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Harsh But
Just Since rapists do not even have
an iota of compassion, society must reciprocate
In advocating the death penalty for rape Home Minister L.K. Advani is
articulating the sheer disgust which every such act evokes. The recent violation -- and
never has the word been so apt -- of nuns at Jhabua in Madhya Pradesh has strengthened the
popular perception that a rapist is somehow less than human, he is a deviant who deserves
no mercy. In a hospital in Mumbai, Aruna Shanbaug -- perhaps India's most tragic rape
victim -- has spent 25 years in coma. The ward boy who destroyed this nurse's life used a
dog chain to immobilise her. Horrifically, he also lacerated her wind pipe and cut off a
vital link to her brain. Today, while Aruna waits a death which does not arrive, her
molester is a free man -- having got away for lack of evidence. It is at such moments that
the death penalty seems most justified, even desirable. Rape has a million silent victims:
young women numbed by squeamish families; little girls who are victims of incest or the
lust of a trusted associate. Many rape cases in India go unreported. Indeed, such was the
misplaced prudery that till a few years ago more conservative newspapers preferred terms
like "criminal assault" to describe rape.
Advani will find much support for his harsh prescription.
Yet, rape will not vanish simply by making it a capital offence. Before such a law is
enacted, the conditions for it must exist. Medical and policing authorities have to
undergo a transformation in attitude. Just as western police forces have special homicide
squads, the Home Ministry has to strengthen its gender-specific mechanism. An officer
looking after the crimes against women (CAW) cell one day could well be transferred to
traffic control the next. This won't do. The CAW cells have to be equipped with staff of
lasting commitment. Only with experience will come the expertise to smoothen the mangled
psyche of a human being -- or, and this will doubtless be a problem, tell a genuine
complaint from a trumped up charge.
Performance Matters
Nice words prime minister, how about a modicum of
implementation
Political analysts often talk about the ability of
political administrators to "talk up" the markets or "talk down"
prices. In effect, this means that a decisive policy announcement is enough to influence
the economic indices -- provided it is accompanied by sufficient credibility. In the eight
months they have been in office Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Finance Minister
Yashwant Sinha have tried to "talk up" the markets -- and the general mood of
the nation -- on several occasions. Most infamously, Sinha promised a boom "by
September" only to find his hopes going bust. While the finance minister has acquired
a reputation for talking through his hat, the prime minister has come to be seen as a man
who begins the right journeys but conveniently fails to complete them.
Early in his term, Vajpayee put in place a set of task forces
-- on defence, information technology, the finances of states, you name it. Reports have
long been submitted. In the case of info-tech, the Jaswant Singh-led panel's suggestions
have even been hailed as the route to software superpowerdom. Yet, implementation levels
are close to zero. Given this record, the scepticism evoked by Vajpayee's policy overdose
at a recent industry conference is understandable. For instance, allowing companies to buy
back shares is already being described as a means of buying time for the Government -- by
pushing up the Sensex temporarily. The supposedly new initiatives on disinvestment,
aviation and telecom are anything but that. In these areas the BJP-led regime has shot
itself in the foot by appearing to succumb to vested interests. Far from taking a great
leap forward, it now has to do some urgent repair work. What use are grand promises if
they are not followed up? The prime minister cannot but know that whether the fare be
swadeshi or videshi the proof of the pudding lies in the eating. |