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Tourist harrassment. Whats wrong with India ?

Tourist alleges molestation at Goa beach
(IANS)

17 March 2008



PANAJI — Even while the Goa government is trying to fend off allegations of a cover-up in the murder of British teenager Scarlette Keeling, a German tourist yesterday alleged that she was molested by an unidentified man at Cavelossim beach here.

Twenty-seven-year old German national Marlene Martha Gabriel complained to the police that an unidentified person molested her at Cavelossim beach on Saturday night. According to police inspector Edwin Colaco, Gabriel, in her statement, said that a man pulled her swimwear while she was bathing in the sea
 
Rape Cases Rattle India's Tourism Industry
Foreign women visitors put on the alert

Archana Roy (archana) Email Article Print Article

Published 2008-02-10 04:14 (KST)



Things could not be worse for the Indian tourism industry. Recent incidents of rape and sexual molestation or harassment of visiting foreign women have had an impact on the tourist inflow.

Seven cases were reported in the first month of the year.

A Swedish teenage was molested at a New Year's Eve party at Kochi in Kerala state, while a number of tourists were also heckled. Three foreign women reported sexual harassment in Goa. Also in Goa, two British women claimed to have been sexually assaulted by the owner of a resort.

The Indian government called the incidents isolated, but a recent BBC report on one of the British women raped in Goa stated, "She is just one victim among thousands. The numbers are horrifying. On average across India there are 53 rapes a day, and recently released government statistics suggest that it is the fastest growing crime in the country."

While the issue may be affecting industry revenues, it has also brought out the fact that Indian policing has virtually collapsed. Women tourists are no longer safe in the country.

The impact of the incidents abroad has been bad. The American and British governments have warned women not to go to India for their summer break.

Crime statistics for 2006, released by the Home Ministry's National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), show that 18 women are victims of crime every hour. The number of rapes a day has increased nearly 700 per cent since 1971, when such cases were first recorded by the NCRB. The number has grown from 7 to 53 rape cases per day.

Several sexual attacks have been reported in Rajasthan, the jewel of Indian tourism. It is one destination where culture speaks for itself and where the spirit of India is evident in its people, ambience and buildings.

With a record arrival in 2005-06 of more than 1.2 million foreign tourists and 17 million domestic tourists, Rajasthan has been one of the most popular destinations for tourists, especially those from France, Britain, Germany, the US, Italy, Australia, Canada, Switzerland, Japan and Bangladesh.

Today Rajasthan is the tourist-rape capital of India. Just before Christmas, an American national was molested in Pushkar and a British journalist was raped in Udaipur. Earlier, a French woman was raped, also in Pushkar. In 2005 in Rajasthan, a German tourist was raped by an auto-rickshaw driver and his accomplice in Jodhpur.

"Rajasthan has always been considered a very peaceful state, but the recent rape and molestation cases have been affecting its image," a tourism department official admitted recently.

There have been other incidents of rape elsewhere in India. Tourism department officials are "concerned," but things may have gotten out of hand. A tourism department official was recently quoted saying, "The reports could deter potential visitors to the country. We have asked states to report to us what happened in these incidents."

Travel guidebooks have started advising women traveling to India to wear "loose, long clothes" to avoid unwelcome attention.

India attracts around 5 million tourists every year. As a face-saving exercise the tourism industry plans to create complaint centers and dedicated phone numbers for tourist security in all the major tourist destinations. The tourism ministry has decided to hire retired defense personnel for security and to deploy police in the top 10 destinations frequented by foreign travelers. But whether these actions will help remains to be seen.
 
Sexual assaults on foreigners threaten Indian tourismJeremy

Page of The Times, in Delhi

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle3191537.ece

India's reputation as a safe and easygoing tourist destination has been dented by a string of alleged rapes and sexual assaults on foreigners in the past week, including at least four of them British women.

The Indian Government has called tourism officials from its 28 states to a meeting in Delhi next week to review security measures for the five million foreigners expected to visit this year.

The meeting was announced as police confirmed today that medical tests had shown that a 32-year-old British woman was raped on Friday night in Goa, one of India's most popular tourist sites.

The woman told Goan police that her assailant offered her a lift home on his motorcycle after she had attended a concert in the city of Mapusa in north Goa.

“I do not know where exactly he took me. I struggled and screamed but...no one heard me,” she told an Indian television station.

Two more British women have told Goan police that they were sexually assaulted by the owner of a resort in the former Portuguese enclave - although a case has yet to be registered against him.

Also last week, a Russian woman reported being attacked by a beach café owner in south Goa and a Finnish woman alleged that she was threatened with rape by two local men at another seafront eatery.

The reported assaults highlight the dangers of travelling alone as a woman in India, where Westerners are widely regarded as promiscuous, and sexual harrassment in public places is routine. The alleged attacks are particularly damaging to Goa, which has earned a reputation as one of India's most tolerant and cosmopolitan tourist sites since becoming popular with Western hippies in the 1960s.

The lastest government statistics show that there were 19,348 rape cases reported in India in 2006, compared with 15,847 in 2005 — an increase of 22 per cent.

Goan authorities have vowed to crack Friday's rape case within two days, to deploy extra police to improve security for tourists, and to adopt “zero tolerance” towards sexual assault.

“Certainly I would say that it's bad, but to say that it is setting a trend - no,” said Kishen Kumar, Goa's Inspector General of Police. “By and large, Goa is a very peaceful place. By and large tourists feel very safe.”

Local officials say that the problem is caused partly by the rapid increase in the number of foreigners visiting Goa, whose beaches attracted 2.2 million tourists last year. The problem is made worse by foreigners' disregard for local mores and by Goa's reputation for hedonistic beach parties, fuelled by drugs and alcohol.

Other popular tourist area in India have registered similar cases in the past year. A British freelance journalist reported that she was raped by the owner of a guesthouse in Udaipur, home of the Lake Palace, in Rajasthan, two weeks ago.

An American woman alleged that she was molested at a temple in Pushkar, also in Rajasthan, last week. Two teenage girls from Canada reported being sexually assaulted by a security guard at a hotel in the southwestern state of Kerala last week.

In September, two Japanese women were allegedly gang-raped in Agra, site of the Taj Mahal, while in June, a South Korean tourist said she had been raped near Manali, a hill station in Himachal Pradesh.

The Government is so concerned that the assaults could undermine its Incredible India! advertising campaign that it has summoned state tourism ministers to a meeting in Delhi on January 24.

S. Banerjee, the Tourism Secretary, has reminded all the participants of a commitment last year to deploy tourist police at all important sites. Only ten states have complied so far.
 
Is Agra safe for foreign tourists?
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By Brij Khandelwal. Uttar Pradesh, India, 12:01 PM IST

India eNews - Is Agra safe for foreign tourists?

On an average, 20,000 tourists visit the Taj Mahal every day. But comments written in the Visitors' Book at the world famous monument reveal how shocked and concerned foreigners are about crime in this city. Many say they will never return while others say it was a mistake to have come.

Foreign visitors have been easy targets of unscrupulous cheats and touts masquerading as guides and friendly neighbourhood faces in Agra. They reported at least a dozen cases of rape, harassment, theft and cheating last year.

The figures tell a grim story of how government agencies have been callously indifferent to the sordid tales of harassment, molestation, snatching and plain cheating that have brought a bad name to the city of the Taj which every tourist entering India wants to see.

After a hue and cry following the gangrape of two Japanese tourists in September 2007, a new Tourist Thana - a special police station for tourists - was opened. But the situation has not improved. In the last quarter of 2007, at least half a dozen complaints were lodged by foreign tourists.


The latest is the shocking case of a Russian woman tourist being shot dead in the Kamayani Express train on the Agra-Jhansi stretch on Dec 28 while it was running. Unidentified desperadoes armed with guns entered the AC compartment and started looting and bashing up passengers between Dabora and Panhai. When the Russian couple protested, the woman was shot point blank and the husband beaten up.

One of the most shocking was the gangrape of the two Japanese girls Sep 19. The girls were so shocked that they did not even lodge a complaint in Agra. The complaint was registered in New Delhi with assistance from officials of the Japanese embassy. Agra Police later registered a case. Three people are now in jail.

After that case, there has been a decrease in the number of tourists from Japan, according to half a dozen Japanese language knowing guides at the Taj Mahal.

A survey by Shyam Vir Singh, a researcher, shows that most victims in 2007 were those who had problems with their English. 'The Japanese, the Koreans and even some south Indians find it hard to communicate in Hindi or in English and are often misunderstood. Being extra polite could mean acceptance of an offer to drink or spend time together,' Singh explains.

In another case, acid was thrown on a Russian girl when she was returning with her friend after dinner at a hotel on Mall Road Nov 28.

Every few days a foreign or domestic tourist is cheated or harassed by touts called 'lapkas' in local parlance.

2007 started with a theft case in hotel Taj View. The victim was a foreigner called Jolandra from West Europe. Another tourist, Anwar Mohammed, was a victim of theft and lost dollars, pounds and a credit card.

Malaysia's Sheng became a victim of harassment and attempted molestation Feb 5. Tourists from the Philippines Feb 17 last year lodged a complaint of theft of camera and some currency inside the Taj Mahal premises.

In March the same year two American female tourists lodged a complaint of harassment and taunts, again inside the Taj premises.

The Government Railway Police (GRP) station at Agra Cantonment is still investigating at least a dozen cases involving foreign tourists on trains coming to Agra or at the railway station.

The complaints of domestic tourists are not taken seriously either. In most cases, the harried visitor files a complaint and leaves. Since there is no follow up, there is no result.

However, the romance of the Taj Mahal lives on and despite all the problems and negatives, the number of tourists to Agra has continued to swell. Around 3.2 million tourists turned up to see the Taj in 2007 against two million in 2006 and 1.9 million in 2005.
 
Tourists not safe in incredible India
Dec 23, 2007
(eTN) -

http://www.eturbonews.com/483/touris...credible-india

Rising incidents of crimes against foreign tourists has pushed the Tourism Ministry to send a communication to all states asking them to speed up the process of creating a special tourist police force.

The urgency was highlighted by an incident in Mumbai earlier this week where a Latvian national was raped by a driver who offered her a lift.

The ministry had reminded the states to speed up the matter in June at the chief secretaries meet. Today, only 10 states have implemented the measure — the communication had first been sent last year — while the rest continue to drag their feet.

But even in those states that have deployed special tourist police, it is open to question whether this is merely a token measure or a genuine effort. Incidents have been reported from at least four of the 10 states — Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh and Rajasthan.

In September, two Japanese women were allegedly gangraped in Agra. In June, a South Korean tourist claimed she had been raped near Manali and in Alwar, Rajasthan, a German tourist said she had been raped by Biti Mohanty, the son of a top police official from Orissa.

These incidents dent India’s image as a safe tourist destination — despite the Incredible India campaign abroad — and
several prominent countries, including the US and the UK, have issued warnings in official travel advisories to their citizens who are bound for India. Other states where the step has been implemented are Andhra Pradesh, Goa, Jammu & Kashmir, Karnataka and Kerala.

In Goa, a big attraction for foreign travellers, several cases of rape, molestation and other crimes against tourists have been reported. Officials at the ministry pleaded inability to intervene directly, pointing out that law and order being a state subject, they could only urge the states to take adequate steps to protect the tourists.

"Whenever such incidents occur, we get a report on them from our regional tourist offices. There is also a complaints cell in our ministry where grievances of tourists are recorded and followed up for action. Besides, in our media campaigns we try to create awareness among those engaged in the tourism and travel trade as well as general public on the issue,” said a senior official.

The issue had also drawn the attention of a parliamentary standing committee on transport, tourism and culture, headed by CPM leader Sitaram Yechury.

A report tabled last month said: "The committee notes with concern that incidents of cheating, fleecing criminal acts and harassment of foreign tourists bring a bad name to the country and have an adverse impact on the foreign tourist arrival.

The committee feels that the issue related with safety and security is vital in creating goodwill and the Union Ministry of Tourism cannot wash its hands off stating that policing is a state subject.”

hindustantimes.com
 
Goa seeks murdered British teen’s mother out of India
(AFP)

17 March 2008



PANAJI, India - Authorities in Goa said on Monday they will ask the Indian government not to extend the visa of the mother of a British teenager raped and murdered on a beach in the resort state.

Since the discovery of the body of 15-year-old Scarlett Keeling last month, her mother Fiona MacKeown has accused state officials, police and drug lords of being involved in a cover-up over her death.

“We are writing to the home and external affairs ministry to not issue her a visa again to come to India. Her entry into India should be banned,” Goa Home Minister Ravi Naik told AFP.

Naik was one of the politicians alleged by MacKeown, a 43-year-old mother of nine whose six-month tourist visa is due to expire next month, to be linked to narcotics dealers blamed for the drugging, rape and the murder of Keeling.

Keeling’s bruised and partially naked body was found last month with the police at first saying she had drowned in the Arabian Sea. But a second autopsy demanded by MacKeown prompted police to launch a murder probe.

“We will request the federal government to make sure that she (MacKeown) does not get entry to India again,” Naik added.

Police have so far arrested a local barman Samson D’Souza, 29, and alleged drug dealer Placido Carvalho for Keeling’s murder.
 
By the way how many foreign tourists visit ur country each year???

LOL..

Dont generalise these few incidents..
 
Dont generalise these few incidents..

First step to solve the problem is to identify it, if you want to live in denial then its your choice.
How can you defend Child molesters so bluntly? If your Sister or mother got raped would you dismiss it as an "Isolated" incident? All of the people molested/raped are under age & you find it funny? Well sir, Shame on you.
 
Three Indian Army officers on UN Congo mission accused of rape

LAHORE: Three Indian Army officers deputed to the United Nations peacekeeping force in Congo have been accused of rape, according to a report published in The Indian Express on Tuesday. A lieutenant colonel and two majors of the Indian Army, presently with the North Kivu brigade of the Mission of the UN in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUC), were detained last Wednesday by South African police after a woman resident of Plettenberg Bay in Pretoria charged them with rape. They were away from MONUC headquarters in Kinshasa on a holiday to Pretoria. India has the largest contingent in MONUC with more than 4,300 personnel. The three officers were picked up from a bed-and-breakfast hotel in Mossel Bay on March 12 and kept in police custody for more than a day. Sources said that the incident first came to light during a meeting with a South African delegation on defence cooperation in New Delhi last week. A senior army officer was asked to ascertain the facts and suggest measures to sort out the embarrassment. Later, an officer from the Indian Embassy in Johannesburg was sent to Plettenberg and the three men were released. Citing unidentified sources, the newspaper said Indian Defence Minister AK Antony had asked for a report on the incident on how the officers managed to go to the “unsecured place” while with the UN. daily times monitor


Three Indian Army officers on UN Congo mission accused of rape

LAHORE: Three Indian Army officers deputed to the United Nations peacekeeping force in Congo have been accused of rape, according to a report published in The Indian Express on Tuesday. A lieutenant colonel and two majors of the Indian Army, presently with the North Kivu brigade of the Mission of the UN in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUC), were detained last Wednesday by South African police after a woman resident of Plettenberg Bay in Pretoria charged them with rape. They were away from MONUC headquarters in Kinshasa on a holiday to Pretoria. India has the largest contingent in MONUC with more than 4,300 personnel. The three officers were picked up from a bed-and-breakfast hotel in Mossel Bay on March 12 and kept in police custody for more than a day. Sources said that the incident first came to light during a meeting with a South African delegation on defence cooperation in New Delhi last week. A senior army officer was asked to ascertain the facts and suggest measures to sort out the embarrassment. Later, an officer from the Indian Embassy in Johannesburg was sent to Plettenberg and the three men were released. Citing unidentified sources, the newspaper said Indian Defence Minister AK Antony had asked for a report on the incident on how the officers managed to go to the “unsecured place” while with the UN. daily times monitor

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
by the way i wasn't laughing at women being raped, i was laughing because a few weeks ago i had a quarrel with some people on this forum about this stuff happening everywhere. I mentioned that this is ruining the image of india, so after seeing your posts i wanted remind everyone i was right.
 

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