“Women empowerment” is an excellent electoral bait. It’s a staple in every election manifesto. Political parties seek votes promising to implement schemes that empower women and save them from the throes of discrimination. But unfortunately, it has become a repetitive, hollow cliché, used in public rallies.
For every successive government, ‘women’s empowerment’ is a promise that gets lip service, a broken promise. The Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao campaign (BBBP), which translates to Save the daughter, educate the daughter,” launched by the BJP led government on 22 January 2015 is a classic example.
The initiative seeks to address the declining child sex ratio, promote girl child education, and enable “issues of women empowerment over a life-cycle continuum.” A joint effort of three Ministries – Ministry of Women & Child Development, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, and the Ministry of Human Resource Development – the programme aims to serve a daughter’s interests from childhood to adulthood. As the official Prime Minister’s Official website says:
There is a strong emphasis on mindset change through training, sensitization, awareness raising and community mobilization on ground.
A campaign that attempts to tackle girl-child discrimination – across a spectrum of issues, from survival and education to empowerment and “mindset change” – must be celebrated. But a closer examination of facts surrounding the scheme paints a grim picture.
-30-
Copyright©Madras Courier, All Rights Reserved. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from madrascourier.com and redistribute by email, post to the web, mobile phone or social media.Please send in your feed back and comments to [email protected]