On Wednesday 14 Mar 2012, justin joseph wrote:
> If one has a family of employees and ones friends are employees as
> well then he/she can understand the importance of safe travel post 8
> p.m
> 
> Its a trivial facility that the company can provide.

It's a trivial facility that the state can provide.  After all, policing 
and security are its responsibility.  Or aren't they?

From the editorial in today's Indian Express 
(http://www.indianexpress.com/news/insecure%2din%2dgurgaon/923762/):

Insecure in Gurgaon

Don’t tell women to go home at 8 pm, get the police to work

The rape of a 23-year-old woman in Gurgaon — and the official reaction 
to it — highlights the disconnect between a local administration that 
has not understood the rapidly changing urban landscape around it. That 
change is about new opportunities and challenges: as one of the largest 
outsourcing hubs in the country, Gurgaon is also emerging as the 
National Capital Region’s new central business district. It’s home to 
the offices of many corporations, domestic and foreign, shopping strips 
and a services industry that provides employment to men and women. 
Recent estimates suggest that about 30 per cent of Gurgaon’s working 
population is female. That’s why it’s startling that this is the place 
that considers limiting the movement of women an adequate response to 
rape.

Gurgaon’s administration has decided that the most effective way of 
preventing rape is to bar women from working in pubs, commercial 
establishments and malls after the late, late hour of 8 pm. This 
decision assumes that rapists only strike late at night, that the onus 
of a woman’s safety rests solely on her and her employer, rather than on 
the police — those sworn and paid to protect. The victim of the latest 
rape was kidnapped at a location on a key arterial road in the city that 
has seen many such incidents.

There is a simpler solution to Gurgaon’s problem: efficient and tough 
policing that works with local communities on a zero-tolerance model. 
More women are assaulted in Gurgaon not because there are more dark 
alleys in the city or that more women work late into the night. They are 
under threat because the police have not been able to secure public 
spaces. It’s an administrative and policing failure. The local and state 
government should realise that incidents like these dent Gurgaon’s image 
and in these times of image-politics and image-economics that can mean 
the difference between a vibrant city and an avoidable suburb. So rather 
than telling women to stop working and go home at 8 pm, the 
administration should tell the police to get working.

Regards,

-- Raj
-- 
Raj Mathur                          || [email protected]   || GPG:
http://otheronepercent.blogspot.com || http://kandalaya.org || CC68
It is the mind that moves           || http://schizoid.in   || D17F
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