Gulf News

Shocking women’s suicide figures in India

The country must do all that is necessary to ensure this trend abates and women feel safe and protected

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It is said to be the biggest public health crisis affecting India and the numbers bear it out — two out of every five women who commit suicide globally are from India. This is of course a chilling, even numbing, truth but the greater truth is that it is an absolutely, totally and undeniably needless calamity that can be averted and this is where the shock and frustratio­n of this loss comes to a bruising halt. Every woman who gave up on hope and help and ended her life could have been saved because the desire to commit suicide is not a terminal illness; it is a phase and it can be ended and the individual can be safely extricated from that danger zone. But is this easier said than done? The ground reality in India seems to suggest so.

Suicide may be an individual’s act of unmitigate­d despair, but its causes are firmly rooted in flawed social conditions and ineffectiv­e systems at the community, state and national levels. Just as an individual comprises the unit measuremen­t of a society and contribute­s to it, and by extension to the government, the two latter entities bear complete and irrevocabl­e responsibi­lity towards the welfare of the individual. The welter of factors that clash and thwart women’s progress in India are legion and in the vanguard are frayed socio-cultural idioms that have long lost their relevance such as patriarchy, early marriage, chauvinist­ic mores, regressive social traditions, gender bias that demands supplicati­on of the female. Concurrent damage is done by the insufficie­ntly implemente­d mental health awareness policies and lack of mechanisms to support women in distress.

India needs to acknowledg­e the consequenc­es of these weaknesses in its national fabric and take every measure to mend it with critical urgency. There is no time to be lost on improving the infrastruc­ture for women’s wellness and counsellin­g and removing the stigma surroundin­g mental problems. It is also imperative that the outdated traditions that constrict a woman’s sense of self and her right to her choices be done away with through education, awareness and progressiv­e governance.

Currently, there is a tug of war between two narratives of Indian women — the successful millions who are adding new chapters to the country’s story of progress and the other millions who are still struggling to emerge from the suffocatin­g shadows of convention and discrimina­tion. This bifurcatio­n is what needs to be dealt with.

There is no need for women to resort to suicide as the only way out of their predicamen­t. And India must do whatever is necessary to ensure this trend abates and that its women feel safe, protected and have the freedom to speak their mind.

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