Thursday, August 9, 2012

Bihar: Rape capital of India?


Manoj Chaurasia in Patna

A series of rape incidents have rocked Bihar of late In the past two days, at least six cases of gang-rape have been reported from various parts of the state, scaring citizens. Significantly, the ruling Nitish Kumar government had returned to power after 2010 assembly elections on the plank of maintaining law and order in Bihar but the present situation appears quite more alarming as is evident from the total failures by the state administration to tackle crime against women.

In a fresh incident, a college girl was picked up by three car-borne youths in Gaya and gang-raped in the ruling vehicle before being thrown out along the national highway in far-off Kaimur district. The sensational incident took place in broad daylight on Wednesday while the 19-year-old BA part-I student of Gaya-based Gautam Buddha Mahila College was way to a coaching centre. On hearing her cries, the local villagers rushed to the spot and admitted the victim to a local government hospital from where she was handed over to her parents. She told the police that three youths dragged her into a SUV and gang-raped her into the running vehicle before being throwing her out in an unconscious state. The police have arrested two youths in this connection.

Similar incident was reported from the state capital where a Nepali girl was thrown out on the busy Bailey Road, considered the lifeline of Patna, yesterday after being gang-raped for a year. Her cries invited the attention of the passersby who admitted her to the nearby Rajvanshi Nagar’s government hospital. She told the police that she had fled her home in Nepal last year after being chided by her parents but shortly after she reached Patna, she fell into the sex racket. During her stay in Patna, she was supplied at 29 different locations of sex racketeers. Police said she had refused returning her home at Janakpur in Nepal. Meanwhile, the victim has been handed over to a women helpline.

In another incident reported from eastern Bihar’s Lakhisarai district, a class VIII girl student of a government middle school was lured by her school teacher and then raped several times until she became pregnant. The entire matter came to light when the victim’s parents admitted her to a local hospital yesterday when her labour pain started. Hurriedly, her parents brought her to a local hospital but she fainted while riding the stairs and suffered miscarriage. “The condition of the girl is very serious since she has become pregnant in a tender age…she is anaemic and urgently requires blood”, a local doctor Dr Rupa who attended the victim told reporters today.

On Tuesday, the Guwahati molestation incident was virtually repeated on the streets of Patna when a 24-year-old teacher with a private school was allegedly molested by a group of drunken youths. The girl screamed for help but none came to her rescue out of fear of ruffians as she saved herself by taking shelter inside a roadside house. The girl dressed in jean-pant was returning home on foot after the duty hours when some three youths mobbed her and began allegedly molesting her as the onlookers stayed away from help. One of the passersby who tried to rescue her was brutally assaulted by the youths. In the meantime police have registered a case against some persons in this connection. Yesterday, the main accused in the case surrendered in the court under mounting police pressures, after which he sent to jail but the increasing cases of sexual assaults on the female class have terrorised the common men.

These incidents come close on the heels of gang-rape of a teen-aged girl in Patna by some seven youths who also filmed the entire act on their mobile phone camera before getting them uploaded on the internet and circulating them in the market after making their CDs. The incident occurred in a flat in Rambha Apartment located in the high-security zone of the state capital where are situated the official bungalows of the chief minister, governor and senior government official. Reports said using these footages, the accused forced the girl submit again and again for a month until the CDs hit the markets and entire story broke. The local media has reported that the incident occurred in June itself but the police continued sitting over the case allegedly under pressures from the some big sharks whose wards were involved in the act. It is alleged son a ruling party lawmaker is involved in the act but the said lawmaker has denied it.

The police swung into action in July end only after a local news channel ran the story and telecast a portion of the story after which women rights groups hit the streets of the state capital and took out late night “candle march”, seeking action against the accused. Subsequently, the State Women Commission rushed to the victim and recorded the statement of the victim after which the case was formally lodged. 

The police, though were geared into action and arrested some of the accused only when the court of the chief judicial magistrate, Patna while taking suo moto cognizance of the case issued arrest warrant against the accused. However, the mystery boy Saurabh still remains out of the reach of the police. The entire issue figured prominently in the current monsoon session of the state assembly as the Opposition members vociferously raised the issue and continuously disrupted House proceedings, seeking for a CBI probe into the incident and punishing the culprits. The government has assured culprits will not be spared.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Caste no bar for next CM: Lalu



Manoj Chaurasia in Patna
In a sudden climb-down, Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief Lalu Prasad has announced that the next chief minister could be from any caste if his party comes back to power in the Assembly elections due in 2015 ~ a gamble observers feel may pay off for the party, which is now battling for survival.  
The move is aimed at bridging the gap with other castes and seeking their support in forming the next government. So far, both the RJD chief ministers ~ Prasad himself and his wife, Rabri Devi ~ have been from his family, which has not conveyed a good message to the voters.  
Prasad made the statement while kicking off the third leg of his Parivartan Yatra from Nawada yesterday. The RJD’s yatra, considered a reply to a series of yatras recently undertaken by chief minister Nitish Kumar, is aimed at unseating the present NDA regime, which Prasad has accused of being “anti-poor” and “neck-deep in corruption”.  
Prasad’s declaration assumes significance given the fact that he very recently had begun grooming his cricketer son Tejaswi Yadav for the coveted post, while closely following in the success story of Uttar Pradesh chief minister Akhilesh Yadav. Prasad, had planned to assign his son the task of strengthening the organisational base of the party’s young wing, before giving him the bigger responsibility in the event of the RJD putting up a good performance in the next polls, according to RJD sources.   
He seems to have changed course, though, after receiving some not-so-good feedback about his proposed plan.   
So far, Prasad’s family had staked a strong claim on the post of chief minister which was one of the reasons for it losing power on its home turf despite having strong support among the poor, backwards, Dalits and Muslims, observers say.   
In the 2010 Assembly elections, the RJD stood a good chance of making a significant improvement in its seat tally, but the party’s sudden move to project Prasad as the chief ministerial candidate and Pashupati Nath Paras, Dalit leader Ram Vilas Paswan’s younger brother, as his deputy, spoiled the entire show as the NDA went to the voters highlighting the RJD chief’s poor track record as Bihar chief minister.  
This, according to observers, sealed the fate of the RJD, which was restricted to a mere 23 seats in 243-member Bihar Assembly.
The RJD chief’s rallies are now drawing impressive crowds, however, which indicate the rising level of frustration with the present regime. Even ruling party lawmakers admit that corruption in development schemes has hugely disappointed the common men and earned a bad name for the Nitish Kumar government.  
This has been corroborated by a recent survey conducted by a BJP member of Parliament from Purnia,  Uday Singh, in his Lok Sabha constituency.  
According to the 55-page survey, 50 per cent of the people feel the condition of the health centres is bad, 60 per cent of children aged three to six have been out of Anganwadi centres, 96 per cent of people are totally against the state government’s policy of opening wine shops at the panchayat level, and only 12 per cent of the below-poverty-line (BPL) families have been given job cards.
"The survey is not aimed at highlighting the failures of the state government, but at bringing out the truth, so that the problems can be rectified,” said Singh.  
He said the government’s intentions are good but the loopholes in the system are defeating the purposes of the welfare schemes.  
“It’s a pity that problems of the people refuse to come down despite a good government being in power,” he said. “Hooliganism is once again raising its head, red-tapism has increased, people’s representatives are being mistreated and political activists are being ignored."  
At the same time, he said, the academic system has collapsed in the state and the farmers’ condition has worsened.