In India, boy victims of sex crimes don't
get talked about
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[May 08, 2018]
By Krishna N. Das and Aditya Kalra
MUMBAI (Reuters) - He was lured into a room
near where he played cricket, a man then shut the door and window, and
raped him. That's what a 14-year-old Mumbai boy told his mother from his
hospital bed last July.
The boy died soon after, killed by the rat poison he consumed after the
assault, according to details described to Reuters by his parents and
police.
Inspector Balwant Deshmukh, the investigating officer, said police have
all but given up hope of finding out who raped the boy. "We will revive
the case if we get new clues, but as of now it's in cold storage," he
told Reuters.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government last month introduced the
death penalty for rape of girls below 12 and increased the minimum
punishment for those whose victims were under 16, after the rapes of an
eight-year-old girl and a young woman in two states ruled by his party
led to public protests.
But the emergency order, known as an ordinance, did not mention boys,
although a government survey has showed that male minors were more
likely to be victims than female minors.
The ordinance lapses in six months and the government has to introduce
legislation to convert it into law. At that time, the government plans
to broaden the statute to make it gender-neutral, said a senior
government official who declined to be named.
"Whatever applies to girls will apply to boys," the official said.
The government's chief spokesman did not respond to requests for
comment.
In the meantime, the minimum punishment for raping a boy is 10 years in
jail, compared with 20 years for assaults on girls under 16.
"Why this discrimination?" asked the father of the boy who was raped,
sitting in his tiny first floor home in a teeming settlement near
Mumbai's international airport, largely populated by migrant worker
families from India's poor northern states.
Between sobs, the mother recounted her horror at her son's condition in
the hospital during his dying days.
"Please get us justice," she said as the interview came to an end.
The boy's medical reports, which were reviewed by Reuters, said their
son had been "sodomized". Rape victims and their families cannot be
identified under Indian law.
HOSTILITY, RIDICULE
Insia Dariwala, who runs a foundation that raises awareness about child
sexual abuse, said police generally lack the sensitivity to deal with
cases of assaults on boys.
"I have interacted with adult male survivors and social workers who have
cited police hostility, ridicule and even lack of trust when it comes to
believing that a boy was sexually abused," she said. "The most common
perception dished out to male survivors is that they may have enjoyed
it."
The Mumbai police investigating the boy's rape, however, said officers
are regularly trained on how to handle sexual abuse of children of both
genders. The federal government is also running workshops for police
that cover all children, said Stuti Kacker, head of the government's
National Commission for Protection of Child Rights, which advises on
child-related policies.
Some activists working for the safety of children say outrage over the
gruesome gang rape and subsequent death of a young woman in New Delhi in
2012 succeeded in raising awareness about sexual violence against women
in India, but far less attention is paid when the victims are male.
A 2007 survey by the ministry of women and child development, which
sampled 12,447 children in families, schools, at work and living on the
street, found that more than half had faced sexual abuse, and 53 percent
of victims were boys. For the capital Delhi, the figure was 60 percent.
The government has not done any similar survey after that, although some
activists and police say many cases of sexual abuse of boys go
unreported because of the stigma attached to homosexuality.
The ministry of women and child development told parliament in March
that only 467 male child abuse cases were lodged with police out of more
than 36,321 such reported incidents in 2016.
The government, nevertheless, last month ordered a study to be
undertaken focusing on sexual assaults on boys.
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The father of a boy, who according to the father committed suicide
after he was sexually assaulted last year, walks in an alley outside
his house in Mumbai, India, April 26, 2018. Picture taken April 26,
2018. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas
"Boys who are sexually abused as children spend a lifetime of
silence because of the stigma and shame attached to male survivors
speaking out," Maneka Gandhi, the minister for women and child
development, said in a statement.
"It is a serious problem and needs to be addressed."
'BOYS NOT SEEN AS VICTIMS'
In India's patriarchal society, girls typically have a more
restricted upbringing than boys and spend less time outdoors, making
it easier for predators to target boys, according to social workers
and others who counsel victims of sexual abuse.
A 22-year-old man in the western city of Pune, who said he was
repeatedly raped by a man for two years starting when he was five,
reported his ordeal to his parents only a year ago fearing he would
be judged.
"I kept going back to the park where I would get raped by this man,"
said the young man, who was counseled by the child abuse awareness
foundation's Dariwala and agreed to be interviewed by Reuters. "I
was scared of him but did not want to stay at home and come across
as lazy in front of my parents. I did not want to anger my mom."
Reuters could not verify the details given by the man.
Some researchers say parents often shy away from reporting abuse of
boys, in the hope that victims would eventually overcome the
psychological trauma.
The Pune man said his parents asked him to "move on and not let this
incident define you". He declined to immediately share their contact
details, saying it was a delicate matter for them.
An article published last year in the Indian Journal of Psychiatry
highlighted those attitudes.
An unidentified father who was resistant to psychological care for
his nine-year-old son after he had been raped, was quoted by the
journal as saying: "He neither lost a hymen nor will get pregnant.
He should behave like a man, not a sissy."
Vyjayanthi K.S. Subramaniyan, a senior psychiatrist in a Bengaluru
hospital who co-authored the report, said she was in touch with at
least eight adult men who were sexually assaulted as boys but never
reported their ordeal to police.
"Boys don't fit into the image of a victim. In a patriarchal society
they are expected to take it in their stride," she told Reuters.
"They think that as he grows up, he is going to become invulnerable,
without any need to work on his psyche. That's ridiculous."
The officer in charge of the police station where the rape and
suicide of the boy in Mumbai was registered said that current data
under-estimates the scale of the problem as boys' parents are
reluctant to come forward.
"We don't discriminate on the basis of gender, but people come to us
only in extreme cases," Senior Inspector Anil Pophale told Reuters.
"This incident would not have been reported if the boy had not
committed suicide."
The father of the dead boy agrees that he would never have gone to
police had his son not decided to kill himself and says he now
realizes his mistake.
"It needs to change," he said, referring to the reluctance of
parents to report abuse of male children. "This (tragedy) should not
happen to anyone else."
(Additional reporting by Sanjeev Miglani and Annie Banerji in NEW
DELHI; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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