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Mega cities may turn dangerous place for women: Par Panel

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : May 09 2013 | 5:35 PM IST
Against the backdrop of gruesome rape of a young Delhi girl in a moving bus, a Parliamentary panel has warned that mega cities could become a "dangerous place" for women and children if government does not take measures in right earnest.
The Committee on Empowerment of Women said the mega cities are turning "safe havens" for criminals despite having the modern police apparatus and suggested that there is a need for sincere effort to overhaul the "tattered policing system" in the country with an aim of giving it a human face.
The panel headed by Rajkumari Ratna Singh urged the government to set up an expert group to study the challenges faced in the form of increasing crime against women and children in mega cities and suggest "practical solutions" in tune with the needs of 21st century.
Even now, the panel said, the spate of crimes against women in mega cities has not been contained and cases of rape, molestation, abduction of women and children etc. Have become a "daily, shameful affair".
"The Committee are apprehensive that if effective measures are not initiated in the right earnest, all these mega cities would become a dangerous place for women and children," it said.
The 74-page report, tabled in the just concluded Budget session of Parliament, noted that 33,789 cases of crime against women were reported from 53 mega cities with over 10 lakh population in 2011 as compared to 24,335 in 2010.
It said Delhi topped the list of the cities accounting for 13.3 per cent cases followed by Bangalore, Hyderabad and Vijayawada. The committee was "astonished" to note that Delhi accounted for 17.6 per cent of rape cases, 31.8 per cent of kidnapping cases and 14 per cent of dowry deaths.

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First Published: May 09 2013 | 5:35 PM IST

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