Sexual Harassment in Presumed Safe Spaces

The tragic suicide of a 20-year-old B.Ed student in Odisha, following the neglect of her repeated complaints of sexual harassment, has once again brought to light the persistent issue of gender-based violence in environments considered safe, such as educational institutions and workplaces.

  • Lack of Awareness:
    In many rural and tier-2 institutions, awareness about Internal Complaint Committees (ICCs) remains inadequate. This severely weakens the redressal mechanism envisaged under the POSH Act.
  • Failures in Grievance Redressal:
    Even after reaching out to the highest state authority—the Chief Minister’s office—the student’s pleas went unanswered, highlighting an alarming culture of institutional apathy and lack of accountability.
  • Enforcement Deficits:
    The absence or dysfunctionality of ICCs, which are legally mandated under the 2013 POSH Act, underscores rampant non-compliance across institutions.
  • Recurring Pattern of Misuse of Power:
    Incidents such as gang rape at a law college in West Bengal and sexual assault by lecturers in Mangaluru reveal that even educational spaces are becoming arenas for the abuse of power and sexual violence.
  • Lack of Data Transparency:
    The delay in publishing the NCRB’s Crime in India 2023 report reflects a transparency gap. In 2022, 4,45,256 cases of crimes against women were reported—a 4% rise from the previous year. However, the actual figures are likely much higher due to widespread underreporting driven by fear, stigma, and low trust in the justice system.
  • Trust Erosion:
    Frequent cases of institutional neglect are corroding public faith in systems designed to safeguard and empower citizens.
  • Victim Silencing:
    Delayed or absent justice mechanisms discourage survivors from speaking out, which in turn contributes to persistent underreporting.
  • Increased Vulnerability:
    The growing insecurity among students, particularly women, negatively impacts their education, mental health, and personal safety.
  • Perpetuation of Gender Inequality:
    When redressal fails, it reinforces existing gendered power structures, weakening constitutional guarantees of equality and dignity.
  • Constitutional Challenges:
    Such systemic failures undermine the constitutional principles of equality (Article 14), dignity (Article 21), and non-discrimination (Article 15), which are essential to a just and inclusive democracy.
Way Forward
  • Institutional Overhaul:
    Mandatory establishment, regular training, and independent audits of ICCs across all institutions should be ensured.
  • Transparent Data Reporting:
    Timely release of NCRB data is essential. Sexual violence in campuses and workplaces must be recorded as separate, trackable categories.
  • Strengthened Accountability:
    Introduce penalties for institutional heads who fail to comply with POSH norms. Establish safe and anonymous digital reporting mechanisms.
  • Mandatory Sensitisation:
    All students, faculty, and administrative staff should undergo compulsory gender sensitivity training and redressal awareness programs.
  • Public Awareness Campaigns:
    Sustained media and public campaigns are needed to normalise reporting and to maintain momentum on gender justice beyond reactionary responses to crises.
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