Bengaluru Shame: 60% Women in Garment Factories Sexually Abused

One in seven women in Bengaluru garment factories face sexual violence, says report says.

Anuradha Nagaraj
India
Published:
One in every seven women working in the garment industry Bengaluru have been raped or sexually abused. (Photo: Reuters)
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One in every seven women working in the garment industry Bengaluru have been raped or sexually abused. (Photo: Reuters)
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She was 20 when the abuse started. Her supervisor at the garment factory where she worked would grope and pinch her, sometimes leaving bruises. Her complaints were ignored and her abuser went unpunished.

One in every seven women working in the garment industry in Bengaluru have been raped or forced into a sexual act at work, said a report released on Saturday.

Violence, intimidation, unwanted sexual attention, being forced to watch pornography, being punched, choked and burnt are part of the daily abuse faced by women employees in Bengaluru’s 1,200 garment factories which supply many global brands.

1 in 7 Women Abused

The unnamed woman is among the 60 percent of women garment workers who face intimidation and violence in “hostile” workplaces, according to a report released on Saturday by the women’s rights groups Sisters for Change and Bengaluru-based Munnade.

We were shocked by the levels of sexual violence we found during our survey. There is such a permissive environment of abuse in the factory, with the supervisors often being the perpetrators. There is no fear of the existing laws.
Alison Gordon, Executive Director, Sisters For Change, UK

Karrupu Samy, Director of READ, a non-governmental group that works with garment workers in the Erode region of Tamil Nadu further added that much of India’s $40 billion garment and textile industry, which employs an estimated 45 million workers, operates in the informal sector and is poorly regulated.

Vulnerable workers, nearly three quarters of them women, have limited or no legal protection and few formal grievance mechanisms. What the report says is true not only in Bengaluru, but in factories and spinning mills across India. 
Karrupu Samy, Director, READ
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Crime & Punishment

82% women don’t report harassment cases because they have no faith in the system. (Photo: iStockphoto)

There are an estimated 500,000 workers working in and around Bengaluru, a major hub for the garment industry in south India. The report, based on surveys of women workers, indicated that hardly any cases were reported to the authorities.

Eighty-two percent of respondents said they did not report the crimes because they had no faith in the police or senior management to take action.

The laws are in place but the awareness about them and the implementation is negligible. The report provides solid evidence of the extent of abuse. Now there has to be a push for change.
Alison Gordon, Executive Director, Sisters For Change, UK

The report urges the government to ensure compliance with the law and increase the frequency of factory inspections, with sexual harassment as a prime focus, added Gordon.

(This article has been published in arrangement with Reuters.)

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