Author: Piyush Rajpurohit
Women always been surpass and suppress in social and political view; despite Indian’s constitutional commitment to gender equality, women’s lived experience has been often surrounded with harsh survival time, domestic violence, workplace harassment. The national crime records bureau (NCRB) 2022 reported 4,45,256 cases against women in India. There are many more cases which was not recorded and reported by the fear of society, position and future of life. The silent torture which they feel and work with every day.
Domestic Violence
Domestic violence as any action, committed in the constraints of a relationship or marriage, as any action, which forces the aggrieved part to lead an immoral life or any action that delivers harm or injuries to the aggrieved person describe under domestic violence Act, 2005.
∙ Physical Abuse: any form of harmful injury, assault, life threatening impact by the person family, relative, husband, any human
∙ Sexual Abuse: person intensely forces another person by the physical force, threat to the life and try to from physical relation without concert/force concert.
∙ Verbal and emotional abuse: include ridicule remark, insult and personal talk with bad words which impact your mental health and sometime it escalate in form of physical act by the person. ∙ Economic Abuse: any form of economic or financial resource involve; any person control the other person’s all kind of property to keep them dependent fell bounded without physical abuse.
(Derogatory remarks and sharing any erroneous photo in which person feel stressed are consider in Verbal and emotional abuse such conduct inflict the serious harm on mental health and even without it leave physical mark but it create impact in mind)
Observation/statistics
∙ The national crime record bureau 2022 report mention 4,45,256 case of crime against women in India, a 4%increae from previous year approx. average 51 complaint every hour.
∙ In comparison with national average, Delhi (144.4), Haryana (118.7), and Telangana (117.6) recorded rates almost two to three times higher than the national average.
∙ National family Heath survey 2019-2021: reported 32% married women in India have experience physical harassment, emotional violence by their husband and family. While 6% reported sexual harassment.
∙ Domestic Violence in India: A Summary Report of a Multi-Site Household Survey: mention about the physical violence. Women reported 15%(1,462 women) reported major physical abuse, 4,322 women report physiological abuse also the reported women’s 50% also experience violence time of pregnancy.[ Figure overall prevalence of violence page no 10]
∙ Report also mention 9,938 women in the survey, approximately one out of every four (2,596 women or 26%) had experienced slapping, kicking, hitting, beating, threat or use of a weapon, or forced sex in the last 12 months.[ Table 2 lifetime marital physical violence page no11].
The Protection of Women From Domestic Violence Act, 2005
The Act defines domestic violence broadly to include physical abuse, sexual abuse, verbal and emotional abuse, and economic abuse, as well as any conduct that harassment, or endangers a woman to force her or any related person to meet an unlawful dowry demand.
Who is protected
Any woman in a domestic relationship with the respondent wife, live-in partner, mother, sister, widow, or other female relative sharing a household is covered, regardless of marital status.
Available Relief (Section18-22)
1. Protection Order: restrains the respondent from committing further violence, contacting her by the any form written, oral, or also provide aid.
2. Residence order: secures the right to her to live in the shared household, restrain to remove from house and property.
3. Monetary Relief: provide the compensation for loss of earnings, medical expenses, and also provide maintenance to provide standard of living to the women.
4. Custody order: The Magistrate may grant temporary custody of any child or children to the woman, and may also regulate the respondent’s visitation rights if it is likely to harm the child’s interests.
Process for seeking Relief (Section12)
∙ Aggrieved woman, Protection Officer, or any other person on her behalf can file an application before the Magistrate.
∙ Magistrate must fix the first hearing within 3 days of the application being filed
∙ Magistrate is required to dispose of the application within 60 days from the first hearing
Breach of Protection Order (section 31)
∙ Breach of a Protection Order or Interim Protection Order by the respondent is a cognizable and non bailable offence.
∙ Punishable with imprisonment up to one year, or fine up to ₹20,000, or both
∙ The Magistrate trying the breach may also frame charges under Section 498-A IPC (now BNS) or any other applicable law, if the facts support it.
Workplace Harassment
The harassment is when someone behaves unwanted badly with women at work place that make a women feel uncomfortable, unsafe or pressured in the work place. That include unwanted bad touch, personal sexual remarks; also indirect try to demand for sexual favor showing inappropriate content to connect her work place.
G²LM|LIC Policy Brief No. 79 Seventy Percent: The Reality of Workplace Harassment in India: online survey mention Regarding the workplace harassment all over India 70% women face at least one form of harassment in Firms with follow of sexist hostility (60%) and sexual attention(40%) women’s also reported the unwanted touch and creepy behavior. Simple thoughts then what they do? Women carry the self-defence product like pepper spray, little knife and other self-defence items. Higher they can do is switch their job but it will go harsh for their professional journey also it will also never sure about the solution of safety in work
place.
The Ministry of Women and Child Development launched the SHE-Box portal duly encompassing various provisions of ‘the Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace) Act, 2013. The portal provides a publicly available simple reporting way of information related to Internal Committees and Local Committees formed across the country whether in government or private sector. It also provides a common platform to file complaints and track the status of such complaints for women safety.
The mission Shakti a comprehensive umbrella type scheme of safety, security and empowerment for women under Nirbhaya fund The one stop centre (OSC) provide women affected by violence and who are in distress with a range of integrated services under one roof such as Police facilitation, medical aid, providing legal aid and legal counseling, psycho-social counseling, temporary shelter up to 5 days.
What is POSH (Prevention of Sexual Harassment) Act, 2013?
The act enacted followed the Supreme Court’s direction in Vishaka v. State of Rajasthan (1997), guideline treating sexual harassment at the work place. After this the POSH Act,2013 created define sexual harassment at work place prohibit it and set up a structured way to address complaint with binding consequences for employers.
∙ Under Section 2(n), Sexual harassment define as any unwanted physical contact, demand any sexual favor, try to making sexually remarks, show pornography and other form written and oral harassment.
∙ Under section 2(o) Workplace: workplace is not limited to the office building. It includes any place visited by the employee during work, including during official travel, and transportation provided by the employer for commuting to and from work.
∙ Complaint process under POSH ACT[ Chapter IV & V]
1. Filing the complaint: The woman submits a written complaint to the Internal Committee within 3 months of the incident. If there were genuine reasons preventing her from filing earlier, the Committee can extend this by another 3 months.
2. Assistance in filing: If the woman is unable to write the complaint herself due to disability, illness, or any other reason, the Committee or any member must provide reasonable assistance to help her file it.
3. Conciliation: Before starting a formal inquiry, the Committee may, only at the woman’s request, attempt conciliation between her and the respondent. However, no monetary settlement can be the basis of this conciliation. (OPTIONAL)
4. Formal inquiry: If conciliation isn’t requested or fails, the Committee proceeds with a formal inquiry, following principles of natural justice meaning both sides get a fair chance to present their case and evidence.
5. Interim relief during inquiry: While the inquiry is ongoing, the woman can request transfer of herself or the respondent, or leave of up to 3 months for herself.
6. Timeline for inquiry: The Committee must complete the inquiry within 90 days from the date the complaint was filed.
7. Report submission: Within 10 days of completing the inquiry, the Committee sends its findings and recommendations to the employer (or District Officer, if it’s a Local Committee). 8. Employer’s action: The employer must implement the Committee’s recommendations within 60 days of receiving the report.
If the complaint is found false or malicious The Committee may recommend action against the complainant but importantly, the Act clarifies that merely failing to prove the case is not enough to treat it as a false complaint; bad faith or malicious intent must be shown separately.
ANALYSIS
The Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 and the Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace Act, 2013 both reflects a deliberate legislative effort to translate India’s constitutional promise of gender equality into enforceable, accessible remedies. Both Acts move beyond a narrow, physical injury understanding of violence, recognizing verbal, emotional, and economic abuse within the home, and hostile environment harassment within the workplace of women, as equally serious violations of a woman’s dignity and autonomy. The availability of time-bound procedures, protection and residence orders, monetary relief, and institutional mechanisms such as Internal Committees, Protection Officers, the SHE-Box portal, and One Stop Centers demonstrates that the law has, at least on paper, evolved considerably since the Vishaka guidelines of 1997. But the ground reality is maybe very different women report and acknowledges there harassment but the limit of time and society bond, thinking pull back action.
The data NCRB’s 4,45,256 reported cases against women in 2022, NFHS-5’s finding that 32% of married women report experiencing violence, and survey findings that 70% of women face some form of workplace harassment reveal a persistent and troubling gap between legal entitlement and lived experience. A significant proportion of violence continues to go unreported, suppressed by fear of social stigma, professional consequence, or simple disbelief that the system will respond in time. Mechanisms such as job-switching or carrying self-defence items, as women resort to in the absence of confidence in workplace redressal ,are symptomatic of a system where awareness, enforcement, and trust remain weaker than the statute itself.
Maybe is not a failure of legislative intent but a failure of implementation depth inconsistent functioning of Internal Committees, fear of reputation in work place. The low awareness of rights among women in rural sectors, and inadequate sensitization of those tasked with enforcing these laws. Sustained protection for women whether within the home, at the workplace.
Reference
1. Press Information Bureau Government of India, Ministry of Women and Child Development, 19JUL 2019 2. Several steps taken by Government to promote safety, security and empowerment of women, Ministry of Women and Child Development, 18 DEC 2024
3. The Protection of Women Form Domestic Violence Act, 2005
4. G²LM|LIC Policy Brief No. 79 | October 2025 Seventy Percent: The Reality of Workplace Harassment in India. 5. The sexual harassment of Women place (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act,2013 6. Domestic Violence in India, A Summary Report of a Multi-Site Household Survey, International Clinical Epidemiologists Network (INCLEN)
7. The three-volume report Crime in India 2022 , National Crime Records Bureau, Ministry of Home Affairs, December 2022

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