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'Rape the girl, blame the girl'

Green Arrow

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BADAR IQBAL CHAUDHARY PUBLISHED about 6 hours ago
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Mukesh Singh is escorted by the police inside the High Court. —AP

I have been trying to write on this topic for quite some time now, but unfortunately, I was left shocked and speechless every time I heard another frivolous justification for rape cited by sex offenders.

Mukesh Singh, the convict in the 2012 Delhi rape incident – in which a daughter of India had to suffer the consequences of being born a girl in a patriarchal, chauvinistic society – asserted it was Nirbhaya’s fault, that she was "indecent to be roaming around at nine o'clock at night."

What can you say to this twisted logic?

What can you do to change it?

No solution, no suggestions, no words ever seemed sufficient. Worse, true justice is unattainable, impossible.

When I first entered the field of law, I had the usual quixotic notions of the profession – how glamorous it would be; how virtuous, how just. I had imagined I would go about pleading justice, and it would fly towards me like winged angels. I saw myself as a solitary force of order amidst chaos.

It would be easy, I thought, or at least convenient.

One of the first files that came my way was that of a rape incident. The victim was a final year medical student at one of the most prestigious universities of the country. The culprit was her Khalu (maternal uncle).

He had trespassed her house with the intention of theft, and was discovered by the girl. She was raped, apparently to silence her from speaking up, and it was filmed. The uncle, soon thereafter, absconded to one of the Southeast Asian countries.

By the time I put the file down, I was fighting back tears. I thought about what she must have envisaged for her future, what she must have dreamt for her life; all those years of hard work, all those moments of struggle she must have gone through, and now, here she was, a rape victim.

In sub-continental societies, a rape victim is a victim twice. She is a perpetual victim. Once invaded by the soulless barbarian, and forever stigmatised to the soulless society.


We have been trying to get the culprit repatriated through Interpol ever since. Years have passed; the poor girl has had to appear in courts over and over ever since, but without any sign of the criminal.

Psychologists hypothesise that rape is about power and not lust. I feel that is an over-simplification of the truth.

Also read: The trivialisation of rape in Pakistan

I remember that sweltering day in June when, just having finished cross-examination and drenched in sweat, a senior colleague and I were walking down the long corridors of the city district courts. An ASI had approached us, requesting for help with a statement that a rape victim was to make in the court. She did not have a lawyer.

We quickly examined the file's contents and walked into the court. The perpetrator, the Mamu (maternal uncle) of the girl, was already standing there in shackles. The statement was made – a shocking story of betrayal and inhumanity.

Then, the defendant spoke.

He stated that whatever he would say would be the entire truth. He told the court he had fornicated with his niece only after marrying her. He alleged that the 16-year-old had asked him to save her from the clutches of her parents, who were getting her married against her will.

In the convoluted logic of his sick mind, the request for being saved from the parents meant forcefully marrying the girl and raping her thereafter. This was his 'defence'.


That was the first time I had lost my composure in court.

Also read: A license to rape

It was perhaps the only time I felt the urges that those imposing vigilante justice feel. I was too shaken to work after that – I came back home and spent the rest of the day brooding.

We get cases of murders on a daily basis – two, four, six, more dead – enmity, sectarianism, flaying tempers or something else. These incidents shake me up, but none half as much as the rape and the acid attack cases.

Death is painful, but living a traumatised life that which kills you a little every day is far worse. I cannot fathom the pain of it. I have the imagination, I lack the courage and the strength to envision it.

Freud had enunciated that as a consequence of cognitive self-defence, humans validate their acts by rationalising them as being right. According to Dale Carnegie, Al-Capone – the most notorious gangster of 1920s America – thought of himself as more of a Robin Hood than a Moriarty.

Mukesh Singh rationalised his rape like this: "A decent girl won't roam around at nine o'clock at night. A girl is far more responsible for rape than a boy."

9pm was the boundary for Mukesh. A girl out on the road after a given time was asking to be raped. No other consideration required.


I wish it were as absurd as saying a car out on the road is asking to be stolen, or a man out on the road is asking to be shot, but appropriating this logic for the rape analogy is much more nefarious.

For others, it may be the dress code, or the girl’s conduct. It could be her attitude, or something she said. It could be her silence, or her mere existence. Everything is indicative of how she was asking for it; it was her fault; she deserved nothing better.

Also read: Policing Mathira, Deepika — and all South Asian women

I want to believe it is ignorance that causes such acts, I want to be convinced it is Bollywood that perpetuates this culture.

But when well-read people like Munawar Hassan, the former JI chief, who have no business with Bollywood, defend the accused by stating a girl who cannot corroborate her story with four witnesses should not report rape, the above postulates become untenable.

Also read: Clicking on rape

It is the patriarchy (in both India and Pakistan), and the tendency to think of a woman as chattel, even whilst claiming they assume a respectable position in our midst. Sadly, with this hypocrisy firmly in place, we will continue to ask the same questions to the same horror:

What can you say to this twisted logic?

What can you do to change it?

'Rape the girl, blame the girl' - Blogs - DAWN.COM
 
Of course it's the girls's fault. Vedic wisdom teaches us that if she wasn't born a girl, she would have never been raped.
 
Girls are responsible for their part but you also need to hold responsible the general nakedness in media and culture which has become so common that mind fails to spot it as nakedness anymore.

Watch this girl walk in the streets of NY


and Compare it with this girl walking on the streets of NY

You will find that it is the girls dressing which is inviting eyes, comments and desires. Girls need to take the burden of their part while they are not the only one to be blamed here.
 
Girls can be blamed for one thing, ignoring the situation of the city that's all. One knows that the society is not yet safe still if you want to act liberal then it is foolishness. It will take 20 more years to roam freely in delhi, but risk will always be there till man woman exists , be it delhi , NY, Paris, wherever.

The statement '' get raped when being raped'' by this asshole should be condemned and more would be condemned, the interview of this bhos*ika by some liberal bhos*ike. Make him bloody example of a zombie. That people fear the consequences.

I am against public execution because some might attain sympathy for this loda or any other. Just make him and the rest four and other who raped a girl in haryana brutally.
 
Girls are responsible for their part but you also need to hold responsible the general nakedness in media and culture which has become so common that mind fails to spot it as nakedness anymore.

Watch this girl walk in the streets of NY


and Compare it with this girl walking on the streets of NY

You will find that it is the girls dressing which is inviting eyes, comments and desires. Girls need to take the burden of their part while they are not the only one to be blamed here.


This is none sense. Perverts will be perverts, you act as if women that are dressed conservatively never get hit on.
 
First of all the guy should not have been interviewed.... Now that the interview is released, no one should have taken it seriously... why are we giving importance to that moron and analyse his moronic logic?
 
Girls are responsible for their part but you also need to hold responsible the general nakedness in media and culture which has become so common that mind fails to spot it as nakedness anymore.

Watch this girl walk in the streets of NY


and Compare it with this girl walking on the streets of NY

You will find that it is the girls dressing which is inviting eyes, comments and desires. Girls need to take the burden of their part while they are not the only one to be blamed here.

People thinking like this is the problem. This has nothing to do with how anyone is dressed.

A shirtless man walks down the street. Nobody will give a damn, nobody will rape him, nobody will say that he is provoking unwanted sexual attention, nobody will blame him for anything.

These girls aren't even topless, but apparently dressing how they want to is enough to cause these animals to rape. It is not the girl's responsibility to avoid rapists. It is the rapists fault for being rapists, that is all.
 
How a prisoner in prison for rape was allowed to give interview but still this man is one hell of a son of a bitc*
 

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