78% Delhi women sexually harassed in 2012: Survey
The survey, done by research agency MaRS exclusively for HT during
the last week of 2012, covered 356 women — apart from the 146 men — who
use public transport. No country for women?
An overwhelming majority of the respondents support the decision to
set up fast-track courts to try rape cases. And asked about measures to
stop sexual harassment, more than three-fourths of them say swifter
punishment is the way forward.
A few of Delhi’s citizens, however, think that the problem lies with
the male attitude, which must be changed. While 24% men support this
view, only 19% women think so — a sign of women feeling that changing
male attitudes is a near-impossible task.
The survey also brought out the attitudinal differences between men
and women. While a majority of women disagree that the issue of sexual
harassment is exaggerated, 65% of men thought that it is. But both sides
agree that there is no silver bullet to solve the problem.
Meera Basu, a 29-year-old resident of south Delhi, said, “You can't
just put the onus on women, asking them to dress in a certain way or
learn self-defence.”
She said, “Short-term steps, such as more policing or removing
tinted-glass windows from buses need to be combined with longer-term
measures, such as improving the way cases are handled in our courts and
gender-sensitising young men in schools and universities.”
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