India
30. The Committee considered the initial report
of India (CEDAW/C/IND/1) at its 452nd, 453rd
and 462nd meetings, on 24 and 31 January 2000
(CEDAW/C/SR.452, 453 and 462).
Introduction by the State party
31.
The representative informed the Committee
that India had ratified the Convention in
July 1993 with two declarations and one reservation.
She indicated that the preparation of the
report had been preceded by wide-ranging consultations
with a number of women's organizations. She
noted that India had ratified a number of
international human rights instruments and
that the Indian Constitution prohibited discrimination
on the basis of sex, as well as providing
for affirmative action for women. India had
initiated a consultative process in preparation
for the Fourth World Conference on Women and
was among the first countries to unreservedly
accept the Beijing Platform for Action.
32.
The representative indicated that among recent
achievements in the implementation of the
Convention had been the establishment, in
March 1997, of a parliamentary committee on
the empowerment of women, and the passage
of constitutional amendments to reserve for
women 33.33 per cent of the seats in the Panchayati
Raj institutions at the local self-government
level in rural areas and municipalities in
urban areas. She also stated that a bill had
been introduced in late 1999 which would reserve
not less than one third of the total number
of seats filled by direct elections in the
Lok Sabha (House of the People) and
State Legislative Assemblies for women.
33.
The representative described the national
machinery for women's advancement coordinated
by the Department of Women and Child Development,
which is headed by a cabinet minister assisted
by a minister of state. The National Commission
for Women, established in 1992, served as
a statutory ombudsperson for women, while
the Central Social Welfare Board networked
with nearly 12,000 women's NGOs. Institutional
mechanisms for women's advancement also existed
at state level. The representative highlighted
the ninth five-year plan (1997-2002), which
had identified the empowerment of women as
a strategy for development and mandated early
finalization of a national policy on empowerment
of women. She indicated that, pending the
adoption of the national policy, many mechanisms
identified therein had already been put in
place. Recently, the Prime Minister's Office
had directed that a review be made of the
impact of gender mainstreaming in ministries
and departments.
34.
The representative indicated that progressive
legislation to promote the interests of women
existed at both state and central levels,
and that the Government had tasked the National
Council of Women to oversee the implementation
of constitutional and legal safeguards for
women. The review of 39 laws was underway;
recommendations for amendments, including
those with regard to the Immoral Traffic (Prevention)
Act, had been submitted; and a draft bill
on violence against women had been prepared.
Lok adalats (people's courts) and parivarik
mahila lok adalats (family women's courts)
had been established to provide less formal
systems of justice delivery. India had a tradition
of public interest litigation and the Supreme
Court had issued landmark judgements, including
on sexual harassment at the work place and
child prostitution. Several training institutes
had also introduced gender sensitization training
for judicial officials.
35.
The representative described steps that had
been taken to revise curricula and textbooks
from a gender perspective, and the efforts
of the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting
to ensure projection of positive images of
women in the media. Measures to address prostitution
and trafficking in women had included a proposal
to amend the Immoral Traffic (Prevention)
Act to widen its scope and increase penalties;
the appointment of special police officers;
and the establishment of protective homes
and child development and child-care centres
for the children of sex workers. A plan of
action to combat trafficking and commercial
sexual exploitation of women and children
and to integrate victims into society had
been developed, and India had actively participated
in the drafting of the South Asian Association
for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) Convention
on Preventing and Combating Trafficking in
Women and Children for Prostitution.
36.
The representative indicated that, at the
Fourth World Conference on Women, India had
committed itself to increasing investment
in education to 6 per cent of gross domestic
product (GDP), but that the target had not
been achieved to date although the overall
growth in literacy among women had been higher
than that of men in recent years. Intensive
efforts to address gender differentials in
literacy and education were continuing and
included the establishment of girls' learning
centres to meet the needs of girls who were
unable to gain access to formal education.
37.
The representative informed the Committee
that International Labour Organization (ILO)
standards were reflected in Indian labour
laws and the Government had been seeking to
extend maternity benefits to all women and
to provide child care for working women. Guidelines
for employers with respect to sexual harassment
had been established in a Supreme Court judgement
and legislation reflecting those guidelines
was being prepared. Efforts to recognize women's
work in the informal sector and reflect it
in the national census and to provide workers
in the sector with labour protection had been
initiated.
38.
Significant improvements in women's health
had been achieved in the last decade, although
the high maternal mortality ratio remained
a concern. The recently launched reproductive
and child health programme sought to address
women's health in a holistic manner. Measures
to address HIV/AIDS had been introduced and
legislative and other strategies to confront
female infanticide and sex-selective abortion
had also been adopted.
39.
The representative indicated that rural women
constituted almost 80 per cent of the female
population and reported that the Government
had introduced quotas and women-specific schemes
to ensure that they received an equal share
in rural development and agricultural programmes.
40.
The personal laws of the major religious communities
had traditionally governed marital and family
relations, with the Government maintaining
a policy of non-interference in such laws
in the absence of a demand for change from
individual religious communities. However,
the Family Courts Act, providing that family
matters, such as marriage and maintenance,
came within the jurisdiction of the family
courts, which incorporated informal procedures
and counselling services, had been adopted.
The representative drew attention to legislation
concerning dowry-related violence and the
provision of the Penal Code and Evidence Act
regarding cruelty to a wife by her husband
or his relatives.
41.
In conclusion, the representative emphasized
India's determined, concrete and sustained
efforts to eliminate poverty and social disability
and empower the poor and vulnerable.
Concluding comments of the Committee
Introduction
42.
The Committee welcomes the submission of the
initial report of India. While noting that
the report conforms to the Committee's guidelines,
it does not provide adequate information relating
to implementation of some articles and the
general issue of violence against women. The
Committee further notes that the report was
submitted with some delay. The report also
does not contain information on measures taken
to implement the Beijing Platform for Action.
The Committee appreciates the detailed written
and oral responses of the delegation during
the consideration of the report, which provided
important additional information.
43.
The Committee notes that the report and the
oral and written responses do not provide
adequate statistical data, disaggregated by
sex and the States of the Union and information
on the implementation of affirmation action
measures for scheduled castes.
44.
The Committee notes with concern that the
Government does not intend to review the declarations
entered to article 16 (1) and 16 (2) of the
Convention.
Positive aspects
45.
The Committee recognizes that India has guaranteed
in its Constitution fundamental human rights
that can be enforced by an application to
the Supreme Court. The Committee commends
in particular the recognition of a fundamental
right to gender equality and non-discrimination
and a specific enabling provision on affirmative
action in the Constitution.
46.
The Committee appreciates the contribution
made by the Supreme Court of India in developing
the concept of social action litigation and
a jurisprudence integrating the Convention
into domestic law by interpreting Constitutional
provisions on gender equality and non-discrimination.
47.
The Committee commends the introduction of
a range of policies and programmes by the
Governments of India over the years to improve
the situation of women. It notes with appreciation
that those programmes have contributed to
some extent to improving the quality of social
indicators for women in various States of
the Union. The Committee welcomes the proposal
to formulate a new gender empowerment policy
and the directives sent from the Prime Minister's
office to mainstream gender issues and a rights
approach to development at the national level.
48.
The Committee commends the Government of India
for establishing the National Commission for
Women and state commissions for women with
responsibility for developing action plans
on gender and proposals for law reform.
49.
The Committee commends the Government for
introducing affirmative action measures that
have enabled 33 per cent of seats in local
government bodies to be reserved for women.
It welcomes the proposed bill to reserve 33
per cent seats in state and national assemblies
for women, and the assurance in the oral presentations
that 30 to 40 per cent coverage will be provided
for women in programmes that give access to
credit.
50.
The Committee commends the Government for
introducing legislation that has banned sex-selective
abortions. It welcomes the amendments to the
law on nationality, which confer equal rights
on men and women.
Factors and difficulties affecting the implementation
of the Convention
51.
The Committee notes that India has a very
large and mainly rural population living in
absolute poverty and that the feminization
of poverty and growing income disparities
prevent the benefits of economic development
being transferred to women.
52.
The Committee considers that widespread poverty,
such social practices as the caste system
and son preference, as reflected in a high
incidence of violence against women, significant
gender disparities and an adverse sex ratio,
present major obstacles to the implementation
of the Convention.
53.
The Committee notes that the existence of
regional disparities is an impediment to the
effective implementation of the Convention.
Principal areas of concern and recommendations
54.
The Committee notes that the Convention and
the Beijing Platform for Action have not been
integrated into policy planning and programmes.
While there have been several national plans
in the pre and post-Beijing period, the Committee
notes that these adopt a welfare approach
towards women.
55.
The Committee recommends that the proposed
gender empowerment policy integrate the Convention
and the Beijing Platform for Action and a
rights-based approach.
56.
The Committee considers that inadequate allocation
of resources for women's development in the
social sector and inadequate implementation
of laws are serious impediments to the realization
of women's human rights in India.
57.
The Committee urges the allocation of sufficient
and targeted resources for women's development
in the social sector, as well as full implementation
of relevant laws.
58.
The Committee notes that there are many gaps
in the legislative framework. The Committee
considers that there is an urgent need to
introduce comprehensive legislative reform
to promote equality and the human rights of
women.
59.
The Committee recommends that proposals of
the National Commission of Women on law reform
be used in preparing new legislation and that
the Commission be entrusted with the task
of developing working papers on legal reform
in critical areas, within a time-frame.
60.
The Committee notes that steps have not been
taken to reform the personal laws of different
religious and ethnic groups, in consultation
with them, so as to conform with the Convention.
The Committee is concerned that the Government's
policy of non-intervention perpetuates sexual
stereotypes, son preference and discrimination
against women.
61.
The Committee urges the Government to withdraw
its declaration to article 16 (1) of the Convention
and to work with and support women's groups
as members of the community in reviewing and
reforming these personal laws. The Committee
also calls upon the Government to follow the
directive principles in the Constitution and
Supreme Court decisions and enact a uniform
civil code which different ethnic and religious
groups may adopt.
62.
The Committee is concerned that India has
not yet established a comprehensive and compulsory
system of registration of births and marriages.
The Committee notes that inability to prove
those important events by documentation prevents
effective implementation of laws that protect
girls from sexual exploitation and trafficking,
child labour and forced or early marriage.
The Committee is also concerned that failure
to register marriages may also prejudice the
inheritance rights of women.
63.
The Committee calls upon the Government to
provide adequate resources and establish a
system of compulsory registration of births
and monitor implementation in cooperation
with women's groups and local bodies. It urges
the Government to withdraw the declaration
to article 16 (2) of the Convention.
64.
The Committee is concerned that the fundamental
right to education under the Constitution
recognized by the Supreme Court has not been
realized by providing girls with access to
primary and secondary education. It notes
that budgetary allocation for education is
still far below India's commitment with regard
to the Beijing Platform for Action.
65.
The Committee urges the Government to take
affirmative action, set a time-frame and provide
adequate resources for primary and secondary
education so as to give girls equal access
to education and eradicate adult illiteracy
among women. It calls upon the Government
to make primary and secondary education compulsory
by introducing and enforcing relevant regulations.
66.
The Committee is concerned that the fundamental
rights recognized in the Constitution can
be enforced only against state actors and
in the event of inaction on the part of the
state. It also notes that the private sector,
where a great number of women are employed,
which is expanding in a period of transition
to market economic policies, is not covered
by Constitutional standards.
67.
The Committee recommends that a sex discrimination
act be introduced to make the standards of
the Convention and the Constitution applicable
to non-state action and inaction.
68.
The Committee is concerned that there is a
high incidence of gender-based violence against
women, which takes even more extreme forms
because of customary practices, such as dowry,
sati and the devadasi system. Discrimination
against women who belong to particular castes
or ethnic or religious groups is also manifest
in extreme forms of physical and sexual violence
and harassment.
69.
The Committee urges the Government to implement
existing legislation prohibiting such practices
as dowry, devadasi and caste-based discrimination.
It calls upon the Government to strengthen
law enforcement and introduce reforms proposed
by the National Commission on Women and women
activists in regard to the law on rape, sexual
harassment and domestic violence.
70.
The Committee recommends that a national plan
of action be developed to address the issue
of gender-based violence in a holistic manner,
in line with the Committee's general recommendations
19 and 24. It calls upon the Government to
provide statistics and information on violence
against women in its next report.
71.
The Committee is concerned that women are
exposed to the risk of high levels of violence,
rape, sexual harassment, humiliation and torture
in areas where there are armed insurrections.
72.
The Committee recommends a review of prevention
of terrorism legislation and the Armed Forces
Special Provisions Act, in consultation with
the Human Rights Commission of India, the
National Commission of Women and civil society,
so that special powers given to the security
forces do not prevent the investigation and
prosecution of acts of violence against women
in conflict areas and during detention and
arrest. The Committee recommends that women
be given an opportunity to make their contribution
to peaceful conflict resolution.
73.
The Committee recommends the introduction
of gender sensitization and human rights programmes
for the police, the security forces and medical
professionals, in addition to programmes already
undertaken.
74.
The Committee is concerned with the continuing
discrimination, including violence, suffered
by women of the Dalit community, despite the
passage of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes (prevention of atrocities) Act of 1989.
75.
The Committee urges the Government to enforce
laws preventing discrimination against Dalit
women and prohibiting the devadasi system.
It urges the Government to introduce affirmative
action programmes in such areas as education,
employment and health so as to provide life
chances to Dalit women and girls and create
an environment conducive to their progress.
The Committee calls upon the Government to
set a time-frame for those interventions and
provide information on the progress made in
the next report.
76.
The Committee is concerned that women and
girls are exploited in prostitution and inter-state
and cross-border trafficking. It is also concerned
that those women are exposed to HIV/AIDS and
health risks and that existing legislation
encourages mandatory testing and isolation.
77.
The Committee calls upon the Government to
review existing legislation on trafficking
and forced prostitution and to strengthen
law enforcement. It recommends the development
of bilateral and inter-state controls and
reintegration and advocacy programmes to prevent
the exploitation of women and girls in forced
prostitution and trafficking.
78.
The Committee notes with concern that maternal
mortality rates and infant mortality rates
are among the highest in the world. It also
notes the adverse sex ratio and the incidence
of sex-selective abortions despite the law
banning that practice. It notes that family
planning is only targeted at women.
79.
The Committee recommends the adoption of a
holistic approach to women's health throughout
the life cycle in the country's health programme.
It urges the Government to allocate resources
from a "women's right to health"
perspective, following the guidelines of the
Committee's general recommendation 24. The
Committee calls upon the Government to elicit
the support of medical associations in enforcing
professional ethics and preventing sex-selective
abortions. The Committee also recommends that
the Government obtain the support of the medical
profession in creating awareness of the urgent
need to eliminate practices associated with
son preference.
80.
The Committee is concerned about the low participation
of qualified women in the administration and
the judiciary, including family courts and
lok adalats or conciliation tribunals.
81.
The Committee urges the Government to take
affirmative action to increase women's participation
in the judiciary and lok adalats, and
provide sex-disaggregated data in its next
report.
82.
The Committee is concerned with significant
disparities in economic activity rates for
men and women. It is concerned that the practice
of debt bondage and the denial of inheritance
rights in land result in gross exploitation
of women's labour and their impoverishment.
83.
The Committee requests the Government to enforce
laws on bonded labour and provide women with
self-employment opportunities and minimum
wages in home-based production and the non-formal
sector. It calls upon the Government to review
laws on inheritance urgently and to ensure
that rural women obtain access to land and
credit.
84.
The Committee is concerned that the National
Commission on Women has no power to enforce
its proposals for law reform or intervene
to prevent discrimination in the private or
public sector. It notes that the National
Commission and state commissions are not supported
by adequate financial and other resources.
It also notes that the National Commission
on Women is not as well resourced or as empowered
as the Human Rights Commission of India, and
that it has no formal link with the state
women's commissions.
85.
The Committee recommends that NGOs be represented
on the National Commission of Women. The Commission's
powers should be as wide as those of the Human
Rights Commission and include a complaints
procedure. The Committee recommends that state
commissions be similarly strengthened and
linked with the National Commission.
86.
The Committee is concerned that, despite the
willingness of the Government to work with
NGOs and women's groups, women activists and
human rights defenders are exposed to violence
and harassment in the communities in which
they work.
87.
The Committee urges the Government to strictly
enforce the law and protect women activists
and human rights defenders from acts of violence
and harassment.
88.
The Committee encourages India to deposit
its acceptance to the amendment to article
20, paragraph 1, of the Convention, and to
sign and ratify the Optional Protocol to the
Convention as soon as possible.
89.
The Committee requests that the Government
responds in its next periodic report to the
specific issues raised in its concluding comments.
90.
The Committee encourages the wide dissemination
in India of the present concluding comments
in order to make the people, civil society
and Government sectors aware of the steps
that have been taken to ensure de jure
and de facto equality of women, as well as
further steps that are required in that regard.
It also requests the Government to disseminate
widely, in all local languages, the Convention,
its Optional Protocol, the Committee's general
recommendations and the Beijing Declaration
and the Platform for Action.