INDIA: BAR GIRLS SEEK RIGHTS
By Geeta Seshu
September 1, 2004 - (BBC) Seeking recognition, respect, dignity
and their right to livelihood as entertainers, about 30,000 women
from dance bars across India's commercial capital, Mumbai, recently
staged a protest at a landmark public ground in the city.
Organised recently under the banner of the Bharatiya (Indian)
Bar Girls Union, they symbolise a rapidly growing band of around
75,000 women aged between 18 and 50 years who work the night through
in at least 1,500 dance bars in the western Indian state of Maharashtra,
according to a recent study conducted by the Womanist Party of
India, a prime initiator of the union.
Often, the song and dance routine
is a run-up to the sexual services the girls provide to numerous
patrons from all walks of life.
In an effort to regulate their work,
the Maharashtra government recently announced a slew of restrictions
in dance bars. It proposed a three-foot wall, in addition to a
minimum five-foot distance between the dancing girls and their
patrons; a ban on short and revealing clothes; no tips directly
to the girls; and the maintenance of a record of all dancers.
While the state government wants
these restrictions to be implemented immediately, dance bar owners
are playing for time, adding that they would like to discuss the
matter with the government.
The Mumbai Police Commissioner A
N Roy has gone on record to state that the move will improve social
security as the bars are breeding grounds for anti-social activities.
State Home Minister Kripa Shankar Singh also said they were attempting
to 'cleanse' the bars and prevent them from becoming 'pick-up
joints' for women.
Bar girls lead a precarious existence,
sandwiched between such regulatory efforts and moral policing
on the one hand and on the other, extreme poverty, sexual exploitation
and vulnerability to health risks like HIV.
Most of these women are poorly educated
and have little vocational skills. Some of them may have come
into the profession attracted by the glamor of being singers and
entertainers.
Points out Varsha Kale, president
of the recently-registered Womanist Party of India, "The
bar girls have swollen feet as they stand in supposedly erotic
poses and dance throughout the night. They ward off advances from
customers and patrons and most of them are secretive about their
work even with their families for fear of censure and rejection.
The number of alcohol and drug abusers among them is high as they
work in liquor and dance bars; and worst of all, their work is
seasonal and transient, dependent on the vagaries of youth and
looks."
In 1996, bar girls hit the streets
to protest against the then Hindu nationalist Shiv Sena-Bhartiya
Janata Party government's attempt to restrict bar timings to 8.30
pm. Sponsored by bar owners, the bar girls emerged as a vocal
and visible force and together with bar owners, prevailed upon
the government to get the timings of bars extended to 12.30 am.
While owners benefited from the extended
timings, the other demand of the bar girls, for a major share
in the tips, has still not received any attention. Kale says the
'96 protest did make bar girls aware of their united strength.
Kale and others have begun moving
cautiously to form the bar girls union. While it is due for registration
in the last week of August, Kale acknowledges it is a very difficult
task to organise the girls by bypassing bar owners.
In a study conducted in 2004 among
bar girls in and around Mumbai, Kale's party realised that the
'phenomenon' of girls serving liquor in beer bars was not restricted
only to cities like Mumbai and the neighboring Thane. Such bars
exist even in cities and towns like Pune, Nagpur, Aurangabad,
Nashik, Solapur and Kolhapur.
The practice of girls or women serving
liquor began about 20 years ago in Maharashtra, according to the
study. Soon, with the proliferation of beer bars across the state,
women waitresses were joined by women performers and entertainers.
Singing and dancing then became a part of the entertainment at
bars.
Kale's study, based on interviews
with numerous bar girls, also revealed that waiting at tables
and serving liquor or dancing were not the only duties expected
of these women. The sale of sexual services was also very much
a part of the job.
Many of the girls hail from the northern
Indian states of Delhi, parts of Bihar, Haryana, Rajasthan and
even the neighboring countries of Bangladesh and Nepal, indicating
widespread trafficking and migration.
The study also reveals most of these
women are from the underprivileged, lower castes or minority communities.
Manjit Singh Sethi, President of the Fight for Rights of
Bar Owners Association, welcomes the move to organise the girls,
saying it is a very good change from previous times.
For once, the work of bar girls is being recognised, he feels.
"There is nothing immoral about it, no obscenity. Our patrons
are all adults and our girls sing and dance to Hindi film music.
Don't you anyway allow your children to watch film stars singing
and dancing on screen?" he asks.
Recently, the present Congress-National Congress Party government
restricted the entry of youth below the age of 21 years into bars,
and asked bar owners to shut down their bars by 12.30 am.
Agitated by the restrictions imposed, Sethi says the Congress-NCP
government has an eye on the upcoming September 2004 assembly
elections. "Let us not be hypocrites," he reiterates,
"politicians also patronise dance bars." Sethi and others
feel bar owners are merely being arm-twisted to make them contribute
to the election campaign.
Sethi says the association represents about 1,250 dance bars in
Maharashtra and gives the government an annual 'official' revenue
amounting to around US $50,000.
"It's an industry, and it employs more than a million people,
including 75,000 women," he stresses.
Besides, Sethi says, the restrictions were introduced in a thoroughly
undemocratic manner. Both bar girls and bar owners were not involved
in any discussions on the restrictions.
Echoing the demand for more participation in decision-making,
albeit to protect the interests of bar girls, Kale and others
from the bar girls union, have demanded the setting up of an independent
committee to discuss the government's restrictions.
But what they really need, she said, was protection from police
harassment. "We plan to give identity cards for the girls
so that they aren't picked up when they return home at night,"
she informs.
During police raids, while the girls are arrested for `soliciting'
and `indecent exposure' the bar owners are let off. The bar owners
get the girls back after paying the bail deposit. The union is
also exploring the possibility of paying up bail deposits on their
arrests so as to loosen the stranglehold of owners.
Besides, the union will ensure regular medical check-ups, work
on HIV/AIDS awareness, ensure the girls participate in a savings
scheme, undertake leadership training programs and last but not
least, familiarize them with the functioning of sex workers unions
across the world.
For, as Kale puts it, "the girls are victims of widespread
feminisation of poverty and unemployment. They are, in part, bar
girls, part call girls or sex workers, part dancers and entertainers
and part waitresses and maids."
From: http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/oneworld/20040901/wl_oneworld/4591930731094020162