“PLEASE do not talk to Manju about the incident. Although it happened nine months back, she has still not recovered,†cautioned Sunita, 46, a domestic worker, while referring to her niece who survived a sexual assault attempt by her exemployer’s 24-year-old son. This happened four months after Manju, 19, left her village in the tribal belt of Chhattisgarh for her first job ever as a housemaid in Delhi. “Manju ran away from that house. She reached me in a hysterical state. I was shocked to know what she had experienced. When I confronted Manju’s employers, they refused to believe me and instead called Manju and me whores, physically pushing me out of the house. The police did nothing to help. Who should I go to?†asked an angry Sunita. Scores of domestic workers like Sunita rallied at Delhi’s Jantar Mantar recently to raise this question. Unfortunately, the Protection of Women against Sexual Harassment at the Workplace Bill 2010, that is awaiting enactment in Parliament, offers them neither an answer nor any redress.