services such as Netflix, Amazon and Hotstar – free from the regulation that controls Bollywood and traditional Indian television – have hosted a new, more progressive breed of TV show. Unshackled from censors, these shows have addressed sex, sexual violence, homophobia and caste inequalities, and critiqued the sinister side of rightwing Hindu nationalism and the persecution of Muslims.

The backlash has been fierce. As well as Rasbhari, shows such as Leila on Netflix, which opened with the lynching of a Muslim man, or Paatal Lok, which shows police brutality, rape and attacks on Muslims, have been the targets of vicious, relentless and far from spontaneous attacks.

Bhasker said she knew Rasbhari would court controversy, but was taken by surprise by volume of the hatred. She has repeatedly criticised the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, and the BJP government and their Hindu nationalist agenda, and believes her dissenting political views, more than the content of the show, have made her a target.

“They are attacking my real-life persona under the garb of a TV series that barely any of them have seen,” said Bhasker. “I expected some trolling and people being uncomfortable with some of the sexual elements, but I did not expect it to come under the kind of agenda-driven scrutiny it did. It’s like the fake ratings on IMDb are a mob punishing you for being a dissenting voice.”

Streaming services such as Netflix have exploded in popularity in India, particularly among the 50% of its 1.3 billion population who are under 25. Bhaskar said the BJP, and its militant umbrella organisation the RSS, which is dedicated to a Hindu nationalist cultural agenda that aims to block western influences on India, were evidently concerned at the reach of the platforms.

Neeraj Kabi in Paatal Lok. The thriller, which shows discrimination against Muslims, came under relentless attack. Photograph: Amazon Prime
In June, the RSS called for strict laws against web series that “hurt the fabric of Indian society”. This week, Prasoon Joshi, chairman of the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC), tweeted criticism of Rasbhari’s “irresponsible content” and said “creators and audiences need to seriously rethink freedom of expression”.

“They have suddenly found that the digital space, which has become so wildly accessible to so many Indians, especially young Indians, is perhaps unwittingly becoming a space for dissent and critique, which is challenging the Hindutva [Hindu nationalist] agenda,” added Bhasker. “So now they are now calling for it to be censored.”

The Hindu nationalist agenda has been encroaching on India’s cultural space for several years. In 2018, when the US series Quantico aired an episode featuring Hindu terrorists, its Indian star, Priyanka Chopra, was subjected to vicious trolling and forced to issue an apology. Similarly when Sushant Singh, star of the beloved true crime show Savdhaan India, participated in anti-government protests last year, he was fired from the series.

Anubhav Sinha, a celebrated film-maker who has spoken out against the BJP government, witnessed the same phenomenon. In 2018, when he released his film Mulk to critical acclaim, it had a 9/10 rating on IMDb. “Then, overnight, some 5,000 accounts gave it a one-star review. I couldn’t fathom it, until I realised it was a smear campaign. It was so heartbreaking,” he said. “They will try to bring down the movies of people they see as ‘anti-national’.” Sinha complained to IMDb but says it did not address the issue. IMDb has not responded to a request from the Guardian for comment.

Shakuntala Banaji, a professor of media, culture and social change at the London School of Economics, said the trolling allowed for dissenting voices to be silenced without the government taking an active public role. “It’s intended to be viewed as a natural backlash – just civic Indians reclaiming their identity and what they believe in – when in fact it is the highly organised BJP IT cells,” she said.

She added: “The organised trolling against these shows is more about policing the public sphere than a genuine anxiety about Indian values. It is about saying, we have hegemony over absolutely everything.”

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jul/03/online-hate-campaign-targets-indian-streaming-stars
 
Fully agree with the indian judge. On top of that women who falsely accuse men of sexual crimes should have to register as sex offenders, serve mendatory jail time and pay for the legal fees of the accused.
 
Agree with the views of the judge. The story by the "victim" seems to be concocted.

I don't think she necessarily "concocted" the story. It is quite possible that she has a fanciful idea of reality and the nature of men from some novels she has read and movies she had watched. She probably thought that she could spend the night with a man, get drunk with him, and he would not be aroused and wanting to have sex because that is how the men in the movies she has watched behave.
 
Action of one woman cannot be used to generalize - fact is that women in India get a raw deal and need all the protection that is needed.
 
I don't think she necessarily "concocted" the story. It is quite possible that she has a fanciful idea of reality and the nature of men from some novels she has read and movies she had watched. She probably thought that she could spend the night with a man, get drunk with him, and he would not be aroused and wanting to have sex because that is how the men in the movies she has watched behave.

anything is possible but her actions raise sufficient doubts about her character.
 
Nearly three decades after an Indian woman was raped repeatedly allegedly by two brothers, she is hoping to finally get justice - and helping her in her quest is the son born out of the assault.

The woman in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh was raped over six months by two men when she was just 12 years old.

Her son, who was given up for adoption but was returned to her 13 years later, encouraged her to file a case against her alleged rapists.

Ten days ago, police arrested one of the accused and on Wednesday, the second man was also taken into custody.

"The incident is very old but the wounds it caused have not yet healed," the woman told the BBC. "It has brought my life to a standstill and I remember that moment again and again."

Thousands of cases of child sexual abuse are reported in India every year. In 2020 - the latest year for which official crime data is available - 47,000 cases were registered under India's Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act (Pocso).

Campaigners say many more cases go unreported because children are either too young to understand what's happening to them or are too afraid to speak out. Families too are often reluctant to report such abuse because of stigma or if the perpetrators are known.

'They instilled terror in my heart'

The Uttar Pradesh rape survivor, whose name cannot be disclosed under Indian laws, said the rapes took place in 1994 in Shahjahanpur city. The accused, Mohammed Razi and his brother Naqi Hasan, lived in the neighbourhood and would jump over the boundary wall of her house and assault her whenever she was alone.

The pregnancy was discovered only when her health started deteriorating and her sister took her to a doctor. The doctor ruled out abortion because of her frail health and young age. Immediately after birth, the baby was given up for adoption.

"I had suffered so much for this child but I didn't even get a chance to see his face. When I asked my mother, she said, 'you'll now get a second chance in life'."

The survivor and her family did not register a police complaint because the woman said she lived in fear of the accused.

"They threatened to kill my family and set our house on fire if I told anyone about the rape," she said. "My dream was to grow up and join the police, but because of those two people, all my dreams came to an end. I missed school. I could not study."

The woman and her family later moved to Rampur district to escape the traumatic memories associated with their previous home. In 2000, she got married and had a second child. She says she hoped this new chapter would help her forget the past, but six years into the marriage, her husband found out about the rape and blamed her for it.

After he threw her out along with her son, she went to live with her sister and her family.

A son's search for the truth
Her first son, who was given up for adoption, also faced a lot of discrimination because of his identity.

His mother said he grew up hearing from his neighbours that he wasn't the child of his parents and that's how he found out he was adopted.

Thirteen years after mother and son were separated, the adoptive parents returned the child to his mother.

But the son yearned to know who his father was. He didn't have a surname - in India, it's usually the father's name - and children ridiculed him in school.

He would constantly ask his mother questions about his parentage and not getting an answer deeply upset him. The woman said her son would tell her that he "cannot live this nameless life" and threatened suicide if she didn't reveal his father's name.

Initially, she said, she scolded him for asking questions, but eventually, she relented and told him the truth.

Instead of being appalled, the son turned into her biggest supporter, telling her that she had to "fight this battle and teach the accused a lesson".

"If you speak up about what happened, maybe more people would do so too. That will strengthen our case and the accused will get punished. A message will be sent to society that no-one can be saved after committing a crime."

The fight for justice
With her son's encouragement, the woman revisited Shahjahanpur in 2020, but found it difficult to register a case against the accused.

With the police refusing to lodge her complaint because it was too old, she reached out to a lawyer. The lawyer too was reluctant, saying it would be difficult to fight a case that was nearly three decades old.

The area where she lived as a child had changed beyond recognition - she couldn't even find her old house and the accused were not traceable.

"How would you prove where you lived three decades back and that's where you were raped?" her lawyer asked.

"I told him, we will bring you the evidence, you take our case," she said.

The lawyer filed an appeal in court and on the orders of the chief judicial magistrate of Shahjahanpur, a case was registered against the two accused in March 2021.

The woman said the policemen asked her to find the accused.

"I found them and spoke to them on the phone. They recognised me and asked me why I wasn't dead yet," says the woman. "I said, now it's your turn to die."

The evidence and the arrest

Though the accused had been traced, there was no evidence to tie them to the crime. Police say that evidence has now come from the DNA tests taken in February.

Shahjahanpur Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) S Anand told the BBC, "This case was absolutely unexpected. When the woman came forward and filed a case, we were quite surprised. But we took a chance and took DNA samples of her son."

Inspector Dharmendra Kumar Gupta, who has been investigating the case for the past year, said, "We then collected DNA samples from the accused and had them tested. One of them matched with the son's DNA samples."

On 31 July, one of the accused was arrested and on Wednesday, police said they had the second man also in custody. The accused have yet to comment on the allegations against them.

The woman says she wants her story to inspire others to come forward and report crimes committed against them. "People sit in silence. I too sat in silence and thought this was what was written in my fate. But there's no such thing. We must go to the police so that nobody else has to endure what we had to."

As for the son, he says he is happy that the accused have been caught.

BBC
 
Almost 40 Palestinian children have been killed so far this year in the occupied territories and in many incidents, Israeli forces appear to use lethal force in a manner that violates international human rights law, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet said.

The United Nations rights chief issued a statement on Thursday expressing “alarm” at the large numbers of Palestinians – particularly children – who have been killed and injured by Israeli forces in occupied Palestinian territory so far this year.

“Inflicting hurt on any child during the course of conflict is deeply disturbing, and the killing and maiming of so many children this year is unconscionable,” Bachelet said in a statement.

Nineteen Palestinian children were killed in occupied Palestinian territory in the last week alone, bringing the death toll of children since the start of the year to 37, according to the statement.

Seventeen of the children were killed during last weekend’s attacks on Gaza by Israeli forces, and two more children were killed on Tuesday in Israeli operations in the occupied West Bank.

Israeli forces launched their bombardment of Gaza, flattening buildings and striking refugee camps across the territory, saying the onslaught targeted members of the Islamic Jihad armed group, including the group’s senior commanders. Palestinian officials said the majority of those killed were civilians.

The toll of civilian casualties in the Israeli attack on Gaza “was heavy”, the UN rights chief said.

“International humanitarian law is clear. Launching an attack which may be expected to incidentally kill or injure civilians, or damage civilian objects, in disproportionate manner to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated, is prohibited. Such attacks must stop,” Bachelet said.

The UN human rights office has confirmed that among the 48 Palestinians killed in the three-day onslaught from Friday to Sunday, at least 22 were civilians, including 17 children and four women.

Nearly two-thirds of the 360 Palestinians reported injured in the Israeli offensive were civilians, including 151 children, 58 women and 19 older people, the UN said.

Al Jazeera
 
An 11-year-old girl in India’s capital Delhi says she was gangraped in a school washroom by two older boys from the same school.

The incident was brought to light after the Delhi Commission for Women (DCW) issued notices to the school authorities and Delhi police.

According to the DCW notice, the incident took place in July when the 11-year-old girl was going to her classroom when she bumped into two boys who go to the same school and study in class 11-12, making them between 16 and 18 years old.

The girl said to the commission that she had apologised to the boys, but they abused her and subsequently took her to the bathroom, locked it from the inside and raped her.

The girl also said that she had informed a teacher about the incident, but the matter was allegedly “hushed up.”

In a statement DCW chairperson Swati Maliwal said: “We have received a very serious case of gangrape with a… student inside a school in Delhi. The girl has alleged her school teacher tried to hush up the matter. It is very unfortunate that even schools are unsafe for children in the capital.

“Strict action must be taken in the matter. Also, an enquiry into the role of school authorities must be conducted on the issue… The commission has asked the school principal to inform as to when did the school authorities learn about the matter and what action was taken by them.”

The commission has asked the Delhi police to file an FIR (first information report), which is the first step in any police probe in India.

It has also asked the school authorities to take action against the accused.

However, no arrests have been made yet.

District commissioner of police (DCP) for New Delhi, Amruth Guguloth, told The Indian Express that they had received a complaint and immediately registered a case under sections of sexual assault and the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act.

And a senior police official insisted to The Hindustan Times that there was no delay in filing the case.

“There was no delay in registering the FIR. A case under Section 376D (punishment for rape) of the Indian Penal Code, as well as under relevant sections of the POCSO Act has been registered and investigation has been taken up,” the official, who did not want to be named, was quoted as saying.

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/worl...sedgntp&cvid=9a2496443e594254b730e35b339176e3
 
There is a rape epidemic in the country. There is public awareness and it appears more cases are being reported compared to even a decade ago. The judge is an idiot for making those remarks. He is playing the role of the defence lawyer here. It is however, weird that a woman would go to sleep after a rape because she is tired. There have been many cases where women would allege rape after a live in relationship in India because the guy didn't marry the girl. There are guidelines as to what constitutes a rape but there need to be clear guidelines for differentiating between consensual sex and rape. The second part is where many men are getting trapped. That's also causing issues for women who were raped days or weeks ago but finally mustered enough courage to report.
 
There is a rape epidemic in the country. There is public awareness and it appears more cases are being reported compared to even a decade ago. The judge is an idiot for making those remarks. He is playing the role of the defence lawyer here. It is however, weird that a woman would go to sleep after a rape because she is tired. There have been many cases where women would allege rape after a live in relationship in India because the guy didn't marry the girl. There are guidelines as to what constitutes a rape but there need to be clear guidelines for differentiating between consensual sex and rape. The second part is where many men are getting trapped. That's also causing issues for women who were raped days or weeks ago but finally mustered enough courage to report.

Good post. I agree.

Both men and women should use common sense and good judgment to avoid troubles.

Men should be very careful in modern days. Many women can frame men using false reports.
 
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