The Citizen (Gauteng)

Indian women in danger – survey

‘SHAME’: OPPOSITION LEADER GANDHI SLAMS PM

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India’s opposition leader, Rahul Gandhi, launched an attack on Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday after a Thomson Reuters Foundation poll found the country was seen as the most dangerous for women in the world, calling it a “shame”.

India topped the poll of experts in women’s issues due to the high risk of sexual violence and slave labour, while war-torn Afghanista­n and Syria ranked second and third, followed by Somalia and Saudi Arabia.

“While our PM tiptoes around his garden making yoga videos, India leads Afghanista­n, Syria and Saudi Arabia in rape and violence against women!” Gandhi tweeted, referring to a video that Modi posted in May, accepting a fitness challenge.

“What a shame for our country!” said the Congress party chief.

The survey – which repeated a similar poll in 2011 in which India was ranked fourth – sparked a storm of criticism in India, with social media users, celebritie­s and campaigner­s echoing Gandhi and slamming the right-wing government.

Bollywood director Alankrita Shrivastav­a, whose last film Lipstick Under my Burkha was lauded for its examinatio­n of women and sexuality, posted the poll findings on Twitter.

“The history of our society is entrenched in patriarchy and misogyny,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, urging the country to think again about its treatment of women.

“We discrimina­te against women, there is female foeticide, there are unequal laws to property inheritanc­e, no pay parity ... these are deep-rooted issues.”

Indian actor Jaaved Jaaferi wrote on Twitter: “And the winner is ... India the most dangerous country to be a woman, survey shows”.

Experts said India moving to the top of the poll showed not enough was being done to tackle the dangers faced by women more than five years after the rape and murder of a student on a bus in Delhi made violence against women a national priority.

“Human life cannot become a political debate. The government needs to be more involved in educating people,” said Wesley Menezes, an independen­t lawyer who fights human traffickin­g and domestic violence cases.

“I deal with so many cases of domestic violence, where a man feels entitled to control, which needs to change.”

The survey asked respondent­s which five of the 193 United Nations member states they thought were most dangerous for women and which country was worst in terms of healthcare, economic resources, cultural or traditiona­l practices, sexual violence and harassment, nonsexual violence and human traffickin­g. – Reuters

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