Due to Tejpal case, companies scared of hiring women: Naresh Agarwal

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New Delhi: Samajwadi Party leader Naresh Agarwal has once again made a controversial statement on the Tehelka case. He has now said that an unforeseen fallout of the sexual assault case is that companies are now scared of hiring women.

“The flip side to this is that many organisations are now scared of hiring women employees,” Agarwal said.

This is not the first time that Agarwal has sparked a controversy with his statements. In the recent past, Naresh Agarwal has landed himself into trouble with his ‘tea-seller PM’ remark and also for comparing the BJP with a widow.

Agarwal had apparently attacked BJP Prime Ministerial candidate Narendra Modi stating that a “tea-seller” can never have national perspective. “Narendra Modi wants to become a PM. Someone rising from a tea shop can never have a national perspective. Like, if you make a ‘sipahi’ (constable) as ‘kaptan’ (Superintendent of Police) he can never have SP’s approach but will have that of a constable,” Agarwal told a rally in Hardoi.

ALSO SEE SP’s Naresh Agarwal compares BJP with a ‘widow’, takes a dig at Modi

Agarwal had also said the Prime Minister of a country has to be an able person of national stature. “As far as crowd is concerned, a ‘madari’ (street performer) also gathers it,” he added.

Agarwal had also compared the BJP to a ‘widow’. “In my village there is a saying that if you ask a widow for blessings, she will ask you to become like her. Similarly, the BJP is asking everyone to become like them,” Naresh Agarwal said.

Agarwal had even taken a swipe at Modi saying he doesn’t believe in marriages. “About family, when the BJP does not follow the trend of marriage, how will there be a family? He does not know the joy of being in a family,” he had said.

Blog: Does a sexually abused woman have no voice?

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All India | Noopur Tiwari | Updated: November 25, 2013 18:13 IST

 
Blog: Does a sexually abused woman have no voice?

File photo of Tehelka founder Tarun Tejpal

Sexual assault is not just about the criminal, it’s also about the abused.

But this is often forgotten and the abused ends up being “silenced for her own good”. This holds true not just for the Khap variety of justice but also in the response of the criminal justice system to rape where the choice of the abused becomes somewhat irrelevant.

In the Tehelka case, Shoma Chaudhury’s claim that she was respecting the journalist’s choice to file the FIR or not, was seen as a move that shielded her alleged rapist. If the journalist didn’t report the crime, those who were in the know were expected to, in order to let law take its own course.

On the other hand, some ignored the need to take the journalist’s consent before putting out explicit details of the crime from her mail into the public domain. A petition was soon doing the rounds to prevent any further breach of privacy. Soon these details were splashed on the front page of a leading newspaper.

The Goa police filed a suo moto FIR against Tarun Tejpal and the criminal investigation began. In all these cases, someone else was claiming they were acting or not, in what they thought was “good for the abused”.

But how much control was the person herself allowed over her own story?  Did she have adequate support, time or the option to decide how she wanted to pursue the case? Measured public outrage is a strong force, it can cushion the abused and help them get justice, but it becomes dangerous when it focuses so much on the criminal that it forgets the abused. Those speaking on behalf of the Tehelka journalist must not forget that the assaulted person this time is an empowered woman, not voiceless and not entirely helpless (unlike in December 2012 when the assaulted woman was dying in hospital).

Rape is a cognizable offence in India, which means the person abused is not required to lodge an FIR. 

This takes away the onus of filing a report from the person who was sexually assaulted and therefore protects her.

The criminal prosecution does not really “need” her. If the abused is a minor, in a vulnerable situation or deeply traumatised, this is of tremendous help. It also saves the abused from being exposed to coercion or any kind of pressure from either the offenders or being influenced by anyone to not speak out and ask for justice. But is it always fine to not take the abused person’s own position into consideration?

In the Tehelka case, it’s not clear whether or not the journalist felt at first that civil action was a better choice for her. Activists who claim they are aware of what she wants say she had opted for civil action. Once the FIR was filed, she said she would co-operate with the police. The question of her “choice” was brushed aside hastily and many of her defenders were no longer interested in what the abused thought would be best for her to be able to “move on”. It’s probably too late now. Anyone, including the abused, questioning criminal action are likely to be lynched in the public discourse now.

Tarun Tejpal has already confessed his guilt in the letters that were made public. He admits to an attempt at ‘sexual liaison’ despite the journalist’s ‘clear reluctance’.
 
Perhaps without the suo-moto action, the abused would indeed have been pressured to give up entirely. So is this silencing in fact giving her a voice?

Criminal action is designed to punish criminals, but is that the same thing as bringing justice to the abused? If it’s “good for society”, is it necessarily “good for the abused”? What happens when the abused does ‘not’ want to take the route that seems better for society? The suo-motu option saves the abused from the burden of filing an FIR, which is great, but if she has to give her testimony and then bear the consequences of court proceedings that don’t go in her favour, what then?

There are some who don’t want to send their aggressors to jail because they are close or related to them. There seems to be little empathy for this choice.  Civil action can be expensive or not get the abused the desired result but the abused should at least get to choose. Is the abused expected to sacrifice her own good for the greater good?  If she thinks an apology and financial compensation can bring her more relief , she is highly likely to be seen as dishonest and her position will be judged as immoral. So in the end the onus comes back squarely on the abused.

Raising questions about the response of the criminal justice system to the needs of the person abused should not be equated to attempts at shielding rapists. That would stifle an important debate. That there should be zero tolerance for sexual harassment at the workplace is unquestionable. Too much is at stake in the Tehelka case. It will set a strong precedence.
But a sexual assault is devastating for an individual and shatters their peace. A solution that provides protection to society by punishing criminals doesn’t automatically protect the abused person’s individual rights. We need to solve this dilemma. 

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed within this blog are the personal opinions of the author. NDTV is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, suitability, or validity of any information on this blog.  All information is provided on an as-is basis. The information, facts or opinions appearing on the blog  do not reflect the views of NDTV and NDTV does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same.

93 schoolgirls sexually harassed aboard Patna train

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Sharad Chandra, Hindustan Times  Dhanbad, November 24, 2013

 
First Published: 20:46 IST(24/11/2013) | Last Updated: 23:49 IST(24/11/2013)

A group of 93 schoolgirls travelling on a train from Patna to Dhanbad were sexually harassed for more than four hours in the wee hours of Sunday.

The students along with three women teachers from Carmel School in Dhanbad and Digwadih in Jharkhand were returning after participating in a two-day environmental camp in Patna.

 

Around 10pm on Saturday, the girls and the teachers reached Patna railway station to find that their reserved seats in the Ganga Damodar Express had been occupied by a large group of men claiming to be examinees of the railway recruitment exam.

The group approached the railway police, but the cops just asked them to enter the compartment and said the men would vacate the seats on their own.

 
 

 

The men, however, refused to vacate the seats.

After the train left Patna junction around 11.40pm, the men began harassing and molesting the girls.

When the teachers protested, the men assaulted them. No co-passenger or train staff came to their rescue.

The ordeal lasted until the men got down at Koderma station four hours later.

After the girls got down at Dhanbad railway station, they could be seen crying and narrating the incident to their parents who had come to pick them up.

“It was a nightmare. I never want to travel in trains again,” a Class-9 girl told Hindustan Times.

“Those men had grabbed all our seats and began harassing us. When our teachers protested, they slapped and assaulted them. We travelled the whole way standing and huddled together in queues, as the men kept on pulling us.”

However, a police complaint will only be lodged on Monday, said one of the teachers travelling with the girls.

“The students are very tired and traumatised, and need rest. So, we have decided to lodge a police complaint tomorrow,” said Sonali Singh, a teacher at Carmel School, Dhanbad.

Tarun Tejpal likely to move High Court for case to be transferred out of Goa: sources

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| Edited by Abhinav Bhatt | Updated: November 24, 2013 21:24 IST

New Delhi Tarun Tejpal, the founder of Tehelka, who has been accused of sexual assault by a young journalist of the magazine in Goa earlier this month, is considering all his legal options and may move the High Court to ask for the case to be transferred out of Goa, as he fears he may not get a fair trial there, sources have said.

HERE ARE THE LATEST DEVELOPMENTS IN THIS STORY:
  1. The Goa Police today said they will slap fresh charges against Mr Tejpal, if required, since many things have emerged in the probe. “If additional charges are required, they will be added according to the development in the course of action,” Deputy Inspector General of Police OP Mishra said in Panaji.
  2. Earlier today, the Goa Police questioned three employees of Tehelka in connection with the allegations of sexual assault against Mr Tejpal. The police had questioned Tehelka’s Managing Editor Shoma Chaudhury yesterday.
  3. The three employees were questioned for nearly four hours as witnesses. The cops are also in the process of collecting Mr Tejpal’s emails in connection with the incident and the complaint of the girl to the magazine’s management following which he is likely to be questioned.
  4. Ms Chaudhury and a few employees were questioned for more than nine hours yesterday.
  5. According to Tehelka, their questioning began at 4:30 pm on Saturday evening and ended at 2 am on Sunday. The police recorded their statements at the magazine’s office in South Delhi and asked Ms Chaudhury to hand over all related documents and emails to assist them in their investigation. (Watch)
  6. “Yesterday, at the Tehelka office, the Goa police took my deposition for about nine hours, it was extremely courteous experience and I fully cooperated and showed every document that was relevant, every email exchange that was there between my colleagues, the management, it was shared, it was a good experience and I hope it helps bring clarity and justice to the entire case,” Ms Chaudhury said today.
  7. Last evening, the young journalist who has said that she was sexually assaulted in Goa by Mr Tejpal, said that she is worried about her family being harassed by his associates. The journalist released a statement in which she said a member of Mr Tejpal’s immediate family visited her mother’s home in Delhi last night and asked what the young woman “wanted” and who is assisting her legally. (Read: Tarun Tejpal’s relative asked what I “wanted”, says journalist)
  8. Today, the National Commission for Women asked the Mumbai Police to provide security to the journalist.
  9. The police case is based on an email sent to Ms Chaudhury by the journalist on Monday, which was later leaked. Legal experts say the email clearly outlines criminal offences and that Ms Chaudhury broke the law by not reporting the matter to the police.
  10. Mr Tejpal suggested in a statement on Friday that his version of events is different from what the young journalist has detailed. However, in an apology that Mr Tejpal had emailed to the young woman on Tuesday, he referred to a “shameful lapse of judgement that led me to attempt a sexual liaison with you on two occasions on 7 November and 8 November 2013, despite your clear reluctance that you did not want such attention from me.”
Story First Published: November 24, 2013 21:18 IST