Hindustan Times (East UP)

In 95% of rape cases, the culprit is an acquaintan­ce. Design the right strategies

- Arpan Tulsyan Arpan Tulsyan is a developmen­t sector researcher with a doctoral degree in social work The views expressed are personal

According to the latest National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) report, released on September 16, 77 cases of rapes were reported in the country in 2020 every day. Crime records in India have consistent­ly shown that a majority of rapes are by persons known to the survivor. In 2020, of the 28,046 cases of rapes reported, the prime accused was known to the survivor in 26,808 i.e. 95.6% of cases, of which 9.3% were immediate family members, and the rest were friends, partners, ex-husbands, extended family members, neighbours, and employers.

Similarly, the proportion of known perpetrato­rs ranged from 93% to 95% in rape cases between 2017 and 2019 — and this is even when marital rape is not yet legally considered rape in the country.

Studies from India and outside have provided insights on how rapes by known people or “acquaintan­ce rape” is substantia­lly different from “stranger rape”, and often involve a significan­t betrayal of trust. Rapists also interact much more with the survivor after the rape, and this continuous abuse perpetuate­s psychologi­cal trauma. Further, these are also much harder to report due to their intimate nature, consequenc­es for interperso­nal relations, as well as financial repercussi­ons. Also, such perpetrato­rs are seen to be least likely to show remorse, and they often find justificat­ion for their actions.

Despite this, public perception­s of rape in India continue to be driven by a “stranger anxiety”. Data has not been used to provide feedback to policies and, hence, the concerns of women’s safety in public spaces dominate interventi­ons. This results in public and private strategies aiming at rape avoidance through risk prevention and safety awareness. Both these target women and girls, as if it were incumbent on them to prevent rapes.

Messages aimed at men and boys are negligibly low. Even when they are engaged, the focus is on reaching out to the “good side” of masculinit­y, and appealing to them to be protectors of women, rather than abusers. There are two major issues with this approach: First, it allows men to externalis­e behaviour, where they can safely distance themselves from “men who rape”. Second, it reinforces the notion of male paternalis­m, indirectly legitimisi­ng their dominant position. It does not challenge men and boys to continuous­ly examine their behaviour and attitudes, therefore hindering, rather than supporting selfawaren­ess or long-lasting behaviour change.

Our rape prevention goal, thus, needs a shift in focus. We need to focus on public education and engagement as the key approaches instead of prevention through avoidance. In addition to teaching girls about “good touch” and “bad touch” from primary school, we need to start teaching boys about consent and respect as well. We need to work towards interrogat­ing traditiona­l gender roles and present rape as the extreme end of the same continuum.

Men need to be included as friends, allies, and supporters in public campaigns, not necessaril­y as protectors. Support systems such as the police, hospitals, counsellin­g centres and shelter homes need to be adequately equipped to provide additional support for survivors of acquaintan­ce rape. These may include additional psychologi­cal help or economic rehabilita­tion not just at the individual (survivor) level but at the family level as well.

It is time we realised that rape does not happen only when an unsuspecti­ng woman walking on a secluded road is pulled away by a weapon-wielding stranger. Popular imaginatio­n also demands that she fight doggedly during the attack, and, thereafter, walk to the nearest police station. It invokes a scenario which could have easily changed if there were enough streetligh­ts, or police patrol vans, or if the woman was accompanie­d by a male relative or knew some form of self-defence.

While these are important strategies, these may not help prevent as high as 95% of the reported rapes in India. NCRB data needs to contribute to our understand­ing of the problem, force us to interrogat­e our set notions on rape prevention, and help design better mechanisms for survivor support.

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