biographiesofFranzKafka

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Wednesday, 10 April 2013

Bulandshahr, another instance of how India tortures its children

Posted on 04:22 by Unknown
It takes a special kind of savagery to do this: to take a ten year old child who comes into a police station after having been raped, and lock her up in the station’s holding-pen. To watch, as she tries to reach out through the cage’s wires, as a local journalist records her presence on film. Perhaps, then again, it doesn’t.  Earlier, children, aged between 10 and 12, were paraded on the streets of West Bengal’s Asansol, beaten with electric wire and tied to bamboo poles—all this in front of police—because they stole from the local market. I’m guessing few people even remember the four year old raped in Chinchwad, the ten year old Valsad girl raped by her uncle or the Latur teenager who was raped by three young men in her village, and then hanged from a Jamun tree.

India treats its children worse than animals, every single day—but there’ve been no mass protests at these outrages, no sit-ins targeting the chief minister, not even a candlelight vigil at India Gate. The Supreme Court has now stepped in, demanding an explanation for the Bulandshahr outrage. It is too easy, though to blame the police officers—women, parenthetically—for this. The officers responsible, guilty as they are of serious crimes, ought be marched out of their uniforms and into prison—but we must accept they reflect the values and attitudes of the societies they are drawn
Leave aside having worse child-nutrition statistics than sub-Saharan Africa, our failure to ensure primary education for all; the persistence of child labour—Indian children’s lives aren’t about school or playgrounds, but physical violence, emotional abuse and rape. This is the way it is, because we as people do not care enough to change it. Back in 2007, the Union Ministry of Women and Child Development released a terrifying study of how we treat our children. Fifty three percent of the children, the Study reported, said they had encountered “one or more forms of sexual abuse”; 68.99 percent said they had encountered physical abuse.  More than a fifth reported severe sexual abuse, including assault, having been compelled to fondle adults’ private parts, exhibit themselves, or photographed nude.  Well over half of those reporting severe sexual abuse, the study found, were boys.
Nearly three out of four children polled reported having been physically abused—kicking, slapping or corporal punishment.  In all thirteen states covered by the Study, the incidence of physical abuse directed at children was above 50 percent. The worst victims were the very young.  Forty-eight percent of respondents who reported physical abuse were between five and twelve years old, while 26.29 percent were thirteen or fourteen years old. “In all age groups”, the Study states, “an overwhelming majority of children (65.01 percent) reported being beaten at school”.
Indian homes, the data showed, weren’t any safer than schools. Fifty-three percent of children not going to school said they had been sexually abused in their family environment.  Just under half said they had encountered sexual abuse at their schools. Most vulnerable were children in workplaces; 61.31 percent of whom had been sexually abused. In all but four of thirteen states—Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Delhi and Maharashtra—boys were found to be more at risk of sexual abuse than girls.  In Delhi, a staggering 65.6 percent of boys reported having been sexually abused.
The study’s findings have been corroborated by several other independent researchers.  Maulana Azad Medical College’s Deepti Pagare had found that  over three fourths of children in Delhi’s Child Observation Home had reported being subjected to physical abuse. Fathers made up over half the reported perpetrators.  Save the Children and Tulir, in a 2006 study conducted in West Bengal, found almost three-quarters of child domestic workers had been physically abused. We know, from separate studies, that the use of children in prostitution is also widespread.  In their 2005 study on the trafficking of women, S Sen and PM Nair estimated that there are up to half a million girl children from across the region working as prostitutes in India.
There is no doubt that children across the world are subjected to horrific levels of violence. In the United Kingdom, 5.9 percent of under 11s and 18.6 percent of 11–17s reported severe maltreatment, including contact sexual abuse. In the United States, a staggering 676,569 victims of child abuse and neglect were reported in 2011—more than 9 out of every 1,000 children in the population. Hideous as these figures are, they are still well below the levels the Government of India’s Study suggests are prevalent in our country.  Moreover, years of sustained efforts in the United States has driven down child sexual abuse levels over 60% from 1992, survey data shows. 
This we know: child abuse scars its victims for life. Neurological research is giving us insight into what abusers inflict on their victims. In 2009, Michael Meaney and his team at Canada’s McGill university found that child abuse left markers on victims’ genes, which made them more likely to commit suicide as adults. Martin Teicher at MacLean Hospital in Belmont led a team of researchers who found victims’ hippocampus’s shrank, leaving them more at risk of depression, schizophrenia and post-traumatic stress disorder. Women abused early in their lives are more likely to smoke, suffer from gestational diabetes and have premature babies or children with autism.
In India, though, we’re barely even beginning to talk about the problem... Read more:
http://www.firstpost.com/politics/bulandshahr-another-instance-of-how-india-tortures-its-children-693448.html#disqus_thread


Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in childhood, current affairs - India, human rights | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Media & police ducking the question of Hindutva terror
    From: The Hindu, June 10, 2013 Accusing sections of the media and the police of deliberately ignoring the issue of Hindutva extremism, journ...
  • Book review: The Frankfurt School at War - the Marxists Who Explained the Nazis to Washington
    Secret Reports on Nazi Germany: The Frankfurt School Contribution to the War Effort ,  by FRANZ NEUMANN, HERBERT MARCUSE, and OTTO KIRCHHEIM...
  • Books Reviewed: TWO NEW BOOKS ABOUT “BORGES”
    Few artists have built grand structures on such uncertain foundations as Jorge Luis Borges. Doubt was the sacred principle of his work, its ...
  • Karima Bennoune on Islamofascism in Algeria: Twenty years on, words do not die
    This year marks the twentieth anniversary of the Algerian jihadists war on culture. Those who waged the intellectual struggle against fundam...
  • Chris Hadfield's photographs of Earth from space
    During his 5 months in space on board the International Space Station, Commander Chris Hadfield has gained 790,000 followers on Twitter than...
  • Pravin Sawhney: Subtle Chinese ping-pong
    A Chinese border guards' platoon (40 soldiers) has pitched tents ten kilometres inside Indian territory overlooking Daulet Beg Oldie (DB...
  • Kabita Chakma: Sexual violence, indigenous Jumma women & Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bangladesh
    There has been a high rate of violence against women all over Bangladesh in recent years. Kapaeeng Foundation figures for January 2007 to De...
  • Atheist Siddaramaiah and God's changing role in politics
    K. Siddaramaiah, a rare Indian politician who wears his atheism on his sleeve, took the oath as the next chief minister of Karnataka on Mond...
  • Child labour & low wages at Dutch seed companies
    Two Dutch vegetable seed companies in India compared * Combating child labour: active involvement makes the difference * Hazardous child lab...
  • The Act of Killing is being hailed by critics as one of the best films of the year
    'You celebrate mass killing so you don't have to look yourself in the mirror'  Joshua Oppenheimer went to Indonesia to make a d...

Categories

  • A K Ramanujan's Three Hundred Ramayanas (1)
  • Afghanistan (7)
  • Africa (9)
  • Ahimsa (17)
  • animals (2)
  • Art (4)
  • Astronomy (9)
  • Bangladesh (23)
  • birds (5)
  • Books and literature (40)
  • Burma (4)
  • CARTOONS (2)
  • censorship (33)
  • childhood (15)
  • China (23)
  • communalism (85)
  • corruption (24)
  • critical theory (34)
  • current affairs - India (139)
  • current affairs - international (51)
  • democratic protest (40)
  • Dilip's notes and articles (6)
  • ecology (36)
  • economics (23)
  • education (14)
  • energy (2)
  • Evolution (2)
  • films (3)
  • Global War and Violence (52)
  • history (81)
  • human rights (89)
  • Indian culture (13)
  • Japan (2)
  • justice (100)
  • labour matters (27)
  • media (26)
  • medicine (6)
  • Middle East (27)
  • mining (13)
  • music (2)
  • naxalism (20)
  • Nepal (2)
  • Obituary (6)
  • organised crime (30)
  • Pakistan (30)
  • Palestine / Israel (5)
  • Partition related texts (3)
  • philosophy (10)
  • Photos (16)
  • Poetry (2)
  • religion (23)
  • Russia (10)
  • Sampradayikta Virodhi Andolan (2)
  • satire (2)
  • science (20)
  • short stories (2)
  • Social networking (8)
  • Sri Lanka (2)
  • the human mind (36)
  • the oceans (6)
  • thinking about fascism (68)
  • Tibet (3)
  • women's rights (32)
  • Workers' movements (9)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ►  August (29)
    • ►  July (119)
    • ►  June (133)
    • ►  May (114)
    • ▼  April (100)
      • 1984 carnage - 5 convicted, main accused Sajjan Ku...
      • SAMIR NAJI al HASAN MOQBEL: Gitmo Is Killing Me
      • National Investigation Agency finds Liyaqat crosse...
      • Wars push number of internally displaced people to...
      • GITA SAHGAL - Backlash against Bangladeshi bloggers
      • USHA RAMANATHAN: Aadhaar: Private ownership of UID...
      • Salman Rushdie: Whither Moral Courage?
      • Books reviewed: What happened to Occupy?
      • Yonathan Listik: The True Meaning of Autonomy
      • Hungary warned its democracy could be put under in...
      • Mihir Srivastava: How Big Business Gets Its Way in...
      • Rahul Pandita - Under Pressure: Migrants flee from...
      • The Law That Saved a Billion Lives
      • NAPM - ACTION ALERT AGAINST MIS-BEHAVIOUR OF PUBLI...
      • JAMAL KIDWAI: Nitish Kumar's Desperate Posturing
      • Jacob Heilbrunn: Israel's Fraying Image
      • Sony world photography award winners – in pictures
      • British officials predicted war – and Arab defeat ...
      • Pravin Sawhney: Subtle Chinese ping-pong
      • Police behaviour worse than mad animals', will int...
      • Maryam Namazie: Defend Bangladesh's Bloggers
      • Factory collapses in Bangladesh, killing 87 (?)
      • Book review: Resistance, Rebellion, & Writing - Al...
      • Garga Chatterjee: Bad moon rising
      • Austerity in Europe? Tighten the military belt
      • 'Women invite sexual harassment': Madhya Pradesh C...
      • Academic reforms and DU's circus of reason
      • SAMI ZUBAIDA: Women, democracy and dictatorship
      • 'Thinking through Law: South Asian histories and t...
      • Ancient Tree Clones To Be Planted In Effort To Fig...
      • "No More Hurting People!"
      • ENCAPSULATED UNIVERSES: A Conversation with Lera B...
      • China - Fast Change and Its Discontents (Dissent m...
      • Nuclear Testing in the Marshall Islands: A Chronol...
      • Life in a Real Nuclear Wasteland
      • China's 100 million religious believers must banis...
      • James Lovelock: A man for all seasons
      • A Khmer Rouge Goodbye
      • MOON MAN - What Galileo saw. BY ADAM GOPNIK
      • Religion and after: Bangladeshi identity since 1971
      • Hindu migrants from Pakistan: Waiting for a new ch...
      • India's juvenile homes are hellholes, says report ...
      • Gujarat govt's failure to protect people in 2002 r...
      • With police help, banned Naxal group takes on Maoi...
      • Snakes the vanguard of the oppressed?
      • Man accused of raping five-year-old in Delhi arres...
      • बंगलादेशी जनउभार और भारत की मुर्दाशान्ति: किशोर झा
      • Can social media clear air over China?
      • Kepler telescope spies 'most Earth-like' worlds to...
      • Supreme Court leaves Vedanta's fate in tribal's hands
      • New Zealand Legalizes Gay Marriage; Spectators Sin...
      • NAPM Press Release: More evidence linking payment ...
      • Juan Luis Sánchez - Voices of the plazas
      • Seashell Sound
      • John le Carré: 'I was a secret even to myself'
      • Defiant anti-corruption blogger Alexei Navalny goe...
      • Police records show Gujarat riots weren’t a sudden...
      • Zakia Jafri to file a protest petition against clo...
      • From the Desert Steppe of Kazakhstan Into the Vast...
      • Robert Fisk: President Assad's army is starting to...
      • Guantanamo Bay - President Obama's shame: The forg...
      • Millions face starvation as world warms, say scien...
      • Delhi University's 4 year degree course: Reforms a...
      • Chinese Journalists resist censorship: Timothy Gar...
      • Mohamed Morsi backs Egyptian military after malpra...
      • Ex-miners to join the anti-Thatcher protesters in ...
      • The Lies of the Land
      • The Middle Ground: Earnest mediation between Maois...
      • Lankan Tamil newspaper office torched in pre-dawn ...
      • Medha Patkar calls off fast after assurance of inq...
      • "The only people who can destroy Islamofascism are...
      • The full Fukuyama: the end of everything
      • Bharat Bhushan: Credible deterrence
      • Inside Bangladesh: Hindus continue to lose land an...
      • Thatcher's legacy
      • Mamata Banerjee's TMC trashes iconic Presidency Co...
      • Pablo Neruda's importance was as much political as...
      • Egypt's army took part in torture and killings dur...
      • Seema Sirohi: The BJP's Bangladesh problem
      • Medha Patkar's Indefinite Fast. Day 7. Demonstrati...
      • Among the Non-Believers: The lives of Sikhs and Ch...
      • Bulandshahr, another instance of how India torture...
      • Book Review: The Cure for Loneliness - the lives o...
      • Subhash Gatade: Muslim Right: Why does it want to ...
      • 1984 anti-Sikh riots: Court to decide on re-openin...
      • Ramachandra Guha: THE MIRACLES OF MAO - A bizarre ...
      • Rampant injustice: Maruti Suzuki Workers Appeal fr...
      • Corruption, fear and silence: the state of Greek m...
      • Citizen's demonstration against inaction by Mahara...
      • An Open Letter to the world on the Bangladesh cris...
      • VIJAY PRASHAD: Mr. Modi Wants to Come to America
      • A dangerous connivance - Jamaati's in Bangladesh a...
      • Janata Dal (U) blasts Narendra Modi for making Lok...
      • Rohini Hensman: Steering Between Islamophobia & Mu...
      • Solidarity Vigil in Delhi for Bangladesh's Shahbag...
      • Women hit back at India's rape culture
      • Book Review: The Left and Political Islam
      • Hubble's Latest Mind Blowing Cosmic Pictures
      • Young and good looking: the saviours of Europe’s Left
      • Israel to jail teenage conscientious objector for ...
    • ►  March (5)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile