ENOUGH IS ENOUGH Anguished President Droupadi Murmu asksnation to wake up, end crimes against women
NEW DELHI :
No civilised society can allow daughters and sisters to be subjected to such atrocities. “The nation is bound to be outraged, and so am I,” President Murmu wrote in an exclusive signed article for PTI
DECLARING that “enough is enough”, President Droupadi Murmu
on Wednesday said, it is time for India to wake up to the “perversion” of crimes against women and counter the mindset that sees
women as “less powerful, less capable, less intelligent”.
“Those who share such views then go further and see the female
as an object. We owe it to our daughters to remove the hurdles
from their path of winning the freedom from fear,” Murmu said
in an exclusive signed article for PTI.
Referring to the August 9 rape and murder of a junior doctor in
a Kolkata hospital, a “dismayed and horrified” President said what
is even more depressing is that it is part of a series of crimes against
women.
No civilised society can allow daughters and sisters to be subjected to such atrocities. “The nation is bound to be outraged,
and so am I,” she wrote.
The hard-hitting and personalised article, titled“Women’s Safety:
Enough is Enough”, is the first time the President has articulated
her views on the August 9 Kolkata incident that has once again
shaken the conscience of the nation and led to widespread, continuing protests.
The President gave the article after a detailed conversation on
topical issues with a team of PTI senior editors, who called on her
at Rashtrapati Bhawan to mark the 77th anniversary of the news
agency’s founding on August 27, 1947.
“Even as students, doctors and citizens were protesting in
Kolkata, criminals remained on the prowl elsewhere. The victims
include even kindergarten girls,” Murmu said.
During the interaction, she recalled her recent meeting with a
group of schoolchildren on Raksha Bandhan. “They asked me
innocently if they could be assured that there
would be no recurrence of the Nirbhaya-type
incident in future,” the President said, referring to the brutal rape and murder of a physiotherapy intern in Delhi in December 2012.
She noted that an outraged nation then
made plans and devised strategies, and the
initiatives did make some difference. In the
12 years since, there have been countless
tragedies of similar nature though only a few
drew nationwide attention, Murmu said.
“Did we learn our lessons? As social protests
petered out, these incidents got buried into
a deep and inaccessible recess of social memory, to be recalled only when another heinous
crime takes place,” she said.
Taking a macro view of the rights of women,
she said they have had to fight for every inch
of ground they have won. Social prejudices
as well as some customs and practices have
always opposed the expansion of women’s
rights, Murmu added.
“This is a rather deplorable mindset. This
mindset sees the female as a lesser human
being, less powerful, less capable, less intelligent,” she wrote. In her view, it is the objectification of women by a few
that is behind the crimes
against women.
“It is ingrained deeply in
the minds of such people,”
the president said, stressing
thatcountering thismindset
is a task for both the State
and society.Acknowledging
that there have been laws
and social campaigns, she
said,“Yet,thereis something
that continues to come in
the way and to torment us.”
History,thePresidentsaid,
“often hurts” and societies
scared to face history resort
to “collective amnesia” to
bury their heads in the sand
like the proverbial ostrich.
“Now the time has come
not only to face history
squarely but also to search
within our souls and probe
the pathology of crimes
against women,” she said in
her impassioned appeal.