Sexual harassment of women by men at
the work place is rampant in India and it takes place in both the formal and
the informal sector. Consequently, that a junior woman worker of the Supreme
Court should complain that someone as senior as the Chief Justice of India had
sexually harassed her is not surprising. After all, no men and no institutions
are above suspicion in this matter given the extent of patriarchy that pervades
Indian society. However, there are a few disturbing points in the present case
that need to be critically reviewed to understand the depth of this abhorrent
phenomenon.
Normally, if a woman spurns the sexual
advances of a man at the work place, the matter ends there unless the woman
makes a complaint or the man continues to harass her. In this case the latter
happened. The man did not make any further sexual advances but took vindictive action
against the woman leading to the termination of her service on flimsy grounds.
Matters did not end there as the man then pressurised the police to target her
husband and brother in law, both junior level policemen and had them suspended.
Then the police dug up an old complaint against the woman and her family and
had her arrested. The woman was forced to fall at the feet of the man’s wife
and rub her nose on the ground saying that she would not commit any
transgression again. Even after that the police persecution continued.
The man had first shown undue favour
to the woman and then demanded that the woman gratify him sexually. When the
woman had the guts to spurn such a powerful man, he became incensed and decided
to crush her completely for having dared to spurn him. The woman then showed
even greater courage and complained to all the justices of the Supreme Court
and went to the press with her complaint.
The Chief Justice of India then first
alleged that there was a conspiracy to curb the independence of the judiciary by framing him falsely and then constituted a committee of the judges of the Supreme Court who are all subordinate to him, without any
independent member to probe the complaint of the woman against him. This
committee did not allow the woman to take the help of her lawyer while deposing
before the committee and nor was she told of the procedure to be followed by
the committee to decide on the complaint. She was also not given a copy of the
record of the proceedings of the committee. During the proceedings the judge
heading the committee offered to reinstate her in her job. The woman withdrew
from the probe saying that this was a gross violation of justice. Thereafter,
the committee decided ex parte that the complaint of the woman had no substance
and cleared the Chief Justice of any wrong doing.
The serious problem in this case is
that the Chief Justice of India had first used his immense power to harass the
woman after she spurned his sexual advances and then bypassed the expected procedure
of having an independent probe into the complaint and allowing the complainant
all possible legal assistance. Justice in this country has often not been seen
to be delivered to poor people and especially Dalits and this has happened
again in this case as the complainant is a Dalit woman. Even in the USA there
have been two cases in which judges who were appointed to the Supreme Court
were accused of sexually harassing women earlier but there too eventually the
women did not get justice.
Since the Supreme Court itself has rubbished the
woman’s complaints there is very little legal redress left and so this is nothing short of monumental patriarchal injustice. Consequently, street protests
have started against this blatant use of patriarchal power to crush a
courageous woman who has stood up against it with about 60 lawyers and activists being arrested from in front of the Supreme Court where they had assembled to register a public protest against the Chief Justice of India. It remains to be seen if these incipient protests snowball into a mass protest that can force the Supreme Court to
follow proper procedure to probe the complaint of the woman.
2 comments:
Well said Rahul. I sincerely hope this does become a mass movement and justice done.
thanks for the article
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