Home Asia Other
Other

Asia India- Andhra Pradesh bans Women from Pubs after 10pm

E-mail Print PDF

AP bans women's entry into pubs after 10 pm

HYDERABAD, May 4, 2013, DHNS:

Moral policing

 

alt

In an effort to discourage pub owners from attracting too many youngsters with offers like free drinks for women,

Andhra Pradesh, one of the largest consumers of beer and cheap liquor in the country, has decided to ban the

entry of women into clubs, pubs and bars after 10 pm.

The Andhra Pradesh Government has issued notification not to serve drinks to women at pubs, clubs and bars

after 10 pm in the state. The normal closing timing of such liquor outlets here is 11 pm.

The notification, signed by the excise commissioner, adds that outlets are also directed not serve any “free

drinks” to women, and not conduct any special events that extend beyond 10 pm.

The excise department has also threatened to cancel licences of liquor outlets if women are served liquor in the

name of a welcome drink or are given entry into pubs and bars after 10 pm. The notification also specifies that all

those below 21 years of age are also banned from bars and pubs, and outlets hosting events offering “free liquor”

to women may also be blacklisted.

Police officials say these steps have been taken in the light of a spate of incidents outside bars and nightclubs

involving drunken women quarrelling with auto-rickshaw drivers near taxi stands at night.  DGP Dinesh Reddy

says the notification also aims at curbing teenage crime -- attacks on women, stealing and snatching, as well as

rapes, which have been on the rise in Hyderabad and neighbouring district towns.

Last month, women students from a law institute had created a ruckus outside a pub in Jubilee Hills, which

attracted media attention. Later, they also reportedly attacked staff of a news channel for reporting the brawl .

Police have registered cases under relevant sections of the law against the students, as well as some employees

of the liquor outlet who allegedly supported the girls in the attack.

There are nearly 1.2 lakh women employed in the IT sector and about three lakh women in textiles and cottage

industries in and around Hyderabad. And women's organisations have termed the new law “chauvinistic” and

“anti-women.”

 

Asia-Attacks on Women Travellers

E-mail Print PDF
The Rape Threat for Women Travelers in Asia Print E-mail
Written by Casey Hynes   
Thursday, 02 May 2013
 
 
 
 
Women say No
Women say No

A long list of attacks on women in several countries

says be careful

Bali is often thought of as a paradise on earth, but for

one Australian woman, that oasis turned into a dark

hell earlier this week. The woman was attacked and

raped at knifepoint in the villa where she was staying

with family.

This horror is a female traveler's nightmare, and

unfortunately falls into a pattern of sexual violence that

has occurred against female travelers in various parts

of Asia. A high-profile case that occurred in Krabi, Thailand, in July 2012, highlighted the potential

dangers for single female travelers. In that incident, a Dutch woman was raped by a local man and

police made few moves to help her until the situation began to draw international attention.

India in particular has been drawing heat recently, due to a spate of highly-publicized rape cases.

The gang rape and subsequent death of a 23-year-old female student in New Delhi sparked

outrage all over the world. That furor had hardly died down before news broke about a Swiss

tourist who was gang raped in a forest in Madhya Pradesh. A few days later a British woman was

injured fleeing a sex attack in the tourist city of Agra. These horrors highlight something many

former travelers to India complain about - the culture of sexual aggression against women.

One traveler who has spent extensive time in India and Thailand said that she noticed a radical

difference between the time she spent in India with her boyfriend, and that which she spent

traveling with a female friend.

Wishing to remain anonymous, she said: "The very first day I began traveling without my

boyfriend, my breast was blatantly grabbed from a passerby on the sidewalk, who laughed in my

face when I yelled in an attempt to lash out back at him. A security guard at a nearby hotel looked

on and didn't make a move. I definitely noticed an increase in the ‘accidental touching' or groping

that would occur in any overcrowded, public area."

According to the UK's Telegraph, India has seen a 35 percent decline in tourism numbers since the

New Delhi rape. Amid increased public outcry over sexual violence - including two rapes of five-

year-old girls in April, one of whom died in hospital this week - travelers are wary of visiting the

country, which has developed a reputation for groping and aggression.

The Bangkok Post reported that women who may have been planning to venture to India are now

seeing Thailand as a more viable vacation option, but travelers aren't always safe there, either. In

addition to the Dutch tourist who was raped in Krabi, a young Scottish woman was allegedly raped

by a Thai man after she was out drinking one night, while in early January three Thai men were

arrested for the alleged rape of two Russian tourists in Pattaya. An Israeli tourist was also

allegedly raped on her way home from a Full Moon party on Koh Phangan in October 2012.

It is important to note that the danger lies not only with local men but fellow foreigners as well. In

February, a Dutch tourist was allegedly raped by three Danish men in Chiang Mai, one of whom

she had been hanging out with at a bar earlier in the night.

The Thai police's treatment of foreign rape victims is notoriously poor. Convictions are hard to

come by and many victims complain that their allegations are often met with scepticism and the

inference that the assault was somehow their fault.

It's not coincidence that many of these incidents occur after late nights of drinking and partying,

but to use that as an excuse for the rapists' behavior, as many often do, is cruel and misses the

point entirely. The underlying issue is that rape occurs so frequently on a global scale, and that

these rapists seemingly take no issue with forcing a woman to have sex against her will, or take

advantage when she is not in a position to give her consent.

Heather Thompson, a 27-year-old teacher who has lived in Chiang Mai for two years and has

visited Bali, said she feels safe in both places but regularly exercises the same caution she would at

home in London. She acknowledged the rapes that had occurred in both places, but pointed out

that these are the same dangers that exist in major cities.

"Having grown up in London, near areas where rapes, muggings and murders had taken place,

Chiang Mai is a comparatively much safer environment," she said. "However, no place is free of

crime. Locals warned me when I arrived of places and people to steer clear of, and I still use my

streetwise attitude I have always used in London and take precautions like avoiding walking down

dark [alleys] on my own, never leaving my drinks unattended and being wary of strangers."

Ruby Brayman, a 24-year-old traveler who has been backpacking through Southeast Asia, said

she takes a measured approach to deciding where to visit and what to do once she is there.

Brayman will travel to Bali this month, and said this week's rape incident will not change her plans.

"The recent rape does not make me hesitant about going to Bali, but it does remind me that I am

vulnerable as a female traveling solo and I need to take some extra precautions," she said.

The debate about solo female travelers became particularly heated after an American woman was

found dead in Turkey. Some commenters called women traveling alone "very reckless" and

criticized women who chose to visit countries that are perceived as dangerous without a

companion.

This inspired independent female travelers to band together to support safe but adventurous solo

travel. For the past several months, a number of bloggers have participated in a weekly  

#WeGoSolo Twitter chat, in which anyone can ask questions or advice about safe travel as a

woman.

The conversation is an important one, as it speaks to the worldwide issue of violence against

women, and shows strength and solidarity are more likely to change the tide of this than opting to

stay close to one's home country out of fear.

"Terrible things, such as this rape in Bali, happen all over the world," Brayman said. "As horrifying

as that is, I don't want to be too afraid to explore it."

(Casey Hynes is a freelance journalist based in Asia. She has lived in South Korea, China and

Thailand and travels throughout the region. She blogs for Asian Correspondent, where this

originally appeared.)

 

Asia India- A Rotten State of Affairs

E-mail Print PDF

Police offered bribe, advised me to thank god: Rape victim's father

New Delhi, April 19, 2013 (IANS)

The father of the five-year-old girl who was held captive and raped by her neighbour said Friday that the police had

offered him Rs.2,000 to keep quiet, and advised him to "thank god that his daughter was alive".

"We went to the police to register an FIR (First Information Report) but they refused. They never tried to find her,

and instead drove us away," the father of the victim told reporters here outside the Swami Dayananda Hospital in

east Delhi's Shahdara, where the girl is battling for life.

The father said that when the family finally found the girl Wednesday, the police told the family to not highlight the

issue, and offered them Rs.2000 to keep mum.

"The police told us that we should not highlight the issue in the media and gave us Rs.2,000 as kharcha-pani (for

expenses and refreshment)," said the father, adding that the police further told them to "thank god that his

daughter was alive".

"The police told us to take our daughter home and pray for her recovery," said one of the girl's relatives.

The girl was abducted April 15 and kept hostage for two days without food and water in a flat owned by the

attacker, said to be in his 30s. He lived on the ground floor of the building in east Delhi's Gandhi Nagar, in which

the victim's family also stayed, police said.

The girl was raped repeatedly, and rescued when members of her family heard her screams Wednesday evening,

police said.

A doctor treating the child said her condition is "serious" and the "next 24-48 hours are critical".

 

Asia Burma- Political Prisoners must be freed

E-mail Print PDF

Political Prisoner Jailed Since 1999 Must Be Freed!

04 Apr 2013

 

Burma Campaign UK today urged Hugo Swire MP, British Foreign Office Minister with responsibility for Burma, to

push the military-backed government in Burma to secure the unconditional release of Aung Naing and to repeal

the repressive laws which put political prisoners in jail.

As part of the No Political Prisoner Left Behind campaign, Burma Campaign UK is highlighting a case of a political

prisoner every month to draw attention to hundreds of political prisoners still in jail. The political prisoner for this

month is Aung Naing.

Aung Naing is an activist from Burma, and he is a son of U Kyaw Min, who is a former political prisoner.  In 1999,

Aung Naing was arrested for his involvement in a student protest the previous year. He was falsely accused of

possessing drugs and charged under the Narcotics Act. He was sentenced to 26 years in prison with hard labour

in Insein Prison.

In 2005, his family members, including his father, were arrested and Aung Naing was put on trial again along with

his family. They all were charged with two counts including under Section 18 of the 1982 Citizenship Law with the

accusation of obtaining Burmese citizenship and concealing their Rohingya origins. The entire family is from the

Rohingya ethnic minority group.

The Citizenship Law introduced by General Ne Win in 1982 is not compatible with the Universal Declaration of

Human Rights or with Burma’s legal obligations under international treaties. It arbitrarily stripped many people in

Burma of the right to citizenship.

According to the verdict from the 2005 trial, 17 more years were added to Aung Naing’s existing 26- year prison

sentence. However, due to a Presidential amnesty, Aung Naing received a reduction on his prison sentence to 17

years. His family were released in 2012 but he still remains in jail. According to his family members, he has been

suffering from heart problems and he urgently needs an eye operation.

“Although high profile political prisoners have been released, all the repressive laws which put them in prison in

the first place still remain in place,” said Wai Hnin, Campaigns Officer at Burma Campaign UK. “Unless these

repressive laws are repealed, people in Burma will still be subject to arbitrary arrest, torture and harassment by the

military-backed government.”

Action can be taken online here: http://www.burmacampaign.org.uk/index.php/campaigns/actions/free-political-prisoners/no-political-prisoner-left-behind

Related news


 

Asia North Korea- Action Stations ?

E-mail Print PDF

North Korea 'cannot protect diplomats'

MOSCOW - North Korea on Friday warned foreign embassies in Pyongyang that it was unable to guarantee their safety after April 10 and they should consider evacuating their missions amid soaring nuclear tensions.

alt

South Korean army reservists raise their hands as they swear to stay resolved against North Korea at a Foundation Day ceremony in Seoul on Friday. South Korean officials say war with the North is "unlikely" but has raised the defence alert level. (AP Photo)

European countries with embassies in Pyongyang, such as Britain and Russia, reported receiving a warning advisory, as an increasingly bellicose North Korea moved two mid-range missiles to its east coast.

"Their communication said that from April 10, the North Korean government would be unable to guarantee the safety of embassies and international organisations in the country in the event of conflict," a spokeswoman for Britain's Foreign Office said.

alt

North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un holds up a pistol as he supervises pistol and automatic file firing drills at an army battalion, in this screen grab from a video supplied by North Korea's official news agency. (Via Reuters)

"Our understanding is that the North Koreans were asking whether embassies are intending to leave, rather than advising them to leave," she said.

Thailand has no permanent diplomats stationed in Pyongyang, where about a dozen Thais are employed. The Thai embassy in Beijing covers North Korea as well.

"The current question was not whether, but when a war would break out on the peninsula," because of the "increasing threat from the United States", China's state news agency, Xinhua, on Friday quoted the North's Foreign Ministry as saying.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Moscow, which has relatively close ties with Pyongyang, was consulting with China over the warning, as well as the United States and other members of the stalled six-party talks on North Korea.

There were "many factors" that needed clarification, Lavrov said.

Bulgaria's foreign ministry said the chief of all EU missions in Pyongyang had agreed to meet Saturday to discuss a common position.

North Korea, incensed by UN sanctions and South Korea-US military drills, has issued a series of apocalyptic threats of nuclear war in recent weeks, and there has been growing international concern that the situation might spiral out of control.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon described the daily threats from Pyongyang as "really alarming and troubling" and Germany summoned the North Korean ambassador to convey Berlin's "serious concern".

Philippine Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said he was flying to Seoul on Saturday and would "fully vet" contingency plans for ensuring the safety of 43,000 Filipino workers in South Korea.

The spike in tensions came as Yonhap news agency, citing a top South Korean government official, said North Korea had loaded two mid-range Musudan missiles on mobile launchers and hidden them in underground facilities near its east coast.

"The North is apparently intent on firing the missiles without prior warning," the official said.

A Navy official told Yonhap that two South Korean Aegis destroyers with advance radar systems had been deployed -- one off the east coast and one off the west coast -- to track any missile launch.

The Musudan has never been tested, but is believed to have a range of around 3,000 kilometres (1,860 miles), which could theoretically be pushed to 4,000 with a light payload.

That would cover any target in South Korea and Japan, and possibly even reach US military bases located on the Pacific island of Guam.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said Thursday that the barrage of rhetoric flying out of Pyongyang fitted a "regrettable but familiar" pattern of North Korean behaviour.

"We're taking all the necessary precautions," Carney said.

The Pentagon has said it will send missile-interceptor batteries to protect its bases on Guam, a US territory some 3,380 kilometres (2,100 miles) southeast of North Korea and home to 6,000 American military personnel.

Most experts think the North is not yet capable of mounting a nuclear device on a ballistic missile which could strike US bases or territory.

On Thursday the North Korean army said it had received final approval for military action, possibly involving nuclear weapons, against the threat posed by US B-52 and B-2 stealth bombers participating in joint military drills with South Korea.

There has been speculation that Pyongyang might schedule a missile launch to coincide with the birthday of the North's late founder Kim Il-Sung in mid-April.

"A flight test would make sense," Daniel Pinkston, a North Korea expert at the International Crisis Group, told AFP.

"But I'd be surprised if they used an untested missile. At this stage in the game, they don't want to be firing off something that might disintegrate after 30 seconds."

Tensions have soared on the Korean peninsula since December, when the North test-launched a long-range rocket. In February, it conducted its third nuclear test and drew fresh UN sanctions.

The North also warned this week it would reopen its mothballed Yongbyon reactor -- its source of weapons-grade plutonium that was closed in 2007 under an aid-for-disarmament accord

 


Page 2 of 15

Newsflash

NEW ARTICLES EVERY DAY