ATTROCITIES ON
WOMEN AND THE LEGAL REMEDIES TO PREVENT THEM
There will be no generation of great men,
until there are women, free women of free mothers. There every women deserves
sentiments. Women should be honoured and adorned with appraisal. The religious
act of family where women are not honoured becomes fruitless. The family enjoys
perpetual propriety, where women are delighted. Therefore one should honour
women as ‘ PUJYA DEVI’ and refrain from committing any atrocities upon them.
Equality on the basis of sex and
individuality of women has been recognized by the Indian Constitution. The
number of laws has been enacted to improve the lot of women, but it has not
been successful in changing the status of women. The women continue to be
exploited, as they are dependent, socially, economically and psychologically
upon men.
Education, an important source of
personality development and emancipation has failed to bring women at par with
men. Marriage being the sole purpose of women’s life, education becomes only a
means to attain that purpose.
Women constitute one of the backward social
groups is in the need of special protection. Tradition, religion and law have
conspired to make women subordinate to men. The subordination of women is
against the spirit of democracy, it is against equality and justice.The
abolition of Sati and Lord Bentinck ( Bengal Sati Regulation, 1929) was no
doubt the first legal measure for social reform. Legalization of widow’s
remarriage, prohibition of child marriage and recognition of widow’s property
rights were some of the other reforms made during British Rule. The
Constitution of India, realizing the special need for ameliorative efforts to
bring about equality between man and woman provided the special provision for
women and children. The egalitarian thrust provided the right to an adequate
means of livelihood. The special provision for maternity relief reveals the
anxiety of implementation of social obligation. The doctor mother and her twin daughters were thrown out of their home
in West Delhi. New Delhi: Her doctor husband forced Ritu Kumar, a
physician herself, to go for a sex determination test and her academician
in-laws pushed her to abort the two female foetuses inside her or at least kill
one of them. But she still went ahead and gave birth to twin girls.That was
two-and-a-half years back. Ritu (name changed) and the twins were thrown out of
their home in west Delhi. But the fight that began with two unborn children is
far from over. "I am facing a lot of hardships. My husband has thrown me
out of home. But still I am proud of what I have done. I am proud to have saved
my daughters," said Ritu, who lives in the national capital. Nearly one
million female foetuses are aborted every year in India — a country known for its
male preference — which means over 2,700 girls die every day before even seeing
the light of day. But thanks to Ritu, at least two girls have got a chance to
live. Ritu got married in 2004. Both she and her husband are doctors and her
in-laws are well-educated. "We came to know that I was carrying twin
babies. Then my mother-in-law started demanding sex determination. They got
that done by force. Then they started demanding that I get an MTP (medical
termination of pregnancy). They asked me many times to at least get one child
killed in utero," Ritu, 33, says. Ritu alleges that her mother-in-law told
her that "two daughters would be a big burden on them". She accuses
her husband of verbally abusing her and claims that she was virtually put under
house arrest when she decided to disobey their diktat on the female foetuses.
Now she is living with her 72-year-old father, who is also a doctor, along with
her children. "I am living only because of my daughters," said Ritu,
her eyes brimming with tears. But she often feels scared. "I am scared!
They want to kill me. They have deployed detectives to record my activities.
But, for the sake of my children, I have not filed a police case against my
husband and my in-laws," she said.
"I have informed the Delhi Commission for Women and taken legal
counselling from a high court lawyer. I have also availed myself of counselling
from the Navjyoti Counselling Centre of Kiran Bedi. "But I have requested
all of them not to initiate action against my husband and in-laws. I want to give
my husband another chance as my children need their father," Kumar
says. Pragya Routray, a high court
lawyer in Delhi, who has counselled Ritu and her husband, said: "It's a
serious case. Her husband can be charged with forced sex selection, pressurising
her to go for female foeticide and, above all, domestic violence.
In social field, the Hindu Marriage Act,
1955 took a step of abolishing poly gamy amongst Hindus. The provision in
Cr.P.C. u/s 125 for getting maintenance, amendment u/s 376 I.P.C. and the
promulgation of the provision of Dowry death r/w section 113-B of the Evidence
Act has provided the substantial measurements for the eradication of prevailing
maladies of oppression upon the women. The Hindu adoptions and maintenance Act,
1956, the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 and Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act,
1956 provided a substantial degree to remove the disabilities of Hindu women.
The Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961 was passed with an ostensible idea of checking
the evil. The practice of dowry has emerged as a major social evil, which is
reflected in large number of cases of "Dowry Deaths". The reluctance
of parents of the victim to lodge a report is the reason for this personal
nature of the crime.
Women by and large constitute a neglected
section of the society. There is now indisputable evidence of steady decline in
the value of women in society. The following trends may be responsible in this
context: - (1) excessive morality amongst women and female child. (2) glaring
disparity between men and women in access to medical services (3) Persistent
decline in sex ratio. (4) Illiteracy and unemployment of women. Dowry is a clear Affirmation of the fact that
one’s gender determines one’s worth or significance. Since worth is distributed
unequally amongst the sexes at birth, worth deficiency amongst females can be
offset by material additives.
Dowry is the most prominent additive. In
the survey of the cases of unnatural deaths of young women, this hypothesis
suggested itself again and again. Brides who earn more that their husbands are
made to feel an obligation to supply ‘dowry goods and services’ long after
their marriage, just as those women who earn nothing. Society perceives woman
as economically less productive than man (or unproductive) and, therefore, a
female is regarded as a net economic drain on a family. At marriage, when the
female is in transit between the two households, the family that accepts her is
perceived to be saddled with a net economic liability, while the household that
is losing her is in fact losing a liability. Dowry is, therefore, a
compensatory payment to the family, which agrees to shelter her, hypothetically
for the rest of her life. And precisely for this reason, dowry is a recurring
phenomenon, which lasts a lifetime.
In Air India Vs, Nargesh Meerau (1981) 4
SCC 335, an Air hostesses case, according to regulation 46 and 47, the air
hostesses shall retire on following contingencies (1) on attaining age of 35
years (2) on marriage, if it took place within four years of service (3) on
first pregnancy. On other hand, Assistant Flight persons were retiring at the
age of 55 or 58 years. Both categories continued the same cabin crew. The Apex
court observed that compelling the air hostess not to have any children and
thus interfere with and diverts the ordinary course of human action. The Apex
court observed that this provision is not only manifestly unreasonable and
arbitrary, but contains the quality of unfairness and exhibits " naked
despotism" and therefore violative of Article 14. There are vide variety
of women employees i.e. (1) small segment in workforce as executives and
prestigious professionals (2) semi professionals like nurses, school teachers
who are hired not only for their skills and intelligence, but presumably for their
looks too. (3) The lowest economic stratum, predominantly illiterate semi
literate. We have to see that (1) whether there are set of laws which
meaningfully deals with the stresses and strains faced by women in workforce
(2) Do existing law discriminate in any way against those women? (3) are the
existing law comprehensive enough to protect the interest of women ? (4) What
are the special steps required to meet the specific disabilities faced by women
(5) Is there the need for special laws to meet the disabilities faced by women.
Laws, as we know, are only regulatory and not curative and had this not been
so. Nothing would have been easier for us and to make laws against all social
evils and find the next morning that our society has become heaven. The
eradication of an evil lies not so much in law as in the society itself. No
society can exists, breathe and move without a base and this base is provided
by norms and values.
Let
us have an introspection upon the prevailing maladies and get the effective implementation
of the better idea, the better measurements as to prevent them by the strong
will power in order to protect the half of the human being which constituted
the part of the women folk in the society. Yogesh Kumar Saxena, Advocate, High
Court Allahabad (India) e mail Address yogrekha@yahoo.co.in
or yogrekha@rediffmail.com Phone:-
91/ 0532/637720/2436451, Mobile:- 9415284843
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