PEOPLE'S UNION FOR DEMOCRATIC RIGHTSPress statement30th December 2012Defend 
Women’s Right to Equality! Fight against Rape and Sexual Violence!  PUDR mourns 
the death of the 23-year-old victim of an intensely violent attack and gang 
rape. However, rather than giving in to anger caused by this distress, we 
believe that this is a time to reflect on the constitutive contexts that 
produce an event and figure out how it might never be repeated.PUDR holds the 
Indian state primarily responsible for the sorry state of gender rights in this 
country. Contrary to viewing the ‘problem’ of male dominance as vested in 
‘society’, which the state through its laws and regulations enforces and 
sustains, we see the state as the body that accentuates the inequality of women 
and sexual minorities in families, communities and in society. The Indian state 
is constitutionally mandated to treat all the citizens of the country as equal, 
and to actively foster equality.
 In reality, the state upholds and manifests dominant patriarchal culture and 
practices.It is common knowledge that the odds are stacked against victims of 
sexual crimes. The home and the public space are unsafe. The reporting of such 
crimes is difficult, and when reported, women face long, arduous trials, the 
prospect of meeting their rapists repeatedly, threats, social humiliation, and 
finally, the possibility of a judgement that lets off the accused on the 
requirement that he marry his victim. Rape continues to be defined in narrow 
terms and excludes insertion of objects other than the penis into a woman’s 
vagina. Medical tests for rape continue to rely on judgements of the 
‘character’ of women by deciding whether a woman is inured to sexual 
intercourse using the infamous ‘two-finger rule’. And the state continues to 
divest itself of any responsibility towards survivors of rape. Leave alone a 
crime of power like rape, quaintly-named crimes
 against women such as ‘eve teasing’ and ‘outraging modesty’ are barely 
reported, investigated and prosecuted. Sexual violence against women, in word 
and deed, simply isn’t important enough for law enforcement agencies.But it is 
not just such acts of omission that the state is guilty of. The government and 
its functionaries have routinely practised rape. Conflict zones as well as the 
neighbourhood police thana have been locations of gang and custodial rape. In 
October 2011, Soni Sori in Chhattisgarh required hospitalization after 
undergoing severe custodial torture, including sexual violence. In May 2009, in 
Shopian in Kashmir, two women were gang raped by army personnel and killed. In 
2004, in Manipur, Manorama was raped and killed by the Indian Army. None of 
these cases led to public trials of the perpetrators; in fact, the SP involved 
in the case of Soni Sori was given a gallantry award! Of course, enough has 
been said already of the
 presence of large numbers of convicted and alleged rapists in the Parliament 
and various legislative assemblies, though enough cannot be said about the 
attitude of the Hindu right wing towards women when they can term a survivor of 
a brutal attack and rape ‘zinda laash’.A democratic state should make it 
difficult for those in power to practice inequality. Not only has the Indian 
state’s record in countering inequality been abysmal, but also its complicity 
in furthering it, which is why working class and ‘lower’ caste women, women of 
minority religious and other groups and sexual minorities suffer multiple 
oppressions of class, caste and gender.By supporting the oppression of more 
than half of its population within their families and in their communities, by 
pretending that marital rape does not exist, by not accounting for violence on 
sexual minorities, by turning a blind eye to the use of rape and women’s 
brutalization to enforce upper
 caste and Hindu majoritarian power and by condoning the practice of a vengeful 
masculinity by those on its payroll, the Indian state is patriarchal in the 
extreme.It is the state’s patriarchal beliefs that allowed it to rain lathis, 
water cannons and tear gas on peaceful protestors. Like the protestors, PUDR 
believes that the state and its agencies have over several decades sustained 
and legitimized violence against women. Whatever the problems with the 
articulation of demands by the protests over the last few weeks, the 
government’s response only shows the undemocratic and patriarchal nature of the 
Indian state. For any significant changes to occur in social attitudes towards 
women, a democratic state owes it to the populace who elected them to ensure 
their rights. Much of what the state needs to do is already known: speedy 
trials, the compulsory registration of rape cases and action against police who 
make such reporting difficult, the protection
 of the victim from threats, the complete abandonment of judgements that 
suggest that rapists can marry their victims, more attention paid to all manner 
of gendered crimes, the education of state employees in the equality of men and 
women, and the absolute need for safe public transport.PUDR expresses 
solidarity with the protests and the public’s anger. However, we urge 
protestors to reconsider some of their demands. The emotive demand for death 
penalty has been rightly criticized by women’s groups already. First of all, 
death penalty and castration leave too much power in the hands of the state to 
unleash on those it wishes to silence. Second, death penalties in rape and 
murder cases have already occurred and have not led to any fall in their 
occurrence. Rather, lower class men like Billa, Ranga and Dhananjay faced the 
gallows, while Priyadarshini Mattoo’s rapist and murderer continues to be 
endlessly tried in courts that hesitate to award him a
 death penalty. Finally, it is well-known that the greater the punishment, the 
lower the rate of conviction. Only the certainty of conviction can lead to true 
deterrence of any crime. Can the momentum gained in the series of protests 
across the capital today demand that conviction rate increases to, at least 
60%, by the end of next year? Can we see women caught in years of litigation 
benefit from the agitation today?However, PUDR also views rape as an assertion 
of patriarchal power that works at many levels besides the state. Interpersonal 
relations, the family and community all produce women and sexual minorities in 
similar ways. The home is no ‘safer’ than the outside for many people. We need 
to see the connections between these levels and fight for a change that while 
it recognizes the centrality of the state, also sees our own complicity in the 
production of unequal gendered and sexualized subjects.Ashish Gupta and D. 
Manjit(Secretaries)

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