In the run-up to Holi this year, there were complaints from women that they had been attacked with balloons filled with semen.
The first such attack that gained eyeballs was flagged by Lady Shri Ram College student Tolino Chishi, who wrote about being attacked before Holi on her social media profile.
Chishi, who is from the Northeast, recalled how she was harassed on the streets of Delhi. She was in a rickshaw when a balloon filled with some kind of liquid hit her hard.
On March 1, another student, Ghazala Rasheed -- originally from Patna and now in Delhi -- related on her social media page an incident of Holi harassment.
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"I'll never forget this in my life. Today a bunch of ruffians attacked me and my friend ...with water balloons on our face," she wrote.
Her left ear was hurt, her nose started bleeding and face swelled up, Rasheed wrote.
"When my friend called the police they were reluctant (to help)," she said.
It's not that women who are long-time residents of Delhi are spared such violent balloon attacks. But many who have come to the city in recent years are new to being harassed in public in the garb of a festival.
Students of Delhi colleges also took out protest marches last week on Holi hooliganism.
Avidha from Kolkata complained that she was hit with a balloon filled with semen on the day before the festival, which was on March 2 this year.
"Though I did not go for a medical test, the contents of the balloon that burst on my dress were sticky. It was disgusting," she said.
Purnima (name changed) recalled how she was attacked by a group of men. The first year student of Daulat Ram College, who came to Delhi from Madhya Pradesh, said she was suddenly bombarded with balloons.
Purnima said she called a women's helpline number.
"But they just responded by consoling us," she said.
Another student, Gouri (name changed), said she was shocked to get an indifferent response from a woman who lived in a house in Amar Colony from where balloons were thrown at her.
"Just like we cannot stop people from burning crackers during Diwali, we cannot stop people from throwing balloons during Holi," the woman resident was seen telling Gouri in a video which the student shared with PTI.
"It does not matter if it is a local or migrant. Its not a gender crime either, as some women also attack others," she said.
It has to be hammered into people's heads that they cannot fling balloons at people, she said.
"There is need for sensitisation. People have to stop doing this not just because it's a crime, but because it is wrong," Mishra said.
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