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Student's 'sexual predator' list names professors

  • Published
    6 November 2017
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Raya Sarkar, a US based law studentImage source, Facebook
Image caption,

Raya Sarkar is a US based law student who published a list of alleged sexual harassers

Elizabeth Cassin and Ritu Prasad
BBC Trending

The ripples of the #MeToo movement have reached India, where one law student has published a list on Facebook accusing more than 50 Indian professors of sexual harassment - but it's touched off a debate about whether "naming and shaming" is an effective tool against alleged abuse.

After the outpouring of allegations in Hollywood and in other industries, 24-year-old law student Raya Sarkar asked fellow students to send over their experiences with "academics who have sexually harassed or were sexually predatory" towards them.

"I wanted to make my friends and friends of friends aware and wary of different sexual predators - based on first-hand testimonies," Raya Sarkar told BBC Trending. "I put the list out to make students safe."

This crowdsourced list was published on Facebook and shared more than 1,000 times. It named professors alongside their university affiliations, but included no details about the allegations or the accusers.

While a couple of men on the list have had official complaints filed against them, there are no legal charges against the majority of the named professors.

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Hear more on this story on the BBC Trending podcast

You might also be interested in: 'MeToo' and the scale of sexual abuse

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Feminist debate

Shortly after Raya's list went viral, Nivedita Menon, a feminist author and professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University, published a statement on behalf of a group of prominent Indian feminists who vehemently disagreed with Raya Sarkar's methods.

"It worries us that anybody can be named anonymously, with lack of answerability. Where there are genuine complaints, there are institutions and procedures, which we should utilize...This manner of naming can delegitimize the long struggle against sexual harassment, and make our task as feminists more difficult."

The discussion between feminist factions continued on Twitter.

Some attacked the statement, accusing established, upper-class feminists of silencing less privileged victims. Others argued the list has not been authenticated and as such, was a violation of due process.

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Most of the professors named on the list did not respond. But one who did, Partha Chatterjee, told Indian news website The Wire it was unfair that he did not know the nature of the complaint, external. He also said he always treated his students with "dignity and respect."

The professor added that the proliferation of unverified lists "is only likely to discredit the cause and diminish the moral force of the unquestionably legitimate demand to transform our universities into a safer place for women."

Sarkar declined to give Chatterjee further details of the allegations against him. Sarkar told Trending that students often fear reporting offenders to their university because those investigating the case could be friends with the accused professor, which could lead to further harassment or discrimination.

"Initially, I wanted to include the names of the complainants and what the people had done," Raya said. "But the complainants were really not for that plan, and they were like 'please don't take my name, please let it be anonymous, because I'm scared, because I will be harassed and the person may figure out it's me.'"

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For Raya, due process has failed women in academia.

"I'm glad that people have critiqued it and pointed out due process has failed students," Raya said. "I'm coming from a place of helplessness."

"Why would people even get to this point if they could just go to court, and due process would be fair and easy?"

Karuna Nundy, a lawyer at the Supreme Court of India, agreed that women worldwide face serious challenges in bringing sexual harassment and sexual abuse cases to court.

"It's hard for women to go through the justice system and succeed. Conviction rates in England, in India, across the world are low. Because of the women's movement, the conviction rates in India are higher than many other parts of the world but they're still at about 27 percent," she told Trending

She added that conviction rates are even lower for low-caste, LGBTQ, and minority women in India.

Protest in DelhiImage source, AFP
Image caption,

Convictions in cases of sexual violence are rare

In the wake of Raya's public list, another Facebook user, Malati Kumari, posted the names of other alleged harassers within academia. The post, which is no longer available, directly credited Raya's list as opening "a Pandora's box."

"I think there's been a wave in the last few weeks," said Karuna, the legal expert. "Tactically it's actually a somewhat successful strategy."

When the accused has no access to the evidence against them, Karuna explained that anyone pursuing a defamation case in India or the US would have to be "seriously confident" of their innocence.

Raya stands by her decision to keep the accusers anonymous.

"All the people that reported to me kind of risked their careers. There's a relationship of trust that they built with me, which is why I chose to believe them," Raya said. "And I'm going to see this through."

Blog by Elizabeth Cassin and Ritu Prasad

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You can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, external, and find us on Facebook, external. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.

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