HomeNewsOpinionOpinion | #MeToo in India: A shock treatment that was long overdue

Opinion | #MeToo in India: A shock treatment that was long overdue

The #MeToo movement in India needs to move beyond high profile areas of work to also focus on sectors in which women (also men and transgenders) are even more vulnerable

June 29, 2020 / 12:01 IST
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A protester raises a placard reading "#MeToo" during a rally against harassment at Shinjuku shopping and amusement district in Tokyo, Japan, April 28, 2018. Picture taken April 28, 2018. REUTERS/Issei Kato - RC19441C57D0
A protester raises a placard reading "#MeToo" during a rally against harassment at Shinjuku shopping and amusement district in Tokyo, Japan, April 28, 2018. Picture taken April 28, 2018. REUTERS/Issei Kato - RC19441C57D0

Almost lost among the headlines flagging the recent, ongoing outing of men accused of sexually harassing women in workplaces are reports on the extraordinarily prompt action that has followed many of these revelations: inquiries and investigations, transfers and administrative leaves, resignations and suspensions, dropping of actors from films and films from festivals, exits from one company, dissolution of another, and at least one complaint registered with the police -- all in the space of a little more than a week.

Not everyone may be satisfied with the action taken so far, and some people, no doubt, disapprove of the summary action taken against a few of the accused, even if much of it is temporary, pending inquiry. But to anyone who has followed the course of complaints about sexual harassment experienced at workplaces in India in the past -- certainly in media workplaces -- what has happened over the past few days is nothing short of miraculous.

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From a situation where even private apologies were rare, there are now public mea culpas. Where once editorial and managerial bosses routinely disbelieved complainants or advised them to quietly grin and bear it or quit, companies are now issuing public statements assuring appropriate action. Where once even friends and family invariably dissuaded survivors from lodging complaints, and colleagues played ostrich, there is now widespread support for those who have gone public with their harrowing experiences. Where once discussions on sexual harassment and harassers were largely confined to the whisper network, the subject has now become a political hot potato.

The fact that even close relatives of at least one accused (all Bollywood celebrities) have expressed solidarity with women who may have been hurt by his behaviour suggests that sexual harassment is finally being acknowledged as an unacceptable reality. With professional bodies of various kinds speaking out on the subject for the first time, and some professional associations quickly setting up committees to address this long-standing problem at least now, there is hope that survivors will no longer be isolated and left to fend for themselves as they have been all this time.