Hema committee report a wake-up call for men in cinema: Bina Paul
‘It is not a very clean space to work in where you are respected and can work with dignity,’ Paul said.
‘It is not a very clean space to work in where you are respected and can work with dignity,’ Paul said.
‘It is not a very clean space to work in where you are respected and can work with dignity,’ Paul said.
A landmark report that revealed widespread sexual harassment and exploitation of women in a southern Indian film industry must be a "wake-up call" for men in cinema, said Bina Paul, film editor and founding member of WCC ( Women in Cinema Collective) referring to the Hema committee report. WCC had filed a petition with the Chief Minister seeking the constitution of a committee to study issues related to the Malayalam film industry, especially gender discrimination and sexual abuse. The report by the three-member Hema Committee has rocked "Mollywood" - as the Malayalam film and TV industry is known - since its release last month, with a series of sexual abuse allegations against some top male celebrities triggering resignations by men in powerful posts, as well as police investigations.
"This must act as a wake-up call. Now there will be a lot more vigilance, women themselves will ask 'Am I owed anything?', and men certainly will – and should - be more vigilant," she said.
"With this spotlight, social media, you cannot hide anymore. India's southern states, including Kerala, have vibrant and popular local language film industries, separate from the Hindi-language Bollywood," she said. The nearly 300-page report uncovered a range of problems faced by women, including poor working conditions such as a lack of female toilets and changing rooms on sets, a lack of legally binding contracts, irregular pay, wage gaps, and demands for sexual favors in exchange for work.
"It is not a very clean space to work in where you are respected and can work with dignity. The Malayalam film industry is unorganized and feudal. Even though the identities of the victims, as well as those accused of harassment, were hidden in the report," Paul said adding that it was not hard for people working within the industry to work out who the alleged perpetrators were.
There were mass resignations from the Association of Malayalam Movie Artistes including its head, veteran star Mohanlal, as some of its members faced allegations of abuse. While Paul said she was lucky not to have faced sexual harassment at work, she had experienced many other issues and was routinely "gaslighted".
The allegations in the report came at a time when doctors across the country were protesting against the rape and murder of a trainee doctor in the eastern city of Kolkata. The assault on the doctor revived memories of the 2012 gang rape of a physiotherapist on a moving bus in Delhi. A wave of #MeToo revelations hit Bollywood in 2018 and soon spread to media, sports and business, intensifying pressure on public figures, companies and organisations to take sexual harassment seriously. But campaigners say little has changed.
"It is a powerful nexus of money, power et cetera. These are very strong systems to fight. Women need a lot of courage," said Paul. Paul said she and her colleagues noticed that many within the sector largely blamed the victim."We soon realized that there is a lot of ingrained misogyny in the film industry. It was important to come together and change things," she said, adding that the WCC had to fight to get the Hema Committee report published.While the report was submitted to the state government in late 2019, it was only made public last month after facing a series of legal challenges from people working in Mollywood.
The report's findings sparked debate, dominated local headlines and prompted actors to call for action. Workers in other regional film industries in the states of West Bengal and Telangana demanded similar investigations and the National Commission for Women vowed to look into the matter. Paul said that was encouraging but more needed to be done."This is not enough," she said, demanding India's film industries properly implement the law on sexual harassment in the workplace, introduce gender sensitization programmes and round-the-clock helplines for women.
She also called for transparency in pay and work schedules, for unions to be more inclusive and provide more protection for women, who, according to the report, were sometimes rejected for membership for reasons such as "advanced age".She urged the government to initiate talks with stakeholders and involve more women in policy decisions to improve conditions in Malayalam cinema."Why should women not be part of an industry which is very lucrative, very creative?" asked Paul. "Women need to have equal employment opportunities everywhere."