Women are not safe in India...statistics

Even in the most literate parts of India, the violence against women is rising.

*The incidents are endless and figures show an alarming rise in atrocities against women in India. Every 26 minutes a woman is molested. Every 34 minutes a rape takes place. Every 42 minutes an incident of sexual harassment occurs. And every 93 minutes a woman is burnt alive for dowry. The issue is not only of gender abuse, it is to recognise the right of every individual to exist as a human being and not live as `subordinate sex’. Violence against women is the most persuasive human rights violation in the world today. *
http://www.hindu.com/mag/2005/03/06/stories/2005030600670400.htm

Re: Women are not safe in India...statistics

^^ And that only according to the "official" statistics....

Re: Women are not safe in India…statistics

From the stories I have read, Delhi is the rape capital of India as well.

**Six held over gang rape in Delhi **

Police in the Indian capital, Delhi, say six men have been arrested on charges of raping a 16-year-old girl in the early hours of Thursday. Officers said the teenager was lured into a bus in the Najafgarh area. The high rates of rape have raised great concern among the citizens of Delhi, with some now demanding the death penalty be imposed. This is the third case of a gang rape in a vehicle in the capital in the past few months. Police say an acquaintance of the 16-year-old lured her into the bus to be raped by him and five others. She had been missing from home since Wednesday, said police, who had responded to an anonymous call. The accused appeared in court on Thursday and were remanded in police custody for two days.

Lengthy process

In other recent incidents in Delhi, a university student was abducted by four men and assaulted in May while another woman was gang raped last month. **Junior Home Minister S Reghupathy has said in parliament that more than 550 cases of rape were registered in the capital last year. ** He said most were committed by people known to the victim. Women’s groups say India’s poor rate of conviction and lengthy trial process deter many rape victims from coming forward to testify, especially because they fear social discrimination. In 2003, a Swiss diplomat was raped in her car after attending a film festival. On the same night, an Indian woman filmmaker suffered head injuries as she fought off attackers. Those attacks came soon after the alleged rape of a woman by members of the presidential bodyguard.

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Alleged presidential guard gang rape rattles India’s military

NEW DELHI, Oct 10 (AFP) - India’s military, stung by the alleged rape of a teenage student by four presidential guards, was planning Friday a revamp of the elite unit that has protected the country’s first citizen for 53 years.

Police have arrested four soldiers of the Presidential Body Guard (PBG) on charges of raping the girl Monday in a park two kilometres (one mile) from the official home of President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam.

Kalam and his presidential palace reacted strongly to the alleged assault, which occurred while Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama was addressing his followers in the same Buddha Jayanti Park.

"The president has expressed serious concern over the incident and has asked for tough measures to be taken to ensure that such incidents do not recur.

“What has been committed is a terrible crime and the guilty shall be given appropriate punishment,” the palace said, adding that Kalam, the supreme commander of the Indian armed forces, has called for a military probe.

http://quickstart.clari.net/qs_se/webnews/wed/av/Qindia-crime-rape.R8xJ_DOA.html

O o o La LA
Presidential body guards doing this crime 2 kilometers away from his residence…:eek:

Re: Women are not safe in India…statistics

India faces rape debate

Women say the law does not protect them

The issue of rape in India has been thrown high up the political agenda following an alleged gang-rape of a medical student in the capital, Delhi.

On Sunday one of the four alleged attackers was remanded in custody.

He is accused of raping the 24-year-old medical student in broad day light. The girl was dragged off a busy road at a knife point and was taken to a nearby historical monument, Khooni Darwaza.

The man and three suspected accomplices have now been charged with rape, robbery and criminal conspiracy.

Police said they had tracked down the accused man’s missing trousers and would carry out forensic tests to establish that he had been in sexual contact with his alleged victim.

The case has caused widespread outrage.

Angry students from the victim’s college, the prestigious Maulana Azad Medical, went on a protest strike demanding the arrest of those responsible for the crime.

Harassment ‘rife’

According to women’s groups, there is one rape every hour in India, with females belonging to lower castes or from tribal origin at highest risk.

Last week MPs in parliament suspended scheduled business to debate whether rapists should be given the death sentence.

Sexual harassment of women is rife in India and the conviction of rapists is extremely difficult under current legislation.

For years women’s groups have demanded the laws on rape be modernised.

But so far law makers have ignored them.

Many incidents of rape in villages and small towns are largely ignored.

But recently there has been widespread outrage at some daring incidents of rape, including one in a Bombay (Mumbai) suburban train and on the campus of Delhi University.

Unsafe for women

On Sunday one of Delhi’s leading newspapers, The Hindustan Times, released the findings of a survey of women in Delhi:

  • 72% said they had been sexually harassed
  • 18% said they face harassment nearly every day
  • 16% said that they had been sexually molested
  • Nearly 70% said not enough was being done by the Delhi police
  • 43% think rapists should be castrated
  • 71% wanted the death penalty for rapists

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/2508929.stm

Re: Women are not safe in India…statistics

According to a recent report by the People’s Union for Democratic Rights (PUDR) – an Indian human rights organisation – police officers were charged in 10 cases of rape in New Delhi between 1989-1993. They reported that the courts tended to ignore the victim’s vulnerability, and often subject the victim to so much emotional strain that the case is dropped completely.

No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

As in other countries throughout the world, rape is extremely common in India. Hardly a day passes without a case of rape being reported in the newspapers.

Women belonging to low castes, and tribal women are especially at risk. What is particularly worrying about rape in India is the lack of seriousness with which the crime is often treated, and the degrading treatment to which alleged rape victims are often subjected by law courts and by their own communities. This problem is exacerbated by the fact that rape laws are inadequate and definitions so narrow that prosecution is made difficult. In a notorious case from Rajasthan, alleged gang-rapers were acquitted on account of their high-caste and middle-agedness.

A case study which has received a great deal of media attention recently regarding a woman social activist from Rajasthan powerfully illustrates the difficulties of women who have been raped, and gives an insight into the status of women in India.

43 year-old Bhanwari Devi, a backward-caste voluntary worker from Bhateri village in Rajasthan filed a complaint with the police in 1992 alleging that she had been gang-raped. **She had allegedly been raped on September 22, 1992, by members of a rich, high-caste family, whom she had attempted to report for organising a child marriage as part of her job in the state sponsored Rajasthan’s Women’s Development Project. **

Following its transference from the local police to the state Criminal Investigations Department, and then under pressure from women’s groups, to the Central Bureau of Investigations (CBI), the district and sessions court in Jaipur dismissed her case and acquitted all five accused: Ram Sukh Gujjar, Ram Karan Gujjar, Gyarsa Gujjar, Badri Gujjar, and Shravan Sharma. The judgement emphasised that her First Information Report (FIR) was not immediately filed and that she did not tell anyone else in the village about her ordeal.

Khalsa Human Rights does not consider that this would be a surprising reaction to gang-rape and the emotional trauma and stigma attached to it. Based on an examination of available press reports, Khalsa Human Rights remains very concerned about the outco me of this case and the poor treatment which has been accorded to Ms. Bhanwari Devi.

Custodial Rape Article 7 ICCPR: No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.Article 10(1) ICCPR: All persons deprived of their shall be treated with humanity and with respect for the inherent dignity of the human person.\

Custodial rape is a particularly important category of rape since it represents a flagrant abuse of the authority of the Indian government, the ver y same institution which is bound to promote and protect the rights of women. The degree to which government authorities are willing to ensure that the perpetrators of this crime are brought to justice is likely to be a good indication of the esteem in which women’s rights are held in the society as a whole.

Hundreds of cases of police rape have been reported in India in recent years, but convictions of police officers for raping women in their custody remain rare. Few cases of custodial rape reach the trial stage. In 1990 five police officers in West Bengal were suspended for allegedly raping Kankuli Santra in Singur police station. The police at first tried to avoid responsibility by claiming that she was mentally ill. Then they said that she was a bad woman. Public protests eventually forced charges to be brought against two of the officers, but the case was dismissed for lack of evidence.

According to a recent report by the People’s Union for Democratic Rights (PUDR) – an Indian human rights organisation – police officers were charged in 10 cases of rape in New Delhi between 1989-1993. They reported that the courts tended to ignore the victim’s vulnerability, and often subject the victim to so much emotional strain that the case is dropped completely.

Of the ten cases it is reported that six of the women wanted to withdraw the charges in order to end their ordeal; two of the women did not show up to complete proceedings; one of the remaining cases was still in progress, with all four def endants on bail. In the only remaining case, there was a failure to produce any of the accused in court. In another case which has been brought to the attention of Khalsa Human Rights, , the wife of Kanwar Singh Dhami, a well-known advocate of an independent Sikh homeland (Khalistan) in Punjab, was arrested in Himachal Predesh in 1993, following a seditious speech given by her husband at the Anandpur Sahib Gurdwara (Sikh Temple). **Kanwar Singh Dhami claimed that he and his wife were tortured in front of each other by Punjab police during their detention. **

Kuldip Kaur alleged that she had been raped by the police during her detention, and that she had to have an abortion on April 11, 1994, because of the pain that she was suffering.

http://www.sikhnet.com/sikhnet/discussion.nsf/By+Topic/31c6caf6b5471ecd872569d10041a085?Open

Re: Women are not safe in India…statistics

INDIA
Reports of rape in 1993

http://www.amnestyusa.org/countries/india/document.do?id=7BC6BB3C1946833B802569A6006048D7

Re: Women are not safe in India…statistics

Rape Of The Law

By Shoma Sen

A nation-wide campaign followed against rape demanded redefining consent in a rape trial and demanded that past sexual history and the girl’s character should not be used as evidence.

http://www3.estart.com/india/women/rapelaw.html

Re: Women are not safe in India...statistics

I hope you all are writing this because of your concern for rape victims-and not for the "feel good" factor.

Rape is unacceptable in most cultures, including Hinuism & Muslims-the question arises how to ensure the victim get justice (In Pakistan & India, this is where we lack).

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^^

It is the same factor you have when talking dirty about Pakistan...

That's why...Look at yourself before pointing fingers...

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Like brothers we fight, like brothers we love???? Each trying to put one down-when in reality we are so alike???

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^^

Well, you guys just make it so easy for Pakis...:D

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You will become our brother inshallah when you will convert whether you live in any part of the wold you wil be our brother in islam.

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It might look an irrelevant question, but:

Can someone inform me of a place on Earth, where women are safe?

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We do admit that Pakistan is not free of this crime. We admit we are not perfect.

BUT

The thread is about Idnia and HIGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH ratio of rape and gang rape in India which is influencing Pakistan too

So please don’t mix Pakistan with India. It not necessary for Pakistan to have EXACTLY the same rape rate as that of India. Don’t project the same image of Pakistan as that of India…:rolleyes:

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OH certainly...it will be criminal for any Indian to say that Pakistan as the same image as that of India!!!! (OK lahore for your easy comprehension - I was being sarcastic)

and Syedpk - u r right we can be brothers only if we all convert... which is never gonna happen...Do you have the same criteria for being friends as well? Probably you may, so what about being plain civil to each other? Does that also need conversion??

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Shocking.

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Sad & disgusting as well.

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I don’t mind you being sarcastic. Three incidences of gang rape in Pkaistan in he last 3 years have been reported in media and the media has taken the full opportunity to “defame” Pakistan…

Why doesn’t media hue and cry for what happenes in India?/???

Re: Women are not safe in India...statistics

I guess as someone else mentioned, these are evils that plague societies across continents and religions. But it gets less highlighted if at least the justice system is seen to be trying to do something (some of the rapists do get arrested and convicted - though the proportion of the same is still bad for India). Perhaps its that aspect which got Pakistan cases all the negative publicity. Otherwise, India is no great place either - I have no pride on that aspect and I hope India, Pakistan and all other places also get better.
What to do Lahore, perceptions rule the world - maybe its also coz of the perception about state of women in Pakistan. India has relatively more examples of women doing well across fields and so that seems to give it some hope..