Delhi remains unsafe for women from northeast        Wednesday, 09 
January , 2008, 13:21           New Delhi: Almost half the women sexually 
harassed in the Indian capital and its neighbourhood are from the northeast, 
says the Northeast Support Centre. Two sisters from Manipur who were molested 
and beaten up last weekend were only the latest victims from the region.   
Madhu Chandra, the man behind the Northeast Support Centre and Helpline, a help 
centre dedicated to youth from the northeast living in Delhi and the National 
Capital Region (NCR), said they were flooded with complaints related to sexual 
harassment. 
   

  "It's been just three months since we launched the Northeast Support Centre 
and we have received more than 10 reports of sexual harassment," Chandra told 
IANS.   "From what we have researched and according to media reports, we have 
found that nearly 50 per cent of the cases of sexual harassment are targeted at 
women from the northeast." 
   
  The Delhi-NCR region has nearly 85,000 people from the northeast. More than 
4,000 northeastern youth take admission to various undergraduate and other 
courses in Delhi University every year.   Chandana Saikia from Assam who 
graduated from Delhi University and is now working in a public relations firm 
in the capital said that even after seven years of staying in this city, she 
didn't feel safe or secure.       "Every other day we keep hearing of cases of 
molestation and sexual harassment in Delhi. Although I take all of this in my 
stride, my parents back at home are always worried and give me panic calls if 
they can't get through my phone," Saikia told IANS.       "But despite giving 
everyone an impression that nothing scares me, I am always on my guard. Even 
after seven years of staying in the capital, I don't feel at home here," she 
added.   Similarly, Lara Subba from Manipur, who lives with her friend in north 
Delhi, said she doesn't feel secure in the capital at all
 and constantly feels threatened.   "The other day I and my friend were coming 
in a rickshaw when two men started following us, calling us 'chinkies' and 
passing lewd remarks. Scared, I started screaming at the top of my voice, which 
made them change their route," Subba said.   "Just because we look different 
and wear more Western outfits, people think that they can take us for granted. 
That's why we usually stick together, with people from our own community."      
 In May 2005, a 19-year-old Delhi University student from the northeast was 
raped by four men in a moving car after dragging her from a roadside eatery in 
south Delhi's Dhaula Kuan area. The sensational case made headlines for days.   
In September last year, there was a huge outcry when three northeastern girls 
were molested in the Delhi University campus. Then in December, the Northeast 
Support Centre received a complaint from a girl from Manipur working as a 
receptionist in a private company in Gurgaon that her
 boss molested her in the office.   Similarly, a minor northeastern girl in 
Gurgaon is still suffering after she was molested three times in December by 
her house owner.       Ranjana Kumari, director of the Centre for Social 
Research and president of Women Power Connect (WPC), said this issue is more 
prevalent in the northern belt because of the mindset of the men.   "In the 
northern belt, the mindset is such that the men believe they can control women 
physically. That's why they can't stand the freedom of sexuality that men and 
women in the northeast enjoy," Kumari said.       "There's no way out of this 
problem but for women to take charge of these issues. In this regard, we will 
be observing a National Shame day across the country, hopefully coinciding with 
the Women's day March 8, to tell people that women must be respected."   D C 
Srivastava, the deputy commissioner of police, north Delhi, however, said that 
in the past year-and-a-half, they have registered just two
 cases of sexual harassment against northeastern women.       "The number of 
such cases is not that high," he said.   The reason for this, according to 
Chandra, is that victims of sexual or any other kind of harassment hesitate to 
lodge an official complaint with the police.   "Staying so far away from home 
and not wanting to get into any complicated situation, most complainants who 
come to us hesitate to approach the police and lodge a first information report 
(FIR)," Chandra said.       "When we tell them that we are not here to replace 
the police, but help facilitate smoother communication with them, they leave 
the case at that. That's why most of the crimes go unreported and the accused 
goes scot-free. This is a major hurdle that we are facing," Chandra said.  
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