Stranded and unsafe: Women election staff face numerous challenges
The Hindu
While the government provided buses from the DRC centres to various points in the city, least attention was paid to the safety issues associated with late-night drop.
‘Equality with a difference’ as a concept has travelled a long way, and governments are slowly adapting to women-friendly policies giving due concessions to their gender-defined roles. General elections, however, are still one area where gender blindness of governments becomes strikingly conspicuous.
A number of women employees who were deployed on election duties in the just-concluded Parliamentary polls had a harrowing time due to gender-insensitive policies of the authorities. While facilities at the polling stations were not women friendly, what caused more agony was the situation at the distribution, reception and counting (DRC) centres where the election material was deposited.
Most unsympathetic was how the women officers were dropped off on the roads post midnight with least concern paid to their safety and security.
“It was 1.30 a.m. on Tuesday by the time I returned. The bus dropped me off at L.B. Nagar crossroads, from where my home was about 3 kilometres away. I panicked as I am a single woman, with no male family member to pick me up,” shared Poojitha, a State government employee who was appointed as a presiding officer in Vikarabad.
She had to call a cousin of hers residing nearby to drop her home. Still, she thinks this time, it was better than her previous stint — during 2023 Assembly elections — when there was no drop facility at all. With much difficulty, she could hire a cab along with a male colleague.
While the government provided buses from the DRC centres to various points in the city, least attention was paid to the safety issues associated with late-night drop.
“We had to wait for close to two hours after polling deadline for the vehicle to take us to the DRC centre, where they took their own sweet time to take custody of the paraphernalia and issue us attendance certificate,” shared Jhansi, a teacher who worked in Uppal. She drove home at midnight, on her two-wheeler.