http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7880377.stm

Underwear protest at India attack  
 
The group has already attracted more than 5,000 members 
Indians outraged at an attack on women for drinking in a bar have gathered 
together to send a provocative gift of underwear to right-wing activists. 
More than 5,000 people, including men, have joined the Facebook group, which 
calls itself the Consortium of Pub-going, Loose and Forward Women.. 
The group says it will give the pink underwear to Sri Ram Sena (Army of Lord 
Ram) on Valentine's Day on Saturday. 
It was blamed for the bar attack in the southern city of Mangalore last month. 
Pramod Mutalik, who heads the little known Ram Sena and is now on bail after he 
was held following the attack, has said it is "not acceptable" for women to go 
to bars in India. 
He has also said his men will protest against Valentine's Day on Saturday. 
'Shocking' 
The Consortium of Pub-going, Loose and Forward Women, which was formed on 
Facebook last Thursday, has also exhorted women to "walk to the nearest pub and 
buy a drink" on Valentine's Day. 
A spokeswoman for the group, Nisha Susan, told the BBC it was giving chaddis 
(Hindi colloquial for underwear) as they alluded to a prominent Hindu 
right-wing group whose khaki-shorts-wearing cadres were often derisively called 
"chaddi wallahs" (chaddi wearers). 
Indian television crews caught the attack on film
"We chose the colour pink because it is a frivolous colour," she said. 
Ms Susan said the group expected to collect at least 500 pieces of pink 
underwear from all over the country and send them to Mr Mutalik's office in the 
southern city of Hubli. 
"It's a choice between ignoring a group like Ram Sena or responding to its 
activities. We have decided to give it attention, but it is attention which it 
will not like," she said. 
The group has asked people to mail or drop underwear at "collection points" 
across the country. 
The Ram Sena has not yet commented on the group's moves. 
Last month's attack in Mangalore, which was filmed and then broadcast on 
national television, shocked many Indians. 
 
Mr Mutalik has said his men will protest against Valentine's Day celebrations 
Television pictures showed men chasing and beating up the panicking women. Some 
of the women, who tripped and fell, were kicked by the men. 
Around 30 people, including Mr Mutalik, were later arrested. 
Women's groups strongly condemned the attack, which was described by the 
country's Women's Minister Renuka Chaudhury as an attempt to impose 
Taleban-style values. 
The Hindu nationalist BJP government in Karnataka state distanced itself from 
the attack. It said it had nothing to do with Sri Ram Sena. 
But a BBC correspondent says that right-wing Hindu vigilante groups loosely 
linked to the BJP are active in many parts of India and have in the past 
targeted Muslim and Christian minorities as well as events such as Valentine's 
Day. 



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