People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVIII
No. 02 January 12, 2014 |
ON January 2, several hundred people from
women’s organisations,
trade union organisations and student organisations
demonstrated outside the
Banga Bhawan in New Delhi, in order to protest against
the callous and criminal
attitude of the West Bengal government towards victims
of sexual assault and
specifically the manner in which the case of the recent
16-year old gang-rape
victim was dealt with, resulting in her tragic death due
to burn injuries on
December 31, 2013. That the government of the Trinamul
Congress (TMC), headed
by a woman, makes a mockery of a crime such as rape
speaks volumes about how
they seek to politicise each issue in order to brush
aside all opposition to
their rule in an autocratic manner. Speaker after speaker denounced the
incident and demanded speedy
trial in this case and steps to curb violence against
women in The speakers put forward the following
demands: 1) Impartial inquiry into the case, 2) Speedy and time-bound trial in the case, 3) Punishment to the policemen who were
hand-in-glove with the
criminals, and 4) Safety and support to the victim’s
family. The participating organisations included,
among others, the AIDWA,
CITU, SFI, NFIW and Swastika Mahila Samiti. Next day, on Akrosh Diwas on January 3,
these organisations and sent
an open letter to the West Bengal chief minister through
the resident
commissioner in CHIEF
MINISTER’S RESPONSIBILITY We the undersigned express our deep outrage
and shock at the
horrendous double gang rape and murder of the 16 years
old student in
Madhyamgram, in North 24 Parganas, We strongly believe that if your government
had acted against the
criminals after she was subjected to gang rape on
October 24 the subsequent
horrific events could have been prevented and the young
woman’s life could have
been saved. The father of the girl in this case is a
taxi driver from But even then the police did not act. When
leaders of women’s
organisations and other concerned citizens raised their
voices in protest and
went to meet the victim, they were driven out by armed
hooligans who were
surrounding the house. Madam, how do such criminals have the run
of the place where they
have the audacity to repeat their horrendous crime and
then attack protesters?
Is it because they have the political patronage of the
ruling party? Pressurised by public outrage, the police
then arrested six of the
accused persons and arranged for vigilance at the girl’s
residence to protect
her and her family. But very soon, this protection was
withdrawn and the family
fled from Madhyamgram to a rented room near Why was the police protection withdrawn? On
whose orders? Why did
the police not take action against those making threats? On December 23, some associates of the
culprits discovered even this
meagre shelter and, according to the statement of the
victim to the police,
stormed into the room in the absence of the parents,
abused and threatened the
girl and set fire on her causing 90 percent burns. It is
shocking that
initially the police tried to cover up the case by
saying that it was the
outcome of a quarrel between landlord and tenant. Later
two persons named in
the FIR were eventually arrested and remanded to jail
custody. The girl was
taken to R G Kar Hospital where there is no burn unit
and in spite of
agitations by organisations to shift her to the burn
unit at As you are directly holding the health
ministry, could not you or on
your direction any senior government official have
intervened to ensure that
the victim was not denied the specialised medical care
she required? This could
have saved her life. It is outrageous and unprecedented that
after her death, the police
who had refused to provide security to the girl while
she was living, suddenly
became pro-active after her death forcibly took her
body, without the consent
of her parents, to the cremation ground and tried to
cremate her by putting
pressure on her father to produce the death certificate.
The father however
refused and on the morning of January 1, 2014, they had
to hand over the body
to the family who were then able to perform the last
rites. Such brutal
behaviour on the part of the police and the
administration raises doubts as to
whether the family of the victim would be able to get
justice at all. Under whose instructions did the police act
in this barbarous way? A year ago, the country was convulsed with
anger and outrage after
the brutal gang rape in Regretfully, we find that in We demand that the All the culprits be arrested without delay
and brought to justice
speedily. The police personnel responsible for
removing the protection cover
as well as those who tried to forcible takeover the
girl’s body should be
proceeded against without delay. Immediate enquiry must be made into the
charges of negligence
against the hospital and the department of health, so
that those who are guilty
in this matter may be exposed. Protection must be provided for the family
of the girl. The letter was signed by many prominent
persons such as Professor C
P Chandrasekhar, Professor Jayati Ghosh, Professor
Archana Prasad, Professor
Pravin Jha of JNU, renowned historian Professor Prem
Chaudhury, DUTA president
Nandita Narain, DU executive committee member Abha Dev
Habib, Professor Sonya
Gupta and Professor Simmi Malhotra (Jamia Millia
Islamia), Professor Dinesh
Abrol (CSSP), A N Damodaran (president, Jan Sanskriti),
Professor Vandana
Prasad (PHRN), AIDWA president Professor Malini
Bhattacharya, Aruna
Roy (NFIW), Jyotsna Chatterjee (JWP),
Jai Bhagwan, (AICCMDMW), Rajiv Kunwar (secretary,
Democratic Teachers Front,
DU), Ranjana Nirula and A R Sindhu (AICCWW),
Amitav Guha (FMRAI), Dr
Nalini Taneja and Professor Amar Farooqui (DU), Leila
Passah (YWCA), Kamla
Bhasin (One Billion Rising), Kusum Sehgal (Swastika
Mahila Samiti), Annie Raja
(NFIW), N S Goswami (retired professor, DU), Sunand
Singh (CEC of SFI), Puran
Chand (general secretary, DYFI Delhi state unit), Smita
Gupta of ISWSD, Dr
Arathi (Council for Social Development) and renowned
economist Professor Utsa
Patnaik, among others. DELEGATION
MEETS
NCW ON January 7, a joint
delegation of women’s
organisations along with the family members of the 16
years old girl who was
gang raped and murdered in Madhyamgram, North 24
Parganas, West Bengal, met the
chairperson of National Commission for Women (NCW) in
the national capital, A statement of the
family members was
registered with the commission and the chairperson
responded to the compliant
positively. She assured immediate intervention in the
matter for the following: a) Provide
support
to the family and take steps for relief and
rehabilitation both short and long
term. b) Stiff
action against
all perpetrators would be sought. c) A
delegation of
the NCW would visit d) The
NCW will do all
that’s possible within its powers to ensure that justice
is done.