NEW DELHI â" In India, womenâs rights have received a lot of attention recently.
Too much attention, according to one small but passionate organization, Indiaâs Menâs Rights Association.
The group was started in Pune in 2010 to âspecifically target the issues men are facing in everyday life, and how they are being discriminated against by society and the law,â said the groupâs founder, Atit Rajpara, 34, in a telephone interview. âWhenever any lawmaking is happening, no one thinks about the men.â
The groupâs stated goals include: breaking the âfalse mythâ of the male-dominated society, rebelling âagainst social mindset assumption of men being born criminalsâ and creating a âMenâs Welfare Ministry.â
Mr. Rajpara said his group tried valiantly to have their point of view heard by the Verma Committee, which was set up after the Dec. 16 gang rape in Delhi to review how India protects women. The committee and other activists ignored 5,000 e-mails sent by Menâs Rights Association members on the issue, he said.
âWe are not against women,â Mr. Rajpara said, but he contended that women are abusing laws that are already on the books to torment their husbands and other men.
Mr. Rajpara was married in 2004 but had an acrimonious divorce. At one point, his ex-wife sued him for child support, he said, even though they had no children. It took him a year and a half to clear his name and get the child support demand dropped, he said.
The new âantirapeâ law, which passed both houses of Indiaâs Parliament this week, ignores 50 percent of Indiaâs population, he said, and could be used to falsely target men.
Members and fans of the group were heatedly discussing the new law on the Menâs Rights Association Facebook page on Friday.
âHere comes the first misuse,â the group titled a Facebook post of an article from The Times of India about a man who could be the first in India to be booked for the crime of stalking, now a criminal offense. The paper reported that 20-year-old engineering student filed stalking charges against a man who kept sending her explicit text messages, even though she told him she was not interested in a relationship.
âOnly becuz of those bastards protesting at India gate all men will suffer,â one fan of the menâs rights group commented on the article.
The site is heavy with pictures decrying the treatment of men (âMen, this is how the world sees you,â reads one photo of a roll of toilet paper) and petitions like this one, which declares, âRape is a shield for a woman to harass men sexually and get away with it.â
Writing about the new antirape law, another Facebook commentator introduced a possible future strategy for the groupâs members: âNow itâs better to avoid women, like u avoid cobrasâ¦â
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