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No Respect For Women in India, Says Sania Mirza

Then who stops her moving her base completely to Pakistan? This picture shows how much freedom she enjoys in India .

Sania in India
Sania-India1.jpg



In Pakistan

Sania-Pak.jpg
Sania-Pak.jpg
 
I see many make fun of you here.
But dont you know Azim Premji's popular quote.
If people are not laughing at you your goals are too small :enjoy:

thanks for your support... i didn't know that quote... and quite true it is... :-)

those who make fun of me here, how easily they avoid accepting that there is injustice, how easily they avoid talking of action... but any talk by someone of creating change, they start making fun of the proposer because... (a). they know they are scared of potential jail or death, but to fake that they are not scared they write nonsense, (b). they are brave only when their ideology is in majority. :)
 
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Badminton isnt any important game. From which one will get more respect.
Then cricket is not important at all. Only 8-10 countries play it.....Badminton is as important as Tennis in India.....
 
Then cricket is not important at all. Only 8-10 countries play it.....Badminton is as important as Tennis in India.....

You are right about cricket but Tennis is prestigious than Badminton. Only in India cricket and badminton gets more respect than it deserves.
 
You are right about cricket but Tennis is prestigious than Badminton. Only in India cricket and badminton gets more respect than it deserves.

That's what I am saying .....Badminton is very respectful sport in India but Sania gets more respect than Badminton players in India
 
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Actress and former VJ Shenaz Treasurywala has written an open letter addressed to the men she considers "most powerful and influential" in the country - Prime Minister Narendra Modi, actors Amitabh Bachchan, Shah Rukh, Salman and Aamir Khan, cricket legend Sachin Tendulkar and industrialist Anil Ambani - asking them to help fight rape and sexual harassment.

The letter - published on the site indicine.com days after a 25-year-old woman was raped in an Uber cab in Delhi - has quickly gone viral.

Shenaz, familiar as a former VJ to those who watched MTV's Most Wanted in the late '90s, writes about being sexually harassed herself, first as a 13-year-old in a marketplace, then while taking public transport to college and later as an aspiring model and actress. She also writes of friends and family having survived sexual assault.

She has cited the Delhi cab rape in specific and calls for all rapists to be given the death penalty - "NO BAIL. Just Death."

The cab rape has shocked and shamed a country still reeling from the fatal brutalization of a medical student on a Delhi bus and the gang-rape of a journalist in an abandoned Mumbai mill in the last year. Prominent voices across India have been raised in protest, many of them from the film fraternity that Shenaz belongs to.

Shenaz has appeared in a handful of high-profile movies such as Hum Tum and Delhi Belly. She has a film out tomorrow - Main Aur Mr Riight, co-starring TV actor Barun Sobti.

We reproduce some excerpts from her open letter, available in full on indicine.com, below:

"Dear Narendra Modi, Amitabh Bachchan, Sachin Tendulkar, Shahrukh Khan, Salman Khan, Aamir Khan and Anil Ambani, I am writing to YOU specifically because you are the most powerful and influential MEN in our country. I am writing to you as a woman who grew up in a middle class family in Mumbai. I am writing to YOU for HELP!

"My parents may not like me saying this. I apologize to them if they are reading but this is NOT MY SHAME. It's THIER SHAME.My first experience with the opposite sex, was when I was just 13 and groped by a man (never saw his face but will never forget his hand) while walking in the vegetable market with my mom. She had just given me the worst haircut and as an angry teenager I was upset at her and was lagging behind as she walked ahead. I still remember what I was wearing. It was her dress, mustard with flowers and little bow in the front. How I hate that dress! As if, it was the dress's fault. I was shocked at first. Speechless. He disappeared. I just stood there. Tears started pouring out of my innocent eyes. I told my mom who went mad screaming in the market but who knew where that man disappeared to. I still remember the dirty feeling I had and the number of times I showered in my grand-mom's bathroom after. That feeling never went away."

"When I was 15, I started going by train and bus to St. Xaviers' College. I was groped and touched and from all angles and this was just how I grew up. Not Just Me but MOST INDIAN WOMEN who don't have the luxury of cars and drivers. As a teenager I would dream of and still sometimes dream that I had a machine gun and could kill all the men who tried to grope me. A very disturbing dream for a kid, don't you think?"


"I developed ways to defend myself, I always carried a bag in front of me, my fist was always clenched, I always turned around every 20 seconds to check who was behind me and a few times I slapped men who touched me, I got slapped back many times too. Sometimes saved by the public, MOST TIMES NOT. My mom begged me not to pick fights with men who touched me, she was afraid of acid being thrown at me or that somebody someday would hurt me badly. She is STILL AFRAID and today she told me not to take an UBER to my meeting tomorrow. Hell ya. BAN UBER! Make everyone take responsibility for this."

"One of my friends in college was RAPED on the train on her way home in the ladies compartment. She was sick and was going home in the 11:15 break. There was nobody in the first class compartment going back to Bandra at that time, it was a superfast meaning it didn't stop at most stations. He raped her and then jumped off after using her scrunchy (hair tie) to wipe himself. She was the only one on the train and had to limp her way back to her home in Bandra, bleeding profusely. She was just 16. This she felt was her shame so she did not say anything to anyone."

"What good are all your speeches in the US or Japan or AUSTRALIA- NAMO, if no woman can walk freely in the streets even in broad daylight by herself in the CAPITAL OF OUR COUNTRY. Isn't this a SHAME? SHAME ON YOU SIR."

"I'm ready to do anything. I'm not a big enough celeb but you Sachin Tendulkar, Amitabh Bachchan, Salman Khan, Sharukh Khan, Aamir Khan, Anil Ambani SIRS- need to speak up as MEN ( you are the men with the power)

SAVE US!

Please demand the Death Sentence for the Rapists.

NO BAIL. Just Death.

Superstars I beg you, please take a stand. Use your Superstardom and Power and MONEY and save the women of our country. SAVE US!

I urge you to protest or go on a fast or do something DRASTIC so people take notice, the government wakes up and CHANGES the LAW so these men are terrified to touch us.

Death to rapists. No bail. Just death.

Imagine Amitabh Bachchan Sir, Aamir Khan, Salmaan Khan, Sachin Tendulkar, Anil Ambani- if you went on a fast or walked to the Rashrtrapati In Delhi. If you, took this stand and made this YOUR NO 1 issue, how much change there would be?!"



Shenaz Treasurywalas Open Letter to PM Modi, Amitabh Bachchan and Khans Goes Viral - NDTV Movies
 
"What good are all your speeches in the US or Japan or AUSTRALIA- NAMO, if no woman can walk freely in the streets even in broad daylight by herself in the CAPITAL OF OUR COUNTRY. Isn't this a SHAME? SHAME ON YOU SIR."

the speeches of narendra modi are meant for the ears of the fools and the callous... his speeches ignore the 69 dead ( by hunger ) in the tea estates of darjeeling... his speeches don't question the reality of india where people are "honor killed" by their parents... his speeches don't condemn the freedom given to violators of human rights like pramod mutalik... his speeches are not meant to provoke deep thought, because his speeches are respected only by the lowest common denominator...

@fsayed ... i have found a new title for narendra modi... "goonga gudda".
 
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May be she was taking drugs with his "ever high " bookie husband when she made this statement.

Seriously?? Tell me which part in that letter you think not happening to a common woman here in India?
 
Seriously?? Tell me which part in that letter you think not happening to a common woman here in India?

When I was in the USA, I watched as a guy in a train taunted a woman calling her a "kitten". Nobody came to her aid. People just shook their heads disapprovingly. When I was in France, a guy on the street followed a woman down the block and pestered her. I couldn't understand what he was telling her or what her replies were but she was clearly protesting against his actions. This was a busy street by the way. In these countries the government openly campaigns against the harassment of women and there are tons of legislation to protect women and children. It is therefore necessary for Indians to change their mindsets in order to resolve these issues. That must be done within the home and not only at schools or government level
 
Seriously?? Tell me which part in that letter you think not happening to a common woman here in India?

That is so much rubbish. Women are more respected in India than anywhere else in the world. That is not to say there are not cases of harassment or violence against them, but it is the lowest in India than anywhere else.
 
When I was in the USA, I watched as a guy in a train taunted a woman calling her a "kitten". Nobody came to her aid. People just shook their heads disapprovingly. When I was in France, a guy on the street followed a woman down the block and pestered her. I couldn't understand what he was telling her or what her replies were but she was clearly protesting against his actions. This was a busy street by the way. In these countries the government openly campaigns against the harassment of women and there are tons of legislation to protect women and children. It is therefore necessary for Indians to change their mindsets in order to resolve these issues. That must be done within the home and not only at schools or government level


Sad part about Indian woman is, if they are groped, raped or harassed, even their parents wont support her. They will ask her to keep quiet because they fear their Izzat will be gone if people know about it.
 
Sad part about Indian woman is, if they are groped, raped or harassed, even their parents wont support her. They will ask her to keep quiet because they fear their Izzat will be gone if people know about it.

Hence my earlier suggestion that Indian communities need to be reconditioned in their thinking
 
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