The process of protecting human rights should begin from the family by treating a boy and girl child alike, she said during an interactive session with students of the Sree Dharmasthala Manjunatheshwara (SDM) College of Management here.
She said youth should be given the option of choosing their careers and parents need not impose their wishes on their wards.
The idea of equality was at present being violated in families, Setalvad said.
Commending the three major schemes introduced in the country -- Right to Information Act, Food Security Act, and the MGNREGA -- which ensures food and daily wages, she said hunger and inequality still persists as governments had diluted these schemes.
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Setalvad said it was wrong to emulate the China model of development, which was feudalistic and did not give any room for human rights. "The youth should come out against the wrong notions of the rulers on development."
She alleged that the media, which were being "controlled" by businessmen and capitalists, was not giving adequate coverage to the problems faced by the common man and was often 'biased and becoming spokespersons of the government.'
To a question on 'immoral policing' incidents in Mangaluru, she said it was unfortunate that in a city which is an educational hub, such groups had dared to show their might.
SDM Post Graduate Centre for Management and Research principal Aruna P Kamath was present at the interaction session.