Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

MAKE POLITICS MUCH MORE ABOUT WOMEN

- LALITA PANICKER lalita.panicker@hindustant­imes.com

In case you were waiting with bated breath last weekend for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) national executive to make some substantia­l statements on how the party plans to improve women’s rights as it goes into election mode, you must have been disappoint­ed. However, the Modi government could have spoken of the many schemes it has instituted which have benefitted women though not as much as they should have. The Ujjwala Yojana, which provides cooking gas connection­s to poor households, has meant much less manual work for many women and less danger of contractin­g respirator­y diseases. The Swachh Bharat programmes have improved hygiene and safety for women. This is to mention just a few.

But it would have been really heartening for the half the population had the party and others in the fray felt that women’s issues were important enough to feature as an important aspect of their election blueprints. For one, all parties really need to sit down with their elected representa­tives and tell them that there has to be a culture of respect when speaking of women.

A BJP MLA from Ghatkopar recently grandly offered to kidnap girls who refused offers of marriage from young men. The MLA felt it was his duty to fulfil the wishes of men who were rejected suitors and use force to make women comply. Then we had an independen­t MLA from Kerala who dismissed a nun rape victim as a whore. This disrespect cuts across party lines.

The message should come from the party leaders that any legislator found disparagin­g women will face the consequenc­es within the party and within the law. These remarks cannot be dismissed as just loose talk. They are taken as licence to misbehave by the lumpen elements in all parties.

How heartening it would be if political parties gearing up for elections were to discuss seriously how to push up the number of women candidates. Data from the Inter-parliament­ary Union ranks India 147 out of 188 countries when it comes to the representa­tion of women in parliament.

There is still time before real election fever kicks in. The BJP should lead the debate on how much the lack of inclusion of women in the labour force has hurt the economy. India’s female labour force participat­ion is among the lowest in South Asia, according to the latest Economic Survey data. If Indian women had equal employment and work opportunit­ies, Mckinsey Global Institute estimates that it would add $ 770 billion to the economy.

If the last election was about developmen­t, this one could be about developmen­t plus women’s rights. It is amazing that all parties feel the need to institute women-centric schemes but feel no need to either showcase them or build on them. When elections come around, the discourse usually revolves around security or class-caste politics. The feeling is that women’s rights just don’t get you votes and that women are, by and large, not winnable candidates.

It is no one’s contention that electoral rhetoric should be focused only on women but half the population deserves much more attention than it gets now. As mentioned before in these columns, there is no women’s vote like, say, a Yadav vote or a Bhoomihar vote. Women are fragmented and marginalis­ed in all sections of society, so they have less political leverage. Perhaps civil society and women’s groups, who are efficient influencer­s as seen in the Article 377 struggle, should put their minds to at least pushing for more women to enter politics. It may not bring about a revolution, but certainly women’s rights would get a boost. And it might just make elections that much more interestin­g and varied.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India