CYBER CRIME AGAINST WOMEN BY DR.DEBARATI HALDER,PH.D.
It was an anxious moment for almost every citizen in the
country who was waiting to see what awaits the rapists of Nirbhaya, the Delhi
gang rape victim. Right on the eve of the judgement day however, I came across another
news which led me to think more than I was expected to think on the gang rape
verdict: the electronic personal safety device (Epsd) which is on its way
specially to protect women in distress ( See http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/watchlike-device-to-alert-kin-of-women-in-distress/article5107722.ece) . I
would have forgotten the information as‘regular news’ which kindles our mind
only for a minute or two had I not been
called for an interview by PuthiyaThalaimurai, a Tamil News channel, on
the judgement day. The breaking news that this TV channel was airing after 2 in
the afternoon obviously braced the issue of the verdict, especially the death
penalty and people’s emotions related to it. I was asked about my opinion as an
advocate, a woman advocate rather. The reporter, while giving his details and
interviewing me, told about the 12 year old school girl in Tuticorin, who was
brutally raped and then killed by the rapist almost within a week after the
Delhi gang rape case happened. While I was giving my views as to what sentence can
be expected in this particular rape case, I started realising how far the
society has become blood thirsty for rapists. As a woman and a mother of a
girl, even I myself would have wanted any one who sexually abuses or assaults
another woman or a minor girl, to go through similar or even more physical pain
and mental trauma that he would have caused to his victim. However, as an
advocate and a legal researcher, I need to be more rational.
But an ‘EPSD’ for protecting women from
sexual abusers?
After
going through hoards of news reports about the Delhi verdict and knowing how
brutally the little girl in Tuticorin was killed, I could not stop thinking the
‘watch like device’ as similar to geolocator loggers or collars used for
tracking migratory birds or wild animals and the women who would be wearing it,
as experimental guinea pigs trapped and tracked for no fault of theirs.
I have some points to think it as anti feminist:
i.Even though the operation of it would be manual, i.e, the
woman can switch on the device only when she needs to alert her people, what
happens when the it gets accidentally ( or even intentionally) switched on by
the harasser if he wishes to show the
harassment, disrobing or even rape of the victim to the select audience through
even smarter technology ?
ii. Given the fact that laws in India are still confused
about tracking a non-criminal person by private individuals including the parents,
husbands or other immediate family members, would the privacy-infringement laws
be amended again to include this exception? In that case, we need to be ready
for the misuse of the law also.
iii. Nonetheless, our Indian society is changing. Won’t this
device present another debatable issue similar to dress-code or gagging the
right to use mobile phones or internet for women ( I discussed about this in
one of my earlier blogs @ http://debaraticyberspace.blogspot.in/2012/12/gagging-right-to-digital-communication.html)
?
Well, I am not the only one who is thinking in these lines. Some
of the comment –contributors of the news report on the device did express
similar concern.
But I must say, the device is a safety
device and apparently women would be given freedom to use it or not to use it
since The Constitution of India has given equal rights to women to live their
own lives. Saying this, I can neither ignore the benefits of the device. Tracking
of criminals through GPS system is introduced to Indian police system quite a
long ago. Almost all the police head quarters and police stations including stations
situated in interior parts of India are expected to stay connected to track the
criminal through this; and this device can be an extended mobile version of
criminal tracking system, which would be carried by women. It can be expected
that in future everyone, irrespective of their gender can use it for alerting
the police about the crime and the criminal.
But still then, I can’t stop thinking: has
our society gone so low that it has to tie the crime detector on women (my angry soul can’t
stop myself from giving the name to our gender in great dismay ‘the sex-thing’)?
Please Note:
Do not violate copyright of this blog. If you would like to use informations
provided in this blog for your own assignment/writeup/project/blog/article,
please cite it as “Halder D. (2013), “Security
of women in whose hands”, 15thSeptember,2013, published in
http://debaraticyberspace.blogspot.com/