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WORKPLACE
WOES
As
more and more women are going out to work, they face
an increasing risk of being subjected to some sort
of sexual harassment. This article will shed some
light on what exactly sexual harassment means and
what recourses does a victim have?
Sexual harassment at the workplace is not a new thing.
Sixty per cent of working women have faced sexual
harassment at some point of time in their working
lives. For every woman who raises an outcry, there
are hundreds of others who suffer in silence, quit
their jobs or get transfers. For years, sexual harassment
was considered an inescapable part of a working woman's
life. Now awareness is slowly rising that no woman
should meekly accept sexual harassment as part of
her lot.
What
is sexual harassment?
What
is the workplace?
Some of the
well-known cases?
What
are the guidelines that govern sexual harassment at
the workplace? How
have the guidelines come about?
What
is the employer's responsibility?
What can women
do?
What is sexual harassment?
Sexual harassment is described as harassment in subtle
ways, which may include sexual innuendoes, inappropriate
sexual gestures and propositions for dates or sexual
favours. In more blatant forms, such harassment may
include leering, pinching, grabbing, hugging, patting,
brushing against and touching. The Supreme Court's
guidelines describe physical contact or advances;
demand or request for sexual favours; sexually coloured
remarks and showing pornography as offensive conduct.
Sexual harassment becomes even more serious when the
granting of sexual favours is made a term or condition
of the individual's employment, when it interferes
with the individual's work performance or it creates
an intimidating or hostile work environment. The offensive
conduct could be exhibited by a superior, a colleague,
a subordinate or a client.
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What
is the workplace?
The workplace is any area where the employee is required
to represent, carry out, perform or implement any
duties, obligations or services required. By this
token, a home would be a workplace for a domestic
maid. For a person engaged in a field job, the area
that she covers in the course of her work represents
her workplace.
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Some
of the well-known cases
Sexual harassment at the workplace, as an issue, captured
the collective consciousness of working women, following
the Shehnaz Mudbhatkal
case. This gutsy woman worked as a hostess for Saudi
Arabian airlines. Her services with Saudi Arabian
airlines were terminated because she refused to surrender
to the sexual demands made by her superior. But Shehnaz
would not give in. Filing suit, she fought for 11
years. In 1997, she was awarded full wages and continuity
of services with effect from 1985. Sadly, the airlines
appealed to Bombay High Court, which granted a stay.
However, this is not the only case of its kind. In
1994, Doordarshan (Hyderabad) producer
Sailaja Suman took director P L Chawla to court
on charges of defamation, criminal intimidation and
trying to outrage her modesty. She filed two separate
cases in the metropolitan magistrate's court. Unfortunately,
Suman was transferred to Lucknow.
In another case, Nutan Sharma,
a steno in the Union Ministry of Railways, was transferred,
following her complaint that R P Sharma, secretary
to the Chief Operating Manager, molested her.
Alisha Chinai's suit against music composer
Anu Malik, demanding Rs. 26,60,000 as damages for
sexual harassment, met with a similar fate. Malik
filed a Rs. 2 crore defamation suit. But the most
well-known instance of a sexually harassed woman taking
the help of the law to teach the harasser a lesson
is that of Rupan Deol Bajaj. Bajaj was slapped on
the bottom by the then DGP of Punjab, K P S Gill.
Accusing him of indecent behaviour, Bajaj fought an
8-year legal battle. The hard work paid off. Gill
was convicted and sentenced to three months RI.
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What
are the guidelines that govern sexual harassment at
the workplace?
Sexual harassment results in the violation of the
fundamental right to "gender equality" and "the right
to life and liberty" besides the right under Article
15 of the Constitution (which deals with the prohibition
of discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste,
creed or sex). Keeping these rights in mind, the Supreme
Court has passed twelve guidelines that have the force
of law. They were taken by a division bench as there
was "an absence of enacted law to provide for the
effective enforcement of the basic human right of
gender equality and guarantee against sexual harassment
at the workplace." These guidelines are to be observed
until legislation is enacted.
Some
of these guidelines are:
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"It shall be the duty of the employer or other
responsible persons in the workplace or other
institutions to prevent or deter the commission
of acts of sexual harassment and to provide the
procedure for the resolution, settlement or prosecution
of acts of sexual harassment."
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"The employer should initiate action in accordance
with the law by making a complaint with the appropriate
authority. Victims should have an option to seek
their own transfer or that of the perpetrator."
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"A complaint mechanism should be created in the
organisation. This complaint mechanism should
ensure time-bound treatment of complaints. The
complaints committee should be headed by a woman
and not less than half of its members should be
women. In order to prevent the possibility of
undue pressure or influence from senior levels,
a third party, especially a NGO familiar with
sexual harassment, should be involved in the complaints
committee."
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"The committee must submit an annual report to
the government. Employees must be allowed to raise
the issue of sexual harassment at various fora."
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The guidelines also provide for the initiation
of criminal proceedings where sexual harassment
is proved beyond doubt.
How
did the guidelines come about?
When Bhanwari Devi was gang-raped as a punishment
for trying to stop child marriage, women's organisations
filed a writ in the Supreme Court to intervene in
the matter and take steps to discourage and penalise
sexual harassment at the workplace. In the wake of
this incident, the Supreme Court issued guidelines.
The Bhanwari Devi case revealed the hazards to which
a working woman is exposed and the depravity to which
sexual harassment can stoop.
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What
is the employer's responsibility?
The employer is responsible for creating appropriate
working conditions for health, work, leisure and hygiene.
When the victim complains to the employer, the onus
is on the employer to make appropriate investigations.
If the employer does not pay heed to the complaint,
he can be held responsible. The employer must set
up a complaint mechanism in each department of the
company. The Supreme Court's guidelines are binding
on Central and State governments and the private and
public sector. If the employer does not comply, he
has to face a writ petition for contempt of court.
What
can women do?
As women, we can make it easier for ourselves.
- We
must shed our mentality of tolerance. We have to
stop telling ourselves that this kind of behaviour
on the part of men is inevitable and unavoidable.
-
Express
strong resistance the first time it occurs. If
you allow the action to take place without expressing
your strongest disapproval, the offender will
assume that he has your consent.
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Don't
encourage males to behave unbecomingly with you
or try to attract their undue attention. At all
times, maintain your own self-respect.
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Dress
in a manner that befits a work environment.
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In
case someone behaves with you in a manner that
makes you feel uncomfortable, protest loudly and
at once. Let others know that such conduct has
been meted out to you.
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Keep
safe distance from the offending party.
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Register
a First Information Report with the police station.
As
more and more women join the workforce, the law
must ensure that women are able to enjoy the rights
promised to them by the Constitution. We must
ensure that they are treated with dignity and
assured of gender equality and that they are not
discriminated against on account of their sex.
Considering that until retirement, we spend a
little less than two-thirds of our lives working,
we must take pains to ensure that we spend it
in a dignified and productive manner.
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