0

“Dr. Ambedkar himself would have wished for people to work more on his birthday”. Public servant’s petition claiming double benefits gets dismissed: Madras High Court

The Madras High Court passed a judgement on 11th of April, 2023 in which it dismissed the petition of a public servant claiming double wages for working on the 14th of April which is a declared holiday. This was seen in the case of Kudankulam Employee Union v. Government of India (W.P(MD)No.18462 of 2020) and the case was presided over by The Honourable Mr. Justice GR Swaminathan

FACTS OF THE CASE:

The petitioner, is the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Employees Union who is filing the petition on behalf of its members. Through this writ petition, the petitioner claimed for double wages for working on the 14th of April which is declared a holiday for the birth anniversary of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar.

JUDGEMENT:

The learned single judge after listening to the contentions, dismissed the petition. This petition was with respect to the workers working on the April 14th of 2018.  This day in particular vs second Saturday and thus was already a holiday. Section 5(2)(b) of the Tamil Nadu Industrial Establishments (National and Festival Holidays) Act, 1958 applies only when it is a working day but was declared a holiday. The employees cannot thus claim double benefits.

Round-the-clock workers of the plant do not have the concept of second Saturdays and thus, would be able to claim the compensation under this provision but not the others.

The court also expressed that while the State had declared the birth anniversary of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar as a public holiday, he himself would have wanted people to work more on this day. The State has done this as a mark of paying respect to him.

“PRIME LEGAL is a full-service law firm that has won a National Award and has more than 20 years of experience in an array of sectors and practice areas. Prime legal falls into a category of best law firm, best lawyer, best family lawyer, best divorce lawyer, best divorce law firm, best criminal lawyer, best criminal law firm, best consumer lawyer, best civil lawyer.”

JUDGEMENT REVIEWED BY SWETA SHOUMYA

0

Court refuses to quash case against college professor over WhatsApp status on abrogation of Article 370 : Bombay High Court

 

 

The Bombay High Court passed a order on 10 April, 2023.This was seen in the case of Javed Ahmed Hajam v. State of Maharashtra & Anr. 94 OF 2023 and the case was presided over by Hon’ble Justice Sunil Shukre and MM Sathaye. 

FACTS OF THE CASE: 

In this case The petitioner is a Professor in Sanjay Ghodavat Collage. There is a whatsapp group comprising parents-teachers organization and the petitioner is a member of this whatsapp group. The petitioner being a member of this whatsapp group, created whatsapp status giving two messages namely; (1) AUGUST 5 BLACK DAY JAMMU & KASHMIR and (2) 14th August Happy Independence Day Pakistan. It is further alleged that below the first message displayed as status of the petitioner on whatsapp application in petitioner’s handset was written “Article 370 was abrogated, we are not happy”.

ORDER BY COURT:

The Court did not find anything wrong with the message .“The first message which has been posted on the whatsapp application by the petitioner is, without giving any reason and without making any critical analysis of the step taken by the Central Government towards abrogation of Article 370 of the Constitution. In our view, this message has the tendency to play with emotions of different groups of people in India as there are strong feelings of contrasting nature about status of Jammu and Kashmir in India and, therefore, one has to tread cautiously in such a field, lest the emotions may reach up to such a level as to bring about consequences or reasonable possibility of consequences visiting as envisaged in Section 153-A of IPC,” the order stated. “As of now, prima-facie it does seem to be having such impact on the mind of different groups of people, for the reasons stated just now, and hence prima-facie constitutes the offence under Section 153-A of IPC,” the Court held while refusing to quash the FIR.

 

“PRIME LEGAL is a full-service law firm that has won a National Award and has more than 20 years of experience in an array of sectors and practice areas. Prime legal fall into a category of best law firm, best lawyer, best family lawyer, best divorce lawyer, best divorce law firm, best criminal lawyer, best criminal law firm, best consumer lawyer, best civil lawyer.”

JUDGEMENT REVIEWED BY ARCHLA.

 

Javed_Ahmed_Hajam_v__State_of_Maharashtra___Anr_

0

Court grants bail to former BrahMos engineer accused of spying for Pakistan’s ISI : Bombay High Court

 

 

The Bombay High Court passed a order on 3 april, 2023.This was seen in the case of Nishant Aggrawal v. State of Uttar Pradesh and Anr. 161 OF 2023 and the case was presided over by Hon’ble Justice ANIL S. KILOR. 

FACTS OF THE CASE: 

In this case Nishant Aggrawal, a former engineer at BrahMos Aerospace Pvt Ltd, booked for allegedly spying for Pakistan’s intelligence agency ISI.

ORDER BY COURT:

The Court had then granted liberty to Aggrawal to move a fresh bail application if there was no progress in the trial. Due to the slow pace of the trial, Aggrawal filed the second bail application. Manohar submitted that 6 witnesses had been examined so far and 11 witnesses were left to be examined. The Court agreed with Manohar’s contention and deduced that the prosecution had not alleged that there is danger to the security and safety of the State, if Agrawal is released on bail. Accordingly, it proceeded to grant bail upon furnishing bail bond of ₹25,000 with a solvent surety of like amount.

 

“PRIME LEGAL is a full-service law firm that has won a National Award and has more than 20 years of experience in an array of sectors and practice areas. Prime legal fall into a category of best law firm, best lawyer, best family lawyer, best divorce lawyer, best divorce law firm, best criminal lawyer, best criminal law firm, best consumer lawyer, best civil lawyer.”

JUDGEMENT REVIEWED BY ARCHLA.

 

Nishant_Aggrawal_v__State_of_Uttar_Pradesh_and_another

 

 

0

SEXUAL AND REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND RIGHTS: AN OVERVIEW OF INDIA

INTRODUCTION:

“The connection between women’s human rights, gender equality, socioeconomic development, and peace is increasingly apparent.”

                                      – Mahnaz Afkhami, Iranian-American human rights activist

 

Right from the time of the inception of this world, women irrespective of religion, race, or religion have been the most affected victims of social differentiation and discrimination. Women and Men are supposedly considered different. They are different physiologically and biologically. While the biological differences between males and females are fairly straightforward, the social and cultural aspects of being a man or woman can be complicated. Men always oppose women having equal status to them and consider them inferior. Women are certainly more soft-spoken, gentle, kind, emotional, and different but not in a way that they are not able to defend themselves against men in the work they do.

 

Women are gentle, affectionate, warm, etc, and are considered fragile in terms of health. Women’s health is so much more than a medical issue, it is cultural, political, economic, and more than that it is a social issue. Improving women’s health and advancing the status of women is often seen as a powerful means to solve economic problems rather than as a path toward social justice. All aspects of a woman’s life are involved with her health, especially if we define “health” broadly, as does the World Health Organization (WHO), as “a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.”[1]

 

Due to the rise of science and technology, there has been an increase in the rate of literacy. The growing awareness of women’s status has led to the measure of protection of women’s rights. These days, the idea that “women’s rights are human rights” seems obvious, but it was not until 1993, when the UN held a conference on human rights in Vienna, that the member states began to talk about abuses such as rape and domestic violence as “human rights” violations.[2] Sexual and reproductive health rights have been progressively enshrined under various international covenants and policy instruments. There are still many places in the world that still do not acknowledge them and a lot of progressive countries recognize them.

 

SEXUAL HEALTH AND RIGHTS

 

Sexual health is: “a state of physical, emotional, mental and social well-being about sexuality; it is not merely the absence of disease, dysfunction or infirmity. Sexual health requires a positive and respectful approach to sexuality and sexual relationships and the possibility of having pleasurable and safe sexual experiences, free of coercion, discrimination, and violence. For sexual health to be attained and maintained, the sexual rights of all persons must be respected, protected, and fulfilled.”[3] The realization of sexual health has been recognized as an integral part of the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) relating to health, [4]education,[5] and gender equality[6]

 

Sexual health is an aspect of the right to health, the enjoyment of which is interdependent on and indivisibly linked to the fulfillment of other human rights. The understanding of sexual health evolved significantly through linkages with HIV/ AIDS, marginalization, and discrimination, particularly of sexual minorities. Sexual health is an important part of a woman’s life. Sex is a natural thing and yet the things that are connected with it are generally neglected. It should be also noted that sexual health also consists sexual rights of a person.

 

The first part of sexual health comes through sex education. Sexuality education is not about biological reproduction as is commonly understood through terms like ‘sex education’, but about gender relations, roles, identities, body and relationship of the self with the body, positive and negative sexual contact, harm and pleasure, disease prevention, amongst others. Sex ed. as it is called is usually done in schools where children are taught about safe sex practices, contraceptives, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), etc. It is an awareness given to teenagers and it generalizes the concept of sex. The right to education and information also includes guaranteed access to reproductive and sex education.[7] This education and information must be “comprehensive, non-discriminatory, evidence-based, scientifically accurate and age-appropriate”.[8]Many people are not aware of a lot of things relating to sex.  Sex is indeed a forbidden word or taboo even in several places, the attitude of people towards it or to knowing about it is atrocious. People tend to hide these kinds of things from their kids. Moreover, sex is not just about having babies and they miss the main concepts like pleasure. People living in marginalized areas have little or zero knowledge about sex or sexual health. The use of contraceptives or the existence of different contraceptives is not known to them. They are pregnant not by choice but by the pressure of their spouses and their in-laws. There are various kinds of birth control methods in today’s world. The most common and effective method is the use of condoms. There are many other such contraceptives like implants, IUDs, vaginal rings, contraceptive patches, birth control pills, etc. People are not aware of the different kinds of contraceptives. Both males and females must be given awareness of its usage and its effects. They must also be taught the different kinds of STIs and how it is transmitted.

 

Prostitution/Sex work is considered one of the oldest professions in the world. It is a billion-dollar industry. Yet, several countries still have not legalized prostitution. Sex workers have the right to profession and hence are not violating any laws. Sex workers are given no importance in society in general. They are generally refused from giving the medical help they require. Sex workers in particular must know all about contraceptives, abortion, and the various STIs they can get from unprotected sex. They must obligate themselves to regular check-ups of STIs and it must be generalized. They must also be saved from any abuse or violence if they are subjected to it. They face discrimination by service providers and are often forced to go to quacks and fraudsters to get treated. There are other health issues of sex workers, which are rarely addressed. For example, sex workers are more prone to cervical cancer because of engaging in sexual activities more often than other women.

Sexual and Reproductive health and rights are also applicable to trans people as well as members of the LGBTQIA+ community. Most doctors don’t know how to treat trans bodies having received medical training that is based on the binary sex-gender system.

Sex Reassignment Surgery (SRS) and other gender-affirming procedures such as endocrine therapy are other under-addressed issues that concern the trans community and which are important for the overall well-being of trans people. They are shunned away from any medical help required and often stigmatized. This is the same case for the people in the LGBTQIA+ community as they face stigma and discrimination in accessing sexual health services. Living in the 21st century, it is way past time to recognize the different genders present, and yet doctors are still to be progressive regarding it.

 

Sexual violence is a grave violation of the sexual rights of a woman. Sexual violence against girls and women has been recognized as a violent manifestation of gender-based discrimination in international human rights law,[9] which has a profound impact on physical, emotional, mental health, and social consequences. They are usually done against will by force, deception, intimidation, manipulation, etc. It mainly incorporates abuse, harassment, trafficking, rape, and female genital mutilation. International law calls for securing legal protection for all persons against rape and sexual violence in all its forms and manifestations. It imposes the obligation of recognising a wider definition of rape that encompasses all forms of non-consensual penetrative sex, that is anal/vaginal/ penetration with penis/object/finger, and oral sex with penis/ vagina. [10] Laws against sexual violence are recognized as necessary for correcting sexual and gender inequalities in society, and for the fulfillment of the Constitutional guarantees of life and equality. Sexual violence against women has been recognized as a violent manifestation of gender-based discrimination in international human rights law,[11]which has a profound impact on physical, emotional, mental health, and social consequences[12]

 

Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) is a procedure that violates the sexual rights of girls.  The term female genital cutting can describe all procedures which involve partial or total removal of the external female genitalia or other injuries to the female genital organs whether for cultural or any non-therapeutic reasons. The procedure is usually carried out in the family home or the home of a relative.  In many cases, female genital cutting is performed by an older woman in the family or an elderly woman in the village who has been specially designated for this task.  The procedure is usually done by razors or blades without any caution and with no reliance on doctors or medicine. This procedure is still conducted in places like Sierra Leone and is continued as a tradition.  It is indeed a very dangerous and gruesome removal done to girls to prevent them from the pleasure of having sex. It is a major human rights issue and health issue for girls. They may have trouble urinating, or have scars left or it might even lead to death.

Non-discrimination in access to health services, and access to education and information is crucial for the realization of sexual health rights of all persons including adolescents, persons living with HIV/ AIDS, persons living with disability, women, and children, has been recognized in international law[13] It also includes protection from gender-based violence, respectful of the evolving capacities of adolescents, and the needs of persons with disability[14]

Hence it can be inferred that sexual health is to be recognized as an aspect of women’s rights and gender equality.

 

 

REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND RIGHTS

 

The right to reproductive health is an integral and inextricable part of human rights, all of which are universal, inalienable, indivisible, and interdependent. Reproductive health and rights allow women to be in control of their bodies and decide if, when, with whom, and how often to bear children. [15]The earliest reference to reproductive health was in the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) Programme for Action (Cairo, 1994), which stated that reproductive health, “also includes sexual health, the purpose of which is the enhancement of life and personal relations, and not merely counselling and care related to reproduction and sexually transmitted diseases.”

Reproductive health is a part of sexual health and it is to be given more importance than sexual health. It begins with being pregnant and can even go up to postpartum care. Reproductive rights are a woman’s right to control her fertility. Several rights intersect with reproductive rights like the right to life, liberty, equality, health, and against discrimination. A woman’s right to choose her partner is integral to the fulfillment of her right to life, dignity, and reproductive rights, and the State must protect and enforce her right to choose if, when, and whom to marry.[16]

 

A woman has the right to get pregnant at her own will and volition. Family planning is not done in many households and even in many countries. They are forced into getting pregnant and it mostly occurs after marriage. Husbands try to control the life of their wives by forcing them into conceiving and it also happens due to the inability to refuse sex. Sexual and reproductive coercion is real. There is undue pressure from society as well to get pregnant after a while after marriage. Requiring the husband’s permission for the sterilization of the wife, imposing conditions for the sterilization of women (such as having a given number of children or the children being of a certain age), and imposing legal duties on health personnel to report women who have undergone abortions are all violations of women’s right to privacy[17] States have an obligation to respect, protect, and fulfill women’s right to choose the number and spacing of children. Due to women’s reproductive functions and the gendered division of work, women bear an unfair burden of childbearing, childcare, and related domestic work.

Marital rape is a grave offense taking place in today’s world. Married women are forced to have sex without their consent by their own husbands. This is happening just because of the reason they are married. They are raped and viewed as mere commodities. Nowadays, a new concern about stealthing is happening in relationships when a partner secretly removes their condoms during sexual intercourse. It is considered a form of rape. Healthcare officials must make it their duty to check if the woman is subjected to any intimate partner violence or rape to get the person pregnant.

Pregnant women are not allowed to abort the child in many places. Abortion is considered a sin and is still illegal in countries like Laos, the Philippines, Egypt, and even the very developed country of the United States of America. The overturning of the decision in Roe v. Wade was a controversy in 2022. It removed the constitutional right to terminate pregnancy and gives the power to regulate or prohibit abortion subject to a rational basis review. There is a conflict between the Christ believers and pregnancy as the bible shows disapproval of pregnancy in general. Mixing religion with morals and law is not the right solution. Sex-selective abortion should also be outlawed as it is a clear gender equality issue and causes a disproportion of sex ratios. In most households, women are not given space and power to control their pregnancy.

The next part comes when the woman decides to keep the child. If the person is unmarried, it is generally frowned upon. In most countries, having sex outside marriage is considered a bad thing. Moreover, having a kid out of marriage is considered a sin and the girl is usually kicked out of her home. Good care and nutritious, healthy food must be given to pregnant women whether they are married or unmarried. They must be given more priority because even the slightest mishap can bring some issues to the child. The health care officials must ensure frequent and regular check-ups, even if not the family members. If a mother is undernourished, often because she is poor, her baby is likely to be underweight and may even be born with a smaller brain. Maternal mortality, another measure of women’s poverty, persists: complications of pregnancy and childbirth, when met with inadequate medical care at the time of delivery, can be deadly. States must eliminate discrimination against women in their access to health care services throughout their life cycle, particularly in the areas of family planning, pregnancy, and confinement during the post-birth and postnatal periods[18]

Maternal leave must be given to mothers who are working in offices and must be given paid leave. All women are entitled to such benefits and must not be kept away from them.

“Special protection should be accorded to mothers during a reasonable period before and after childbirth. During such period, working mothers should be accorded paid leave or leave with adequate social security benefits.”[19]

Timely transportation must be ensured to avail all healthcare facilities for a pregnant woman. Many marginalized areas lack sufficient hospitals or birth clinics, they must travel a long way to conceive a child. It is very dangerous as the pregnant woman will be in pain and cannot suffer much, they need medications to reduce it. The hospitals must ensure good postnatal and postpartum care. The child must be given vaccinations after birth. Postpartum depression is a kind of depression that the mother faces after childbirth. Hence, mothers must be given sufficient care regarding it and awareness of the same must be given. Maternal mortality is something that is still happening in a lot of countries due to insufficient healthcare facilities or no healthcare facilities.

Reproductive rights also include tubectomies. It is also called the typing of tubes. It is the procedure done to women usually after their pregnancies. It is a non-reversible procedure in which the fallopian tube is tied up so that the egg does not reach the uterus. It is considered a permanent contraceptive process. Vasectomy is a permanent contraceptive procedure done on men. It is done to sterilize men by cutting off their vas deferens so that the sperm does not reach the semen. It is a reversible process, unlike tubectomy. Women are forced to do tubectomies and men do not try to get vasectomies. Women go through a lot physically and mentally in connection with reproduction and sexual activities.

 

STATUS IN INDIA

Sexual and reproductive health are two distinct but partially overlapping concerns. Although the two overlap to some extent, particularly concerning information and services relating to contraceptives, abortion, and sexually transmitted diseases; yet, the scope of sexual health is more extensive.[20]

International Human rights standards demand that Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) services should be available, accessible, acceptable and of good quality (AAAQ).[21]India has demonstrated its commitment to improving the sexual and reproductive health of its population. Its policy and program environment have shifted from a narrow focus on family planning to a broader orientation that stresses sexual and reproductive health and the exercise of rights.[22] In 1951, India became the world’s first nation to launch a family planning program. Governments have committed to investment in SRHR through international standards and accords. However, progress has been impeded by a lack of political will, insufficient resources, continued discrimination against women and girls, and a refusal to address sexuality issues openly and thoroughly.

 

Comprehensive Sexuality Education (CSE) as per international standards has not yet been implemented anywhere in India. Age-appropriate sex education for adolescents has often faced considerable resistance in the country, for instance, the backlash against sex education for being ‘immoral and inappropriate’ to certain people. Another serious gap in this area is the inadequate teacher training and unwillingness amongst teachers to talk about sexual health issues, especially related to safe sex practice and contraception. They also tend to focus only on menstrual hygiene and biological development, advocating abstinence rather than information as a means of protecting adolescents. The resistance by teachers is based on social misconceptions and prejudice. In Indian schools, Sex ed is mostly given to only girls, and boys are completely left out of the picture. Hence, they try getting to know about sex and other activities through porn at such a young age.

 

Abortion is legal in India under the Medical Termination of Pregnancies Act, 1971 (MTP Act. Hence, women in general irrespective of their marital status are entitled to a safe and legal abortion. India has the third largest HIV epidemic in the world with 2.1 million people in the country living with the infection as of 2016[23] Lack of information about safe sex practices has led to the burden of HIV/ AIDS and other STDs falling on children and young adults. Research has shown that one in four cases of HIV transmission in India is amongst younger individuals due to unsafe sex practices.[24] A Study amongst adolescent girls in Maharashtra showed that 54% of them did not know the modes of transmission of HIV. This is especially disconcerting because Maharashtra has one of the highest rates of HIV transmission in India, despite which the state does not have provision for sex education in schools. [25]Trans women and sex workers must be given importance in the topic of HIV and AIDS as it affects them more. Sex work is considered to be in a grey area and running a brothel is considered illegal under the Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act,1956. Some states in India have been progressive in the case of trans people. States such as Tamil Nadu have made provisions to provide free SRS services to trans women, but there is no comprehensive national policy on the same, nor availability of these services to transgender men in the states where trans women have the provision of free services.

The recognition of sexual and reproductive rights of women in the country remains negligible. Reproductive rights in India are understood only in the context of selective issues like child marriage, female foeticide, sex selection, and menstrual health and hygiene issues.

Reproductive rights are enshrined in the United Nations (UN) human rights treaties and in the consensus conference documents to which India is a party, and are protected by the Constitution of India In India, there is an unmet demand for safe abortion services due to high rates of unwanted fertility and maternal death. Every day, 13 women in the country die as a result of unsafe abortion-related causes, making it the third leading cause of maternal death[26]

In India there is about 15% population lives in poor or slum areas. They lack facilities and the right awareness. There is always a delay in the timely transportation to such proper facilities. Pregnant women do not reach in time for childbirth, which is why India has a high maternal mortality rate. India provides for about 8 weeks of maternity leave before childbirth and 26 weeks after the child is born. Paternity leave is not a common topic in India and has never been.

Yet there is a long way to go. Notwithstanding improvements, pregnancy-related outcomes, both in terms of maternal and neonatal mortality and morbidity, remain extremely high. Postpartum care is kept away from many women. Contraceptive practice patterns reflect a continued focus on female sterilization, limited use of male methods, limited use of non-terminal methods, and persisting unmet needs an overwhelming majority of abortions take place outside of legally sanctioned providers and facilities structures. Many people avoid telling their parents or friends about their pregnancy due to their judgments. Over one-quarter of young women continue to marry in childhood. Comprehensive sex education reaches a few adolescents, and in general, sexual and reproductive health are poorly met. Access to and quality of services, as an exercise of informed choice are far from optimal.

 

 

 

CONCLUSION

 

 

“The human rights of women include their right to have control over and decide freely and responsibly on matters related to their sexuality, including sexual and reproductive health, free of coercion, discrimination, and violence.”

 

Women are considered prey to various human right violation, coercion, abuse, violence, etc. Women and men are supposed to co-exist in this world and they must not be set aside. The patriarchal society has made women mere baby-reproducing machines and is given the least consideration in terms of their rights and free will. The recognition of women’s rights is a step toward the welfare of the country. India is a developing country not only in terms of infrastructure but also in terms of its progressive laws. India can be considered developed in the terms of the many rights it gives its citizens. Over the years, women have made great strides in many areas with notable progress in reducing gender gaps. Sexual and reproductive health and rights are recognized in India and they should be improved as it is an aspect of women’s rights and gender equality.

 

[1] <https://www.who.int/data/gho/data/major-themes/health-and-well-being#:~:text=The%20WHO%20constitution%20states%3A%20%22Health,of%20mental%20disorders%20or%20disabilities.> last accessed on 7/1/2023 6:57pm

 

[2] 1993 UN Conference on Human Rights in Vienna

[3]< https://www.who.int/teams/sexual-and-reproductive-health-and-research/key-areas-of-work/sexual-health/defining-sexual-health> Accessed on 10-1-2023

[4] UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), The Sustainable Development Goals and Addressing Statelessness, March 2017. Target 3.7, Goal 3

[5] UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), The Sustainable Development Goals and Addressing Statelessness, March 2017. Target 4.7, Goal 4.

[6] UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), The Sustainable Development Goals and Addressing Statelessness, March 2017. Target 5.6, Goal 5.

[7] UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), CEDAW General Recommendation No. 21: Equality in Marriage and Family Relations.1994. Para. 22.

[8] UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, General Comment No. 22 on the right to sexual and reproductive health (Article 12 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights). Doc. E/C.12/GC/22. 2016. Para. 9.

[9] UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), CEDAW General Recommendation No. 19: Violence against women, 1992; UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), CEDAW General Recommendation No. 35: Gender-based violence against women, 14 July 2017, CEDAW/C/GC/35

[10] International Criminal Court (ICC), Elements of Crimes, 2011, ISBN No. 92-9227-232-2

[11] UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), CEDAW General Recommendation No. 19: Violence against women, 1992; UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), CEDAW General Recommendation No. 35: Gender-based violence against women, 14 July 2017, CEDAW/C/GC/35

[12] General Recommendation No. 19, Ibid.

[13] UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR), General Comment No. 14: The Right to the Highest Attainable Standard of Health (Art. 12 of the Covenant), 11 August 2000, E/C.12/2000/4.

[14] UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), General comment No. 4 (2016), Article 24: Right to inclusive education, 2 September 2016, CRPD/C/GC/4. Para 38-46.

[15] https://www.un.org/en/chronicle/article/sexual-and-reproductive-health-and-rights-cornerstone-sustainable-development

[16] UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), CEDAW General Recommendation No. 21: Equality in Marriage and Family Relations, 1994, Para. 16.

[17] UN Human Rights Committee (HRC), CCPR General Comment No. 28: Article 3 (The Equality of Rights between Men and Women). CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.10. 2000. Para. 20

[18] UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, General Recommendation No. 24: Article 12 of the Convention (Women and Health), Doc. A/54/38/Rev.1. 1999. Para. 2

[19] Article 25(2) of UDHR

[20]https://nhrc.nic.in/sites/default/files/sexual_health_reproductive_health_rights_SAMA_PLD_2018_01012019_1.pdf9 (last accessed on 14th January 2023) (last accessed on 14th January 2023)

[21] UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR), General Comment No. 14: The Right to the Highest Attainable Standard of Health (Art. 12 of the Covenant), 11 August 2000, E/C.12/2000/4, available at: http://www.refworld.org/docid/4538838d0.html [accessed 10 October 2017].

[22]https://nhrc.nic.in/sites/default/files/sexual_health_reproductive_health_rights_SAMA_PLD_2018_01012019_1.pdf(last accessed on 12th January 2023)

[23] “The Gap Report”.2014. UNAIDS. http://files.unaids.org/en/media/unaids/contentassets/documents/unaidspublication/2014/UNAIDS_Gap _report_en.pdf.

[24] Khubchandani, Jagdish, Raman Kumar, and Jeffrey Clark. 2014. “Beyond Controversies: Sexuality Education for Adolescents in India”. Journal Of Family Medicine And Primary Care 3 (3): 175. doi:10.4103/2249-4863.141588.

[25] ibid

[26] <https://india.unfpa.org/en/topics/sexual-reproductive-health-10>  accessed on 14-1-2023

This article is written by Roshni S, 4th year Ba.LLB,Kerala Law Academy Law College, Trivandrum.

0

Oppression of Women- An Unending Problem

One Cannot Resolve What Is Not Acknowledged

1.Introduction

Living in the 21st century, women not being given importance and value is still the number one social issue. Patriarchy, male chauvinism, Misogyny are all the different terms that are used nowadays to show the dislike or oppression towards women within the society itself. Oppression is not something that was just started one day, it is something that women all over the world have faced since time immemorial in different forms and from different people. In India, male domination with a complementary suppression of women has been continuing since pre-historic times.

2.A lifelong battle:

Oppression or maltreatment towards women or a girl child begins even before being born. In India, female foeticide and female infanticide has been a major issue since the 20th century. Female foeticide is the deliberate killing (or) abortion of the foetus in the womb of the mother after knowing its sex whereas female infanticide is the intentional killing of a girl child after birth. Determining the sex of the baby was made illegal in 1994 by the Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques Regulation and Prevention of Misuse Act, 1994[1]. This was due to the rise of female foeticides and also the unbalanced child sex- ratios.

Early childhood is the most important phase of development of a person’s life. This is when cognitive, social, and emotional skills are learned, influencing lifelong educational achievement, health, and wellbeing. During this time, they are instructed what to do and not to do by the parents and even the society. Oppression begins as there begins a gender inequality, the usual stereotype that girls love pink and boys blue, and girls should play with barbie dolls while boys should play with cars. Sons are given more preference than daughters. Academically, sons are given more opportunities and even motivation to carry on their future studies. Girls are usually told to take courses that are fit for their future and not too hard.

As they move on with their careers and step into the patriarchal society, boys choose jobs that they like while some girls get married after finishing their undergraduate course. In India, Girls are treated as an object or a burden as such and they try to get her married and send her to another person’s home. Nowadays, the number of literate women is more and since they get proper education, delays the process of marriage and reproduction, etc. It has been argued that the low status in which women are viewed in patriarchal societies creates a bias against females. Even if women get a job that is fit to their expertise, there arises another next issue. The competition or the need to be as competitive and maybe even more productive and hardworking than men, So that they get a stand in the company. They are often compared to their male colleagues and are also subjected to a gender wage gap. Men receive more salary than women because of the preconceived notion that they are the breadwinners of the family and if women get more money than men, they even feel inferiority complex. This problem led to The Equal Remuneration Act,1976 which helps in equal pay for equal work. Even though there exists such an act, women still have to work twice harder to get equal pay or equal respect.

 

3.Violence against Women

Indian women “have suffered and are suffering discrimination in silence. Self-sacrifice and self-denial are their nobility and fortitude and yet they have been subjected to all inequities, indignities, inequality, and discrimination”[2]

Violence against women has skyrocketed in the 2000s. Women are given very little or no security in the nation and are often subjected to some sort of abuse. If a survey is taken to ask any girl or woman whether they’ve faced any kind of violence, the answer will be a yes. Violence against women is of various types and can happen at any place like home, public place, or office. Violence which are counted as crimes under the Indian Penal Code are rape, kidnapping, and abduction, torture physically and mentally, dowry deaths, wife battering, honour killing, sexual harassment, molestation, trafficking of girls, etc. Rape laws have been made stricter after the cruel case of Nirbhaya[3] which shook the conscience of the entire nation. A 23-year-old woman was brutally gang-raped in a moving bus by a group of 6 people out of which there was a juvenile. The juvenile was the most brutal out of the accused. Women are even abused at the workplace. The famous 1997 case Vishaka v state of Rajasthan[4] formulated the very famous Vishaka guidelines and made it mandatory for both private and public sectors to establish mechanisms to redress sexual harassment complaints. In Kerala, three women died back-to-back in 2021. A similar factor in the three cases is that all of them were married and were often abused and harassed over dowry payments. Hence, they are categorized under dowry deaths. There are several acts and laws that govern the various offenses and injustices against girls and women. Some of them are

  • Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961
  • Child Marriage Restraint Act,1929
  • Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act,1971
  • Indecent Representation of Women (Prohibition) Act,1986
  • Equal Remuneration Act,1976
  • The Commission of Sati (Prevention) Act, 1987
  • Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act,2012

    Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013

  • Domestic Violence Act, 2005
  • Section 376 IPC-Punishment for Rape

Realizing the need of setting up an agency to fulfill the surveillance functions as well as to facilitate grievances of women, Government enacted the National Commission for Women Act, 1990. Even though there are acts and provisions in IPC that restrict and prohibit these acts and various precedents based on offences against women, there are still such offences happening at the same rate. Women do not feel very secure due to these horror stories of various outbreaks of violence taking place everywhere.

4.Conclusion

The worst kind of oppression is oppression within women. They try to bring other women down with their behaviour and their words. Discrimination against women and girls is a pervasive and long-running phenomenon that characterizes Indian society at every level. They should try to stop changing the women and start changing the system. omen in every sphere of life have to deal with various hurdles As we reach the turn of the century, feminism seems to be at an impasse. Young women agree that women should receive equal pay and equal treatment as workers, but many insist that they are not feminists.[5]. There are still people who do not know the meaning of feminism. They use the word feminism in the wrong places. The most heard comment is that, “Why do we need feminism, Let there be equality.” Most of them think that feminism is a form of female superiority but on the other hand, it is nothing the belief in social, economic, and political equality of the sexes[6] There must be collective empowerment of women and also equality of sexes in the society to overcome oppression. Furthermore, there must strict implementation of the laws of the violence against women and this should be looked after further by the officials.

 

 

[1] https://www.indiacode.nic.in/bitstream/123456789/8399/1/pre-conception-pre-natal-diagnostic-techniques-act-1994.pdf/ last accessed on 10th December,2021 10:50 pm

[2] Madhu Kishwar v. State of Bihar, (1996) 5 SCC 148

[3] Mukesh and Anrs. v. NCT Delhi (Nirbhaya Case),(2017) 6 SCC 1

[4] Vishaka & Ors. v State of Rajasthan & Ors., (1997) 6 SCC 241

 

[5] See, for example, Barbara Findlen, Listen Up: Voices From the Next Feminist Generation xiv (Seal 1995) (noting that many more “young feminists have integrated feminist values into our lives” than “consider themselves feminist”); Carolyn Sorisio, A Tale of Two Feminisms: Power and Victimization in Contemporary Feminist Debate in Leslie Heywood and Jennifer Drake, eds, Third Wave Agenda: Being Feminist, Doing Feminism 134, 136 (Minnesota 1997) (noting that the media “continuously” claim that young women have disowned feminism)

[6] https://www.britannica.com/topic/feminism/last

 

This article is written by Roshni S,4th year BA LLB,Kerala Law Academy Law college,Trivandrum.

1 514 515 516 517 518 1,831