Defensa de JOH insiste que testimonio de analista de la DEA es falso y solici...
mayankmitruka007
1. Walk To Equality
Ensuringsafety & empowermentof women
Team Details:
Mayank Mitruka (co-ordinator)
MEMBERS:- Sunidhi Setia,Rishabh Kedia,Nikita Setia,Riya Chugh
7. Difficulty Level: 3
More toilets please In Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand and Bihar, lack of toilets in
homes exposes women to humiliation and sexual violence. Public sanitation
and government support for building toilets would go a long way in
addressing this problem.
Difficulty Level: 4
24x7 Cities Imagine what would happen if shopping malls, cinema
halls and restaurants stayed open through the night instead of
shuttering down by midnight. The streets would be lit and alive all
night and would truly never be empty. Safer streets, right?
Difficulty Level: 5
More cops, smarter cops Hire more cops. Hire more women in
the police force. Also, ensure they are ever vigilant, that they are
tech-equipped to communicate better with each other even
about a hint of lawlessness as well as to track and capture
criminals.
8. Difficulty Level: 6
Women traffic cops All states should have a women-only traffic
police department. The men from this department should be
transferred to handle regular law and order responsibilities. With
women cops on the roads, men will eventually come to terms with
female authority and women should feel safer.
Difficulty Level: 7
Just frown The next time you hear somebody make a sexist
joke, frown. Frown hard at the person who says it and his
friends who are laughing with him. Frown when somebody
uses a cuss word that begins with "mother" or "sister".
Frown when somebody refers to women disparagingly in
public or private.
Difficulty Level: 8
What Men Should Do Let's admit it: most men Indian men,
especially are sexists. And rape, or any sexual assault, is a
symptom of this malaise. This attitude has to be purged.
And re-learning has to start individually. Change the
patriarchal mindset. Start doing what you disparage as
"womanly" chores. Small steps, but start NOW.
9. Difficulty Level: 9
Tougher laws In India, rape has been defined so narrowly that it
excludes forced oral sex, or sodomy, or penetration by foreign
objects. The government will have to include such crimes under
the definition of rape. And there should be harsher punishment
for rapists.
Difficulty Level: 10
Difficulty Level on a scale of 1 to 1Sex Offender Registry
Create a national database of those who are convicted of
sexual offence. Their names, photographs, addresses, crimes
and the court's perception of risk levels have to be
registered. And, more importantly, the public should be able
to access the registry.