Indian rights lawyer spotlights plight of jailed women amid nation’s ‘very deep’ patriarchal bias
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“The patriarchal bias goes very deep,” she said.
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Women make up less than five per cent of India’s prison population.
Of them, more than two-thirds are yet to be convicted and are in detention awaiting trial, according to government statistics from 2015, the latest available.
“All the dynamics which play out in society are reflected even more sharply in the prison,” Bharadwaj said.
“So whatever prejudices and discriminations you see outside in the society, they are very much reflected there.”
US-born Bharadwaj, a committed lawyer of the poor, moved to India and renounced her US citizenship to support underprivileged communities in Chhattisgarh.
But the trade unionist was arrested in 2018 and accused of giving speeches that allegedly incited violence, charges she has denied.
“I was still a much more privileged person than most of the people around me,” she said from her home in Mumbai.
“Most of them were of course poor, and a lot of them were uneducated – some of them were completely illiterate.
“They didn’t know what was happening. They were abandoned by their families most of the time. So, I was really in a sea of misery”.
Three bail applications were denied before Bharadwaj was released under strict conditions that barred her from discussing her case.
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But in a book researched while behind bars, she has detailed the situation of the women she met and tried to help.
Titled From Phansi Yard, or, the “hanging” yard, the book details stories from inmates at Yerwada jail in Pune.
There were many cases where the women she wrote about could have been granted bail.
“Either they were too poor to afford a good lawyer, or the legal aid lawyer didn’t really bother to even come in and meet them,” she said.
Bharadwaj wrote “hundreds” of applications for older women in poor health, but all were rejected.
“Only those who you very much require to be in jail should be in jail,” she said, adding that bail should be “the rule and jail the exception”.
Bharadwaj wrote of jailed women being treated as second-class citizens, and within that, those who are members of India’s 200-million-strong Dalit castes – once subject to the discriminatory practice of “untouchability” – facing an extra challenge.
Among the people she met was a Dalit woman jailed after her employer accused her of stealing jewellery.
One woman was accused of murdering her landlord, despite no clear evidence provided and her pleas of innocence.
Another was arrested for the suicide of her daughter-in-law simply because she was in the house when she died.
A widow was arrested after her son allegedly killed her lover in a fit of rage. The son was bailed, but not his mother.
Bharadwaj also wrote of how the Pardhi people, stereotyped as troublemakers by police, were often picked up for a minor offence, then charged with more serious crimes.
“The police are trained to basically round up all the Pardhis around whenever there is a crime which has not been solved,” she said.
“You could see that the sentencing appeared to be much harsher when it came to lower caste people.”
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