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Also Via Sexual Violence Research
Initiative - SVRI
BANGLADESH - SEXUAL HARASSMENT CAN LEAD TO SUICIDE
The streets have turned more dangerous for girls; sexual harassment has driven them to drop out of school -- even to suicide - Photo: Matt Crook/IRIN
DHAKA, 13 December 2010 (IRIN) - Sexual harassment against girls
and women in
A father also committed suicide fearing social insult after his daughter was
harassed and in other cases, stalkers killed three women, reported the NGO.
According to the Bangladesh National Women Lawyers’ Association, almost 90
percent of girls aged 10-18 years have experienced what is known locally as “eve-teasing”, where boys intercept girls on the street,
and shout obscenities, laugh at them or grab their clothes.
Eve-teasing has escalated ever since girls and women started entering formal
education and employment in larger numbers in the 1980s, said Paul Subrata
Malakar, from the NGO Plan International, in
Impacts
On 16 November, Sharmin*, a 20-year-old student in Dinanjpur,
(400km northwest of
Since then, her parents say, she has stopped going to college.
“As sexual violence is happening on the way to school, it will panic parents
and the parents will discourage their daughters from going to school,” said
Rekha Saha, director of Dhaka-based NGO, Steps Towards Development.
In a country where 1.5 million girls (out of 10.4 million eligible) are not enrolled in school, an unknown number are avoiding school
out of fear and humiliation of daily harassment.
Since January of this year, ASK has received 61 complaints from girls who had
dropped out of school because they were harassed.
Moreover, in a country where more than 64 percent of girls marry before they are 18, some parents have pushed eve-teasing
victims into early marriage to “protect” their honour and safety, said Malakar
and Saha.
Causes
Ishrat Shamim, a gender studies expert and professor of sociology at
“[The] mindset of both men and women is important. Many men, also women,
believe women are second-class citizens after men. [While] women’s
participation in education, the labour force and other activities is
increasing, men are not yet to get used to seeing women outside the home.”
Changing this mindset has proven to be a long-standing obstacle.
“In a male-dominant society, eve-teasing can be viewed as a rite of passage for
boys on their way to becoming men,” said Malakar of Plan International. “All
the steps [we take] will be futile unless the male segment of the society
change its patriarchal mindset.”
The fact that girls are hesitant to report violence has made studying and
fighting the phenomenon even more difficult.
“Many girls believe that if they complain, their parents and community leaders
will blame her,” said Sayeda*, a 14-year-old student in the capital,
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