Wednesday 9 April 2008

The Glamour Doll of the Indian Government

Ms. Renuka Chowdhury is the minister of state for women and child development, Government of India

And I would like to say a few things about her.

Recently there was an Indo-Africa forum summit organised by the Ministry of External Affairs, which I had the good fortune of attending. In an interactive session held at Taj Mansingh hotel, she was the chief guest or some such fluff.

So she arrived, with an inch thick layer of make up on her face, smiling at everyone as if she were Angelina Jolie attending the Academy Awards Ceremony. She had to deliver the inaugural address in which all she did was praise the UPA, praise Sonia Gandhi, praise Manmohan singh, and of course, play her trump card for women's empowerment- Pratibha Patil. (Most of her sentences had the following words in varying combinations - my government; the present government; our great leader Sonia Gandhi; the stable force behind all change Sonia Gandhi; Sonia; Gandhi; UPA Chairperson)

There was no substance whatsoever in what she said. She just kept acting all heroine-ish and talking in a sultry voice and throwing her head back and laughing in an attempt at sexiness. Like a vamp.

She came across as the kind of woman who would sleep around to get what she wants.

It was quite disgusting to see her behave the way she was, and I basically wanted to throw up.

Then, her over-stressed and over-worked junior from the Department (a word here on the horribly tyrannical power hierarchy within ministries. I mean, the Personal Secretary to the Personal secretary to the Under Secretary lives in absolute terror of the Personal Secretary who is terrorised by the Under Secretary who fears the Joint Secretary who has sleepless nights because of the Secretary who gets flustered and flaps his/her wings like a Duck caught in tar at the thought of the Minister) gave a presentation on the work of the WCD dept. in which they spoke of all their schemes etc without saying a word about how successful / unsuccessful they have been.

And then when the African parliamentarians were asking really important and good questions to her, she gave generic answers like "he he, actually it has taken so long for the men to wake up and listen to us"

One excitingly intelligent lady from Sudan pointed out to Renuka that even though women had their own ministry within the Govt., it would be better to have women ministers in more departments. She also bluntly stated that, and I quote "...Madam, you may be a minister of your department, but you still have to beg the finance minister for funds"

Rather than answering the question as another intelligent woman would have, and trying to understand what the lady was saying, darling Renuka said "...My dear, we don't ask the Finance Minister, we order him. And he jolly well listen to us. Ha ha"

I mean, what was that, really?

When another African parliamentarian told her that she had seen a lot of Indian women sit on the ground rather than on chairs and beds etc, Renuka said the most outrageous thing

"...that's a cultural practice. It should be separated from a social or gender issue. We Indians like to sit on the floor. Even when I go to my village I sit on the floor. Its a healthy yogic posture (!!!) No woman is denied the right to sit on the chair or bed"

Utter crap. I was in villages of Rajasthan early this year, and several women said they were not supposed to sit on the charpoy, because that was a privilege afforded only to the men. Moreover, many women who were seated, actually stood up when men walked past because they couldn't be seen sitting when the men were standing.

Anyway, she kept evading the core issues with answers of this kind. It was despicable

To top it all, when she was asked about the women scavenging on the streets along with their children, she said it was "an organised crime" in India and "he he, you know we Indians are also have a lot of mischief"

Then she mentioned that Rural Employment Guarantee scheme (which btw, is not being implemented the way it should) as a solution to the problem of people living on the streets in the cities, and said "so we are trying to tell them that you know you can work if you really want. So there really is no reason for you to sit on the road expecting to be fed and taken care of "

What the hell is she talking about anyway? If a million homeless women turned up at her doorstep tomorrow, asking for work, even under the NREGA, is she going to give them a job??

The Integrated Child Development Scheme includes creches for children whose mothers are working. At these creches Midday meals are provided. There has been talk recently about the quality of these midday meals being quite poor, and not very nutritious. You know what Renuka's bright idea was? To include biscuits to make the meal more nutritious.

My mother and I, and several others I am sure, provide nutrition in the form of biscuits to children on a daily basis at traffic lights. Is it wrong for us to expect that the provisions made by the Central Government for the same will go beyond just biscuits then?

She finished by saying the Africans should definitely "go shopping because its great"