"The online survey was conducted from May 2 to May 17 with an aim to assess the nature and scale of the problem in the state and devise an action plan which is closer to the ground reality," Additional Director General of Police, O P Singh said today.
A total of 28,539 people from all over the state participated in the survey. Among the respondents, 40 per cent were females of 14 years and above, he told PTI.
Quoting the survey, Singh said, "Eve-teasing is a major problem as eight out of ten respondents feared it in various degrees. Commuting to schools, colleges and workplaces is problematic as six out of ten said eve-teasing takes place during commute.
"Seven out of ten persons said such incidents take place in buses and trains. Seven out of ten said eve-teasers use public transport or bikes. Seven out of ten said the culprits operate in groups. Schools, colleges, markets, parks and public transports are the affected places," he said.
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A majority of 64.5 per cent said eve-teasing takes place during commuting to and from schools, colleges and offices, while 22.2 per cent said they encountered it in the evenings in parks, markets and coaching centres.
32.8 per cent said they feared it most in schools and colleges, 26.7 per cent in markets, 19.9 per cent in public transport, 16.5 per cent in parks, while 4.1 per cent said they fear it in workplaces, according to the survey.
"37.5 per cent respondents said eve-teasers use public transport, 32.8 per cent said they use two-wheelers, 22.8 per cent said they were among walkers and only 6.9 per cent blamed the car users.
"As many as 40.4 per cent said eve-teasers operate in a group of two, 25.2 per cent said in four and 23.1 per cent said they operate alone. Only 11.3 per cent said they operate in a group of more than four," the survey said.
In case of eve-teasers under 20 years of age, 36.3 per cent respondents said the culprits should be counselled in presence of parents, 33.1 per cent said they should be chided publicly, 18.2 per cent wanted them to be beaten up and 12.3 per cent said the culprits should be jailed right away.
According to the survey, as many as 22.4 per cent respondents said counselling eve-teasers in presence of parents would not make any difference, 34.3 per cent said it would incite them to be even more aggressive. However, 30.4 per cent said it would deter them and 12.9 per cent said it would deter even their friends.
Also, 20 per cent of the respondents preferred information and warning boards in eve-teasing prone areas, while 19.2 per cent said CCTV would be a better bet.
On the safety quotient of Haryana, 27.5 per cent of respondents rated the state as 'quite safe', 40.6 per cent said it is 'safer than neighbouring states', 19.6 per cent said it is 'as bad as neighbouring state' and 12.3 per cent said that it is 'quite unsafe'.
Suggesting remedial measures to curb the menace, the Additional Director General of Police said, "The survey shows that public transport, urban and local bodies and educational institutions need to invest more in women safety by way of warning signs and CCTV. Cops need to patrol these areas more frequently and traffic police need to reign in lumpen bikers more aggressively."
The Haryana Police has so far arrested 15 people on charge of eve-teasing under 'Operation Durga', a campaign launched in the state on May 1 for ensuring women's safety.