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14th September 2013, 03:21 PM
#11
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Originally Posted by
virarajendra
"FEMME FATAL - Is India a Country that doesnot respect it's women ?" - An Article by Manjul Misra, in "The New SUNDAY EXPRESS Magazine" (India) 8th April 2012
An 'enlightening article' with some statistics given which are food for thought.
2,13,585 was the number of crimes against women in India in 2010, as per National Crime Records Bureau
585 Crimes against women every day is what the NCRB figure translates into -----
-------- 45% of crimes against women are domestic violence cases,
-------- 28% is the conviction rate in rape cases,
-------- 33% is for dowry harassment cases, and
-------- 19% for domestic violence
-------- 2005 the year in which the government enacted a law to deal with domestic violence.
Really food for thought.
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14th September 2013 03:21 PM
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30th December 2013, 09:04 PM
#12
Senior Member
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1st March 2014, 12:08 AM
#13
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8th March 2014, 05:34 PM
#14
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It's INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY - today. This Thread is brought forward on this occasion to enlighten the grave situation of Women in Tamil Nadu & India, and the importance of finding quick remedial solutions to same.
Last edited by virarajendra; 8th March 2014 at 05:53 PM.
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5th June 2014, 10:33 PM
#15
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20th August 2014, 02:14 PM
#16
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8th September 2014, 10:24 PM
#17
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It isn't just parents who kill their daughters at birth that are responsible. Even parents who have raised daughters, educated them well, given them the very best they can still expect their daughters to be "tolerant" of injustice post marriage or from relatives.
At a recent wedding, the groom's mother's haughtily asked some young kids to move away from the dining room and when the kids argued back she said "she is the "grooms mother"" as if implying some kind of superiority. And the issue was hushed up with apologies from the kids parents. This is alien to me, and most of us, aren't we all the types that try to impress our partner's parents (immaterial of whether it is the girls parents or boys?, but finally when the occasion of marriage happens, why is there a superiority about the grooms side?
Without putting the marriage at stake, how does one point out and get the elders in our family to speak up against such mundane trivial things?
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17th October 2014, 06:39 AM
#18
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29th October 2014, 07:51 AM
#19
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17th December 2014, 08:44 PM
#20
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