*Women against Sexual  Violence  and  State  Repression** *

*Statement of women’s organizations on *

*the increasing state violence on people's movements and sexual violence on
women *

*by the police, paramilitary and army. *

*Bhopal**, 24th and 25th October 2009 *

We, the undersigned representatives of women’s organizations and
individuals, are deeply shocked and disturbed by the Indian government's
armed offensive by paramilitary and armed forces in the adivasi-dominant
forest areas of Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand, Orissa, West
Bengal, Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra. This attack is ostensibly to
“liberate” these areas from the influence of Maoist rebels, and to undertake
“development” activities there. There are reports of massive deployment of
troops in these parts for this repugnant war of the State against its own
citizens.

For the past half century, the Indian government has used the pretext of
insurgency to stifle the democratic aspirations of the people and given a
free hand to military, para-military and other security forces and the
police. In recent times, new laws have been introduced to suppress any
resistance, peaceful or otherwise against land acquisition and privatization
of natural resources and these laws have vested enormous and arbitrary power
with the police and the military. As a consequence, life and liberty have
become a distant dream for people in large areas of the country,
particularly in the states of the North East and in Jammu & Kashmir.

Since the neo-liberal turn of the 1990s there has been an increased
onslaught by the state on the lives and livelihoods of large sections of the
our population in the name of “development” projects such as mining and
special economic zones, and large communities are being deprived of their
lands, rivers, forests and other common property resources.  Pushed to
desperation people are organizing in several ways to resist this large-scale
displacement and dispossession. Presently, driven by aggressive
corporatisation, sustained state violence in Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand,
Orissa, West Bengal and other states is being systematically used to evict
people from their land and livelihood. All this is being done in the name of
“development” or “maintaining law and order”. Pro-rich policies of the
governments are leading to worsening lives of vast majorities.

In several cases women have been at the forefront of these struggles. It has
been seen that women are specifically targeted in such cases and their
political participation is being repressed by use of rape and other kinds of
violence on women in mass movements. In this bleak scenario, as women’s
organizations, we are enormously concerned about the worsening situation for
the women of these regions, particularly due to the presence of large number
of paramilitary and military forces. Women are the worst sufferers of the
lack of livelihood, food, shelter and security, and of state-abetted
violence, specially the increasing use of sexual violence to intimidate
communities.

In the past 25 years, despite severe incidences of mass rape and murder, for
example in Manipur and in Jammu and Kashmir, no justice has been accorded to
the women and no punishment meted to the perpetrators. The brutal torture,
gang-rape and killing of Manorama, in July 2004, by Assam Rifles personnel
in Manipur (which has been under the armed forces act (AFSPA) for several
decades now) and the courageous protest of the Manipuri women against their
continuous sexual abuse by the armed forces speaks volumes of the inhuman
violence inflicted by the military and the police on women in the name of
counter-insurgency operations. While Manorama’s ghastly death was
highlighted, incidents of sexual violence in the daily life of the women in
states under the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) largely go
unreported. In the recent gang rape and murder of two women in Shopian in
Jammu & Kashmir, ignoring strong protests by the local community, the
state’s agencies have blatantly tried to protect the accused. Tribal women
in Bastar in Chhattisgarh have been subjected to the most extreme forms of
violence since 2005, by Salwa Judum, a civil militia created and funded by
the state to ‘counter’ the ‘Maoists’. There are reports of incidents of gang
rapes, custodial rape, mutilation of private parts, murder and continuous
sexual abuse in villages, police stations and the relief camps. The murder
in 2006 of a tribal for being a ‘Maoist’ and the subsequent gang-rape of his
wife in front of their child for several days inside a police station in
Sarguja by police personnel (including the SP) is one of the few documented
cases. Despite numerous representations before the Supreme Court, NHRC and
government officials, the police refuse to register cases and there is
inordinate delay even in registering private complaints. Instead, women and
there families are threatened and intimidated by the accused with further
criminal assault if they file complaints.

The security forces, a law unto themselves in many remote areas, operate
with impunity as if they have a “license” to rape women, especially those
belonging to the tribal and dalit communities. It is also seen that if the
police are not themselves inflicting violence, they are abetting it, either
by being mute spectators, or ignoring these incidents, or simply refusing to
register the FIRs. This makes the functionaries of the administration and
the whole state co-perpetrators in the crimes; in situations where the state
assumes unlimited powers to limit people's democratic rights, its
accountability and burden of guilt become even stronger. In a case where the
atrocity is committed by a state agency, the accountability of the crime has
to be broadened to encompass not just the rapist/s but also all the other
authorities as well as the state administration and the judiciary which is
duty-bound to protect the rights of women as citizens.

We have no trust in police personnel and find police stations most unsafe
for women even in situations which are not ‘insurgency’ based. The
increasing incidence of custodial rape is evidence of the police attitude to
women, especially when it pertains to dalit, adivasi and working class
women; even mentally challenged women have not been spared. In June 2009, a
tribal woman from Betul, MP was arrested along with her husband and son in a
dowry case but gang-raped in police custody. This incident followed an
earlier one, where a dalit woman along with several others had protested
against continuous sexual harassment (“eve-teasing”) by private security
guards of the Madhya Pradesh Electricity Board, who resorted to firing in
which one youth was killed.

It is a matter of great concern to see the state's attempts to label all
forms of opposition and resistance to its policies as 'Maoist' and
‘Naxalite’ to suppress any form of dissent. People’s movements are being
labeled as ‘Maoist’ while democratic rights groups, activists and
journalists reporting state atrocities are being called ‘Maoist
sympathisers’; they are all facing repression, criminal intimidation and
brutal atrocities.



*In the current context, we, the undersigned, demand that the Indian
government and state governments: *

1) *Take immediate legal and punitive action against all accused and
perpetrators of sexual assaults against women *already registered in AFSPA
zones, under the Prevention of atrocities against Scheduled castes and
Scheduled tribe Act 1989, or under Indian Penal Code section 376 (A) and 376
(B) *including against those in the government and the judiciary *as
co-perpetrators of crimes against women.

2) *Repeal the Armed Force Special Powers Act from the concerned states
immediately. *It must be remembered that more than half a century of
enforcement of AFSPA and use of force has not resulted in bringing peace or
development in North-East or Kashmir and armed offensive is no solution to
any unrest.



3) *Immediately withdraw its armed offensive *in the adivasi-dominant areas
of Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Orissa, Madhya Pradesh, West Bengal, Andhra
Pradesh and Maharashtra. Instead, as expected of a democratic government,
address politically the long-standing socio-economic grievances of these
populations which have been explicitly pointed out in the government’s own
reports.

We strongly urge all democratic minded women’s groups and organizations to
join us in this urgent appeal to the Indian government.

AIPWA, AISA (Delhi), Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Udyog Sangathan, Chhatisgarh
Mukti Morcha (Chhatisgarh), Dalit Stree Shakti (Hyderabad), HRLN (Madhya
Pradesh), Human Rights Alert (Manipur), IRMA (Manipur), IWID, Jagrit Adivasi
Dalit Sangathan (Badwani, Madhya Pradesh.), Kashipur Solidarity (Delhi),
Madhya Pradesh Mahila Manch (Madhya Pradesh), Nari Mukti Sanstha (Delhi),
Navsarjan (Ahmedabad, Gujarat), NBA (Madhya Pradesh), Pratidhwani (Delhi),
PUCL (Karnataka), Saheli (Delhi), Sahmet (Kesla, Madhya Pradesh), Samajwadi
Jan Parishad (Madhya Pradesh), Sangini (Bhopal), Vanangana (Chitrakut, Uttar
Pradesh), Vidyarthi Yuvjan Sabha, Women’s Right Resource Center (Madhya
Pradesh), Yuva Samvaad (Bhopal), Stree Adhikar Sanghatan (Uttar Pradesh).

*Contact: *

*Madhya Pradesh Mahila Manch *

*09425377349*

-- 



You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



http://venukm.blogspot.com

http://www.shelfari.com/kmvenuannur

http://kmvenuannur.livejournal.com

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