Female Scribes face Patriarchy and Misogyny in India, say Women Journalists

Female Scribes face Patriarchy and Misogyny in India, say Women Journalists
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October 6, 2016: Women journalists, like men, should be judged on the basis of their stories rather than their gender in the male-dominated world of journalism where they face "misogyny and patriarchy" on daily basis, renowned Indian scribes said here on Thursday.

"We want to be judged on the basis of our work, stories not just on the basis of being female reporters," Barkha Dutt, consulting editor of NDTV, said here at a discussion on "The female journalist in India".

Barkha Dutt, Wikimedia

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Veteran journalists, including Suhasini Haider of The Hindu and Harinder Baweja of Hindustan Times, were also part of the discussion at the American Center to commemorate the life and work of American-Israeli Daniel Pearl, a Wall Street Journal reporter who was kidnapped and later killed by militants in Pakistan.

The women journalists spoke about their lives as young reporters, covering conflicts and facing harassment and being the target of humiliating and hateful tweets but still standing out in the male-dominated profession.

"I stayed quiet as a younger person when I was harassed during work. Because, I did not want to lose the story," said Dutt, who shot to fame after her live coverage of the 1999 Kargil conflict between India and Pakistan.

Harinder Baweja, Twitter

"I had to argue with the army for allowing me to go to Kargil during the war and their reason for not letting me go was there are no bathrooms," she said.

"I told them, I would go the way men out there would do."

Baweja, known for her investigative reporting, echoed the lines. "As a female, we all have faced difficulties. But to all young reporters, I would advise to have a thicker skin and move on. Although things now are changing."

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Speaking to journalists, students and diplomats, the panellists highlighted the social media abuse that women journalists go through.

"This is where it is different with men. Male journalists do not undergo sexual abuse online whereas we all face it every day," Baweja said.

They said "misogyny, institutional patriarchy, and fictionalising of personal lives" by the society was not what their male counterparts would face.

US envoy Richard Verma and Israel's envoy Daniel Carmon were also present at the event.(IANS)

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