This lady decided to stay in a Muslim ghetto well known for drugs and prostitution, for just $10 per night. She was obviously inviting trouble. Who the hell expects good accommodation for $10 even in India, especially Delhi? Any middle class idiot in India can tell you that. Having such simple common sense is probably why he and his family made it to the middle class. She on the other hand won't last a week in India.
Ghettos don't have pubs and budget hotels, cafes and restaurants, cheap hotels and massage centers...
Blaming Muslims for all the ills related to the women-centric crime is the easiest thing to do...
Blame it on skewed gender ratio, flesh trade, P*rnography widely practiced in India, prostitution legalized there, ranks one or two in the world...many other social and moral degradation and degeneration as well in India...
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...rder-girl-muslim-india-protests-a8307346.html
DB Gupta Road in Paharganj, a morning view
During the
Partition of India in 1947 it again saw extensive rioting,
[20]thereafter the area saw a vast influx of
Hindu refugees from
Pakistan, when several shops and small establishments were allotted to them, since then the area has seen vast development, and seen it the burgeoning marketplace that it is today.
With the arrival of the
Hippie movement in the 70s at India's shores, the area became a regular part of the
Hippie trail, for
hippies,
backpackers, and college students looking for budget accommodations near
Connaught Place, New Delhi and
New Delhi Railway Station. Gradually the hotels and guest houses spread till neighbouring Ram Nagar and area along Deshbandhu Gupta Road.
[10] This legacy which continues even today, with its streams of budget hotels, cafes and restaurants, specialising in
global cuisines, and hordes of
cybercafes.
[21] Apart from that Paharganj also has a
Chabad House as it is frequented by large number of Jewish and Israeli tourists, and bakeries like 'German Bakery', named 'Ajay Cafe' 19 years ago.
[22]
Over the years, Paharganj has become the biggest hotel hub for low-budget foreign tourists in Delhi,
[23] though with rising congestion, proliferation of illegal bars and illegal activities like, drug peddling,
[24] Paharganj has also become a hotspot for crime, and a criminal hideout.
[25] The area has shelters and homes, run by
Salaam Baalak Trust, an NGO, for
street and working children, established in 1988. The trust has run the
Salaam Baalak City Walk - New Delhi,