http://www.dnaindia.com/analysis/comment_sexist-cops-destroying-economy_1632646
Sexist cops destroying economy?
Rakesh Khanna | Tuesday, January 3, 2012

It was already a bumper year for obnoxious and dangerously stupid
statements from Indian police officials on the subject of violence
against women. Just in time to push 2011 way over the top, Andhra
Pradesh police chief Dinesh Reddy chimed in on Saturday by blaming
provocative dresses for an increase in rape cases in his state, saying
this was beyond the police’s control.

A lot has been written about the politics of dressing, Besharmi
Morchas, women’s rights vs Indian tradition, etc. Unfortunately, a lot
of these debates get quickly bogged down in weighty discussions of
culture and feminism. There’s a more immediate, materialistic issue
that I haven’t seen discussed much: how prevailing official attitudes
about the way women should dress and act are hurting the country
economically.

In most of Europe, the Americas, the Caribbean, and Oceania, and in
large parts of Africa and East Asia as well, a woman can wear a short
dress or a sleeveless t-shirt without attracting undue attention or
comments or any societal disapproval whatsoever.

She can wear such clothes on a crowded public street, while drinking
beer in a cafe, and often to work. The average woman who dresses this
way is probably not consciously ‘dressing provocatively’; she may be
simply wearing summer clothes because it’s hot. To be sure, she’s
aware that men may find her attractive. But she considers herself
safe, because she knows that most men can behave themselves, and that
if she needs help protecting herself from the few violent types who
can’t, she can turn to the police.

Women make up half the world’s population, and over the last century —
statistically speaking, as a group — they have steadily become better
educated, more financially independent, and more economically
powerful. Today, women of all races and nationalities are managing
companies, investing in new ones, and making high-powered business
deals. They are experts in specialised fields of science, engineering,
governance, and social service. They are also touring the world for
pleasure, often spending their own money and travelling without male
companions.

India is not a friendly place for these foreign businesswomen or solo
women travellers. When they walk through the streets of our cities,
they are subjected to uncomfortable stares, sleazy comments, and
worse. The truth is that it hardly matters what they wear. One thing
is for sure: when they hear top cops like Dinesh Reddy or Delhi chief
BK Gupta spout chauvinist opinions that legitimise the harassment, it
does not make them feel safer.

Sure, there are a few foreign women who fall in love with the country
despite all this and set down roots. But I personally know several
whose experiences have been so harrowing that they are not interested
in coming back, and many others who won’t even consider a trip because
of India’s reputation for ill-treating women visitors. These women
take their expertise, their business investments, and their tourist
money elsewhere, to places where they can wear what they please and go
where they like without fear of being leered at and sneered at by men
in uniform.

And it’s not just foreigners. There are millions of smart,
hard-working Indian women who rightly feel they deserve simple
pleasures like being able to dress up and go out dancing with friends
once in a while. We know India suffers from brain drain as many of our
best educated young people decide to emigrate to richer,
better-governed countries. This moral policing only adds to the list
of reasons for our most capable women to want to leave.

Change has to come from the top. Here’s a new year’s resolution I’d
like to see for 2012: Let government and law enforcement officials
come out and say loud and clear, in each of our many languages, that
the victims of sexual harassment and assault will not be blamed, no
matter what clothes they were wearing or what time of day they were
driving their vehicles. It is the police’s duty to protect law-abiding
people from criminals, full stop. Officers who try to duck this
responsibility by blaming short skirts and unladylike behaviour must
be summarily removed from their positions, if India is ever to become
a superpower.

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