In 13 th June, 2012 has been designated "Eve Teasing
Protection Day" by the education ministry in Bangladesh.The announcement reflects increasing concern over the
worrying number of girls and women who have recently committed suicide in the
country to escape "Eve teasing", a euphemism for sexual harassment.
Figures released by the Ain-O-Shalish Kendra (ASK) human
rights organisation reveal that 14 girls and women have taken their own lives
over the past four months across the country as a direct result of the insults.In addition, a father and a daughter also committed suicide
together - in an incident blamed by the authorities on "Eve teasing".
Police say three men who publicly protested against the harassment have been
killed over the past 12 weeks.
'Very frightening'
Critics argue that laws which should prohibit sexual
harassment are so poorly drafted that victims get virtually no help from the
law enforcement agencies. Families of the victims are left feeling hopeless and
helpless. "Some victims find suicide is the only avenue that
enables them to escape this social pandemic," said Sultana Kamal,
executive director of ASK."The situation is very frightening. The suicides of 14
girls are an alarming sign of the times. If it is not controlled, we women can
no longer live in society with any dignity."
The tragic story of 13-year-old Nashfia Akhand Pinky - known
as Pinky - shows just how damaging "Eve teasing" can be.Pinky was a ninth-grade student of a school only half a
kilometre away from where she lived with her uncle in central Dhaka. On her way to school, she was stalked by her 22-year-old
male neighbour and some of his friends who, according to her family, persisted
with "ribald comments, smutty jokes, coarse laughter, sly whistles and
even indecent exposure".The neighbour is alleged to have been stalking her for
several months. On 19 January, she went out of her house to buy some
medicine for a niggling hand injury.
'Grave concern'
Ali Ashraf Akhand, Pinky's uncle, said that she suffered
"serious mental torment from this indecent assault".
Dhaka's streets can be dangerous for women."She could not tolerate the insult of it," he
said, "so she hanged herself with a sari scarf tied to a ceiling fan in
her drawing room.
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