Stalking may lead to more serious crimes: Activists : The Tribune India

Join Whatsapp Channel

Stalking may lead to more serious crimes: Activists

NEW DELHI: Ragini Dubey went to the police, as did Priyadarshini Mattoo. But their gruesome murders - over 20 years apart - indicate that when it comes to stalking, little has changed.



New Delhi, August 13

Ragini Dubey went to the police, as did Priyadarshini Mattoo. But their gruesome murders -- over 20 years apart -- indicate that when it comes to stalking, little has changed.

When Dubey, 17, refused the persistent advances made by Prince Tiwari, the son of a gram pradhan, little did the Ballia teen know that she would be stalked to death. She was killed on her way to school last week.

Mattoo, a Delhi law student whose rape and murder shook the country in 1996, too may never have imagined that her stalker would end up killing her.

"Stalking can be the beginning of rape, acid attack or even murder," warned Ranjana Kumari, Director of the Centre for Social Research here, as she emphasised that the problem needs to be dealt with at the initial stage itself.

"People think boys are only making advances, but it needs to be stamped out at that stalking level," she told PTI.

Another stalking incident has also grabbed the headlines and brought the issue to the national centre stage.

In this case, it was the daughter of a senior IAS officer who was allegedly chased by Vikas Barala, the son of Haryana BJP chief Subhash Barala, and his friend in a car on the night of August 4.

The trivialisation of stalking as a crime became evident when Union minister Babul Supriyo in a tweet likened the offence to a "boy chase girl" scenario.

"We all went to college and know, like reel, 'Boy chase Girl' exists in real life too", he tweeted.

Activist Kavita Krishnan rued the "constant trivialisation" of stalking as a crime.

"Our approach to stalking is wrong. It has become an ideology that women are the problem," she said.

Stalking, she stressed, was more than a general social problem.

"There is an urgent need to make the government accountable. The government should take action against its functionaries that trivialise stalking," she said.

She referred to Uttar Pradesh's anti-romeo squads, which let off Dubey's stalker with a warning, and said such groups define "consensual love as a problem but are soft on stalking".

According to a 2015 report by the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), 6,266 cases of stalking were reported across the country, out of which 1,124 incidents occurred in Delhi alone. —PTI

Top News

Deeply biased: MEA on US report citing human rights violations in India

Deeply biased: MEA on US report citing human rights violations in India

The annual report of the State Department highlights instanc...

Family meets Amritpal Singh in Assam jail after his lawyer claims he'll contest Lok Sabha poll from Punjab’s Khadoor Sahib

Couldn't talk due to strictness of jail authorities: Amritpal's family after meeting him in jail

Their visit comes a day after Singh's legal counsel Rajdev S...

Centre grants 'Y' category security cover to Phillaur MLA Vikramjit Chaudhary among 3 Punjab Congress rebels

Centre grants 'Y' category security to Phillaur MLA Vikramjit Chaudhary and 2 other Punjab Congress rebels

The Central Reserve Police Force has been directed by the Mi...

First Sikh court opens in UK to deal with family disputes: Report

First Sikh court opens in UK to deal with family disputes

According to ‘The Times’, the Sikh court was launched last w...


Cities

View All