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In 1976, John Hinckley Jr fell head over hells for Jodie Foster after seeing her play the role of teen prostitute, Iris in the movie Taxi Driver. The obsession knew no bounds and after relentlessly stalking her for 17 months, in a desperate bid to impress her, he shot US President Ronald Reagan.
The letter he wrote to her that day read, “As you well know by now I love you very much.”
Almost three decades later, the fear of stalkers persists – among celebrities and commoners alike.
Let’s be honest. We live in a delirious world that doesn’t acknowledge the gravity of stalking. In common parlance, any act of repeated unwanted advances to the effect of evoking fear or discomfort in the victim is stalking. It may be an explicit display of aggressive behaviour like physically following or spying, vandalising property, threatening calls or assaults. Or even seemingly innocuous acts like delivering flowers/letters, a barrage of text messages, driving by the victim’s residence, photographing the victim or family members and spreading false rumours primarily about the victim’s character.
Undoing this cultural and gender based conditioning is the first step to take cues seriously and pre-empt any mishaps. The victim needs to have confidence to share such incidents and be taken seriously. Friends, family and teachers need to be a bulwark that doesn’t seek a “compromise” and brush it under the carpet. They need to help the victim in taking adequate privacy and safety precautions. And most importantly the criminal justice system needs to be sensitised to intervene as early as possible.
Challenges in the existing system:
All stalkers don’t belong to a homogeneous category. They have varied motivations which need to be understood to deal with them.
Unless they talk to psychologists or specialists, they will continue their behaviour even after serving their term – posing an even greater danger. In 1993, Australian stalking expert Paul Mullen conducted behavioural studies and segregated stalkers into multiple categories – intimacy seeking; socially incompetent; resentful and predator stalkers.
Deep insights into their motives helps the law enforcement authorities predict the modus operandi of the assailant accurately and hence provide suitable protection to the victim.
Anyone can be stalked. Statistically however, the figures (80% of the stalking cases worldwide) are primarily skewed towards women.
Having said that, everyone needs to be equally prepared.
Stalking is like slow rape. Probably only Karuna, the 21-year-old medical student who was stabbed 22 times by her stalker, could judge whether her gruesome death was less painful than a life lost bit by bit. We failed her at every step. Only we are guilty of murder.
(The author is a freelance writer on public policy and social issues.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)
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