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Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Quote of the Day September 10, 2025

 

“It is not what you do for your children, but what you have taught them to do for themselves, that will make them successful human beings.”
Ann Landers
“आप अपने बच्चों के लिए क्या करते हैं वह नहीं, बल्कि आपने जो उन्हें खुद से करना सिखाया है, वह उन्हें सफल इंसान बनाएगा।”
एन लैंडर्स

Economic & Political Weekly: Table of Contents

 

Vol. 60, Issue No. 36, 06 Sep, 2025

Editorials

From 25 Years Ago

From 50 Years Ago

Alternative Standpoint

Commentary

Book Reviews

Insight

Special Articles

Notes

Current Statistics

Letters

National Annual Report and Index on Women’s Safety 2025

 The National Annual Report and Index on Women’s Safety (NARI) 2025 presents a detailed picture of urban women’s safety across India. Based on a survey of 12,770 women from 31 cities, the report reveals a national safety score of 65%. Despite government efforts, 40% of women still feel unsafe in their cities. The report marks key issues such as harassment, trust in redressal systems, and variations in safety by age, location, and time.

City Rankings

Cities like Kohima, Visakhapatnam, and Bhubaneswar rank highest due to better gender equity, policing, and infrastructure. In contrast, Patna, Jaipur, and Delhi score lowest, reflecting weak institutional support and entrenched patriarchal norms. These disparities show how governance and local culture impact women’s sense of security.

Harassment Patterns and Vulnerable Groups

Seven per cent of women reported public harassment in 2024, but this rises to 14% among women under 24. Young women, especially students and professionals, face more risks in educational and recreational spaces. Verbal harassment is the most common form, accounting for 58% of cases, followed by physical, psychological, economic, and sexual harassment.

Harassment Hotspots and Timing

Neighbourhoods (38%) and public transport (29%) are the main sites of harassment. Safety perceptions drop sharply after dark, with poor street lighting and unreliable transport increasing vulnerability. While 86% feel safe in educational institutions during the day, confidence falls at night or off-campus.

Workplace Safety and Awareness

Though 91% of women describe their workplaces as safe, awareness of the Prevention of Sexual Harassment (POSH) policy is low. Over half (53%) do not know if their organisation has implemented POSH. Among those aware, most find it effective, denoting that awareness is crucial alongside legal provisions.

Trust in Redressal Mechanisms

Confidence in authorities is weak. Only one in three harassment victims files formal complaints. Of those complaints, only 22% are registered, and 16% see action. Seventy-five per cent of women doubt the effectiveness of police and legal agencies. This cycle of silence perpetuates insecurity and discourages reporting. Women’s safety extends beyond physical protection. Psychological, financial, and digital security also influence access to opportunities and dignity. The report frames safety as a developmental issue, not just a law-and-order problem. Enhancing women’s safety requires multi-dimensional strategies including urban planning, social attitudes, and institutional reforms.

WHO Reports on Global Mental Health Crisis

 The World Health Organisation (WHO) released new data in 2024 denoting the global mental health crisis. Suicide remains a major cause of death worldwide. Mental health disorders are rising faster than the population growth. The reports ‘World Mental Health Today’ and ‘Mental Health Atlas 2024’ provide updated insights post-Covid-19 pandemic.

Suicide Statistics and Trends

In 2021, approximately 727,000 people died by suicide globally. One suicide death occurs for every 20 suicide attempts. Suicide is the leading cause of death among young people across all countries. Despite efforts, the target of reducing suicide rates by one-third by 2030 under the UN Sustainable Development Goals is unlikely. Current trends predict only a 12 per cent reduction by 2030.

Prevalence of Mental Health Disorders

Over one billion people live with mental health disorders worldwide. Anxiety and depressive disorders constitute over two-thirds of these conditions. Between 2011 and 2021, the age-standardised prevalence of mental disorders rose to 13.6 per cent, up 0.9 per cent from a decade earlier. Young adults aged 20-29 years show the largest increase in prevalence. Males more commonly experience ADHD, autism spectrum disorders, and intellectual disabilities. Females more frequently suffer from anxiety, depression, and eating disorders.

Age and Gender Patterns in Mental Health

Anxiety disorders typically begin earlier in life, often before age ten. Depressive disorders are rare in childhood but become more common after age 40. Depression peaks between the ages of 50 and 69. Gender differences are clear, with males and females showing different patterns of mental health issues.

Challenges in Mental Health Care Delivery

Mental health care in many countries, including India, faces major challenges. There are insufficient psychiatric beds outside specialised institutions. The care model needs to shift from custodial to therapeutic approaches. Psychiatric hospitals often suffer from poor conditions and stigma. Funding for mental health services remains inadequate. There is a severe shortage of trained mental health professionals such as psychiatrists, psychologists, nurses, and social workers, especially in rural areas.

Barriers to Access and Continuity of Care

Access to mental health care is limited by geographic and economic factors. Many patients and families cannot afford travel or treatment costs. Continuity of care and availability of medicines are often disrupted. Severe mental illness frequently leads to loss of income, worsening financial hardship, and social exclusion.

Strategies for Improvement

Experts call for increased funding and leadership to implement mental health programmes effectively. Integrating psychiatric services into general hospitals and tertiary care centres is vital. Training multidisciplinary teams can improve care quality. Expanding community-based care and reducing stigma are essential steps. Establishing a seamless chain of care will help manage mental health conditions better.

Bhupen Hazarika at 100: Why ‘the voice of Assam’ still resonates

 

A unique musician, writer and filmmaker with ideas deeply rooted in Assam and its culture, Bhupen Hazarika stood out as a voice that carried a people through decades of turbulence.


For poet, singer, composer and filmmaker Bhupen Hazarika, whose centenary celebrations began on Monday (September 8) — exactly a year before he would have turned 100 — the Brahmaputra remained an enduring metaphor. So much so that his voice has often been equated with the river, next to which he grew up, lived and died.

Hazarika carried the sweep and sorrow of the Brahmaputra in the songs he wrote and sang, ones that were informed by the folk music of Assam to become the gentle conscience of a region fraught with insurgency and its attendant pain.

Born in Assam and rooted in the traditions of the Northeast, these songs – about the river, about the boatman, about other lesser-known folk idioms from and about a relatively overlooked and disturbed region, went on to become the links to the rest of the country. The universality of his themes, of solidarity, dignity, humanity, and resistance, has echoed for decades.

Bhupen Hazarika’s early life and musical learning

Born in unified Assam in 1926 in Sadiya, a village next to the Brahmaputra’s deepest point, Hazarika was the eldest of 10 children. His grandfather established a school at Sibasagar. His father, Neelkantha Hazarika, began by teaching at this school before moving to Cotton College in Guwahati. Hazarika often credited his understanding of music to his mother’s lullabies and the tribal music of Assam that he grew up around. In fact one can spot the touches of the lullabies in his film, the Dimple Kapadia-starrer Rudaali (1993).

Hazarika’s talent was spotted when, as a 10-year-old student of Tezpur Government School, he sang at a public event. In the audience were poet, playwright, and founder of Assamese cinema Jyotiprasad Agarwala, and composer, writer and political activist Bishnu Prasad Rabha.

After this, from 1936 to 1940, he accompanied Agarwala on his trips to Kolkata, where he recorded a couple of songs, one of them being in Agarwala’s film Indramalati (1939). He also learned music from Rabha.

After school, Hazarika studied political science at Banaras Hindu University, where he was fascinated by the shehnai of Ustad Bismillah Khan and would often visit him to understand the nuances of Hindustani classical music. In 1948, after working briefly with All India Radio, he landed a scholarship and went to do a PhD in Mass Communication from Columbia University in New York.

Since he went via a boat to France, he also met Picasso there, catching him at 4 am during a walk and speaking to him about the latter’s works from the ‘Blue Period’ that he admired.

Music as social conscience

Both Agarwala and Rabha were active participants in the Independence struggle against the British. Agarwala also introduced Hazarika to the political writing and satire of Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw. While at BHU, Hazarika knew former PM Chandra Shekhar well and attended many political meetings with him. He felt that there was political indifference towards the Northeast and the cultural richness of his region was ignored. He also understood caste better, and wanted to fight against it when he couldn’t marry an upper-class Brahmin woman. While in the US, Hazarika was deeply influenced by American folk music as a tool of protest and resistance. He was also inspired by African-American musician and his new friend Paul Robeson, whose rendition of Ol’ Man River, which highlighted the struggles of African-Americans, was later adapted into Assamese as Bistirno Parore (Of the Wide Shores) and its Bengali version Bistirno Duparey, reimagining the Mississippi’s flow through the cadence of the Brahmaputra and later through the Ganga.

After returning from the US, Hazarika joined the Indian People’s Theatre Association (IPTA).

Hazarika and a conversation with the ULFA chief

In the turbulent early 80s, when there was an uprising against illegal immigration and a fear of cultural erasure in Assam, Hazarika’s songs, originally written against the system, became very popular.

The Assam Accord of 1985 led to some peace. When the ULFA was founded in 1987 with Paresh Barua as its Commander-in-Chief, it had the support of many, but the continued violence led to disillusionment among people.

At an event marking 50 years of AIR Guwahati in 1998, Hazarika as Chief Guest spoke of peace, following which he received a phone call from Barua, who is reported to have told him that he, too, wanted peace. Hazarika even offered to be the mediator between the Union Government and ULFA.

“I used to do many road shows before — one-man shows from village to village. During those shows, I have met many angry young men who have said to me, “Dada gana chod do aur gun le lo,” (Leave your song and pick up the gun). I told them that my gaan (song) is my gun,” he told The Rediff in an interview.

An expansive career

Hazarika began his career in the 60s by composing for and directing many Assamese films, including Shakuntala (1961) and Pratidhwani (1964). He composed extensively for Bengali films from West Bengal as well as Bangladesh. He met filmmaker Kalpana Lajmi in the 70s and composed the score for her first film Ek Pal (1986), followed by Rudaali (1993) and Daman (2001). The two were in a relationship and lived together till Hazarika’s death in 2011.

Hazarika’s baritone voice in Samay dheere chalo and the composition Dil hoom hoom kare still remain popular.

In his long career, Hazarika wrote and composed over 1,500 songs, made 14 films, scored music for about 70, edited magazines (Amar Pratinidhi and Pratidhwani), authored books and won numerous awards, including National Awards — the Dadasaheb Phalke for his lifetime contribution towards Indian cinema and a Padma Bhushan. He also headed several organisations, including the Sangeet Natak Akademi and Assam Sahitya Sabha. The Bangladesh government, in 2010, announced its highest civilian honour for Hazarika. His song Manush manusher jonnai (Humans are for humans) has been much-loved in the country. He was also awarded the Bharat Ratna (posthumously) in 2019.

Hazarika also had a short political career. He fought independently and won the state elections and was an MLA from 1967-72. He joined the BJP and also contested the Lok Sabha Elections from Guwahati, losing to Congress’s Kirip Chaliha.

Written by Suanshu Khurana

Source: Indian Express, 10/09/25