What's new

53 pc of children sexually abused in India

aimarraul

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jun 27, 2008
Messages
2,778
Reaction score
0
since you india like making up news about Tibet,how about this one ? take care your own mess
(53 pc of children sexually abused in India:Govt survey- Hindustan Times)

53 pc of children sexually abused in India: Govt survey

More than 53 per cent of children in India are subjected to sexual abuse, but most don't report the assaults to anyone, a new government survey said Monday.

Parents and relatives were found mostly to be the perpetrators of child sexual abuse in the country, Women and Child Development Minister Renuka Chowdhury told reporters while releasing the survey. "Child abuse is shrouded in secrecy and there is a conspiracy of silence around the entire subject," the minister said. Separately, nearly 65 per cent of schoolchildren reported facing corporal punishment beatings by teachers mostly in government schools, the survey said.

The ministry is working on a new law for protection of children's rights by clearly specifying offenses against children and stiffening punishments, Chowdhury said.

The first-ever national-level study by the ministry covered 13 of India's 28 states with a sample size of 12,447 children in the 5-12 age group, and 2,324 young adults.

It covered different forms of child abuse physical, sexual and emotional abuse, as well as female child neglect, the minister said. The survey didn't have a margin of error.

Last year, the Indian government banned the employment of children under age 14 as domestic servants or in hotels, restaurants or small teashops because children were often subjected to physical violence, mental trauma and sexual abuse.
 
. .
What a social culture... the society must be so sick to nurture such perverted third class mentality... though its not unexpected...
 
.
Written by Megan Shank
Wednesday, 08 April 2009
Source:



Xiong JieAs working hours wound down in Sichuan, a southwestern Chinese province, 29-year-old human-resources manager Liu Lun invited recent college graduate and new hire Chen Dan into his office and asked her to be his girlfriend. When she refused, he grabbed her by the neck and forcefully kissed her. Colleagues overheard and called police. Chen escaped.

Across the country in Shanghai, 29-year-old Xiong Jie says, she accompanied her foreign manager on a walk after a company dinner. “Suddenly, he kissed me,” says Xiong. “I didn’t have time to react, and there was no one around to witness it.” When he apologized, Xiong says, she forgave him—until he did it again. She protested. He fired her.

Xiong searched for a new job. But Chen filed suit, using the 2005 amendment to the Law of the People’s Republic of China on the Protection of Rights and Interests of Women, which recognizes women’s right to arbitrate or litigate cases of sexual harassment and to seek legal or judicial aid in case of financial difficulty. In July 2008, Chen became the first to win a criminal case using the amendment. The court sentenced Liu to five months in jail.

Mao Zedong once famously declared, “Women hold up half the sky”; today, they also constitute half of China’s formal workforce—330 million of the nation’s 711.5 million employees, according to the All-China Women’s Foundation. Scholars conservatively put the number of Chinese women who have suffered workplace sexual harassment at 25 to 30 percent, but surveys over the past decade report numbers as high as 80 percent, with the majority of incidents occurring on the job. Sociologists and legal experts say few women seek legal recourse.

“Our country still has a ‘blame the victim’ culture,” says Wang Xingjuan, founding director of the Maple Women’s Counseling Center, one of China’s earliest women’s-rights NGOs. Many victims won’t come forward from the shame of having done something wrong, “saving face” rather than seeking justice.

Foreign and domestic firms have set policies for environmental, labor and corporate social-responsibility practices, but lag in providing sexual harassment policies and staff training, says Tang Can, a sociologist with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. Companies blame local governments for failing to define the national law in more concrete, applicable terms. Shanghai was the first municipality to do so, in 2007, two years after the women’s rights amendment was enacted. Since then, 16 more of China’s 31 provinces and special administrative regions have begun drafting local definitions. Meanwhile, with women facing pressure to adhere to the rule of the collective and also navigate a competitive job market, it’s unclear how many women will step forward.

In 2001, China’s first sexual harassment case was brought by a woman employee who refused a manager’s advances at a state-owned company in Xi’an, Shaanxi. With no sexual harassment law yet in place, the case was brought under a law protecting “human dignity.” Ultimately, the court ruled the evidence insufficient and questioned the connection between human dignity and sexual harassment. Still, “sexual harassment” entered Chinese consciousness

“An Internet survey got conversation going and harassment became a very hot topic,” says Edward Chan, a University of Hong Kong associate professor. In 2002, Women No Longer Silent, billed as the “first Chinese television program to take on sexual harassment and sexual abuse,” tackled fictional power-abusing bosses and government cadres, along with victims’ lack of legal recourse—but ended happily. Life mimicked art in 2003 when a woman in Wuhan became the first plaintiff to win a harassment case under the “right to good reputation” statute.

No official body has recorded how many suits have been brought, and most aren’t public record, says Li Ying, deputy director of the Center for Women’s Law Studies & Legal Services of Peking University. Only Chen has won a criminal case; a few others have won civil settlements. But some women who have won such suits struggle to collect compensation, notes Jo Ling Kent, a Fulbright Scholar who studied sexual harassment cases in Beijing: “These verdicts are hailed as victories, but you have to go back and say, ‘Judge? Company? City? Government? Hello—you need to deliver!’”

“[The amendment] was very clear, but it was only a few sentences,” says Wang. And in China, making a law “doesn’t mean you have the support of the entire system,” adds Chan. “It’s a top-down approach.”

As Tang explains it, China’s metamorphosis from a socialist, planned economy to a capitalist one has robbed it of the institutionalized morality of the old danwei (work unit) that managed all personal as well as professional issues, including marriage licenses, housing and schooling for workers’ children. “Perhaps these strict danwei moral controls weren’t humanistic, but they were effective in controlling workplace sexual harassment,” says Tang. “Now, as companies turn towards marketization, the standardized evaluation is not based on moral rightness but monetary returns.”

Untrained employees pardon sexual harassment as cultural misunderstanding. “I thought maybe that was just the way foreign men behaved,” says Xiong. Similarly, an American working for a Beijing governmental health organization thought the same thing when her Chinese boss returned from an HIV-AIDS conference in Thailand and regaled her with stories of his extracurricular activities in Bangkok’s brothels. His behavior discomfited her, but she “chalked it up to cultural relativism.”

“A respectful workplace is about more than compliance with the law,” says Nicole Zhang, corporate marketing and public affairs manager of 3M China, which provides its 5,700 local employees with anonymous mechanisms to report abuse. “It is a working environment free of inappropriate behavior.”

Trying to help companies develop antiharassment policies, the women’s legal aid center at Peking University, which also represents sexual harassment victims in court, has cooperated with brand-name corporations to draw local companies into educational workshops. “[Chinese managers think it’s a great thing] that General Electric puts such serious effort into this ‘small matter,’” says Feng Jianmei, senior counsel of public policy for General Electric China, who presented the company’s policy to two Chinese firms.

The legal aid center will soon release a new three-year plan to confront sexual harassment, and Tang and Wang plan to publish new research. Meanwhile, everyday 330 million Chinese women go to work— each, in some way, very much alone.

Toward Freedom - No Longer Silent: Sexual Harassment in China
 
.
Several recent studies on child sexual abuse (CSA) in Chinese society have shown that the problem is not uncommon, and is associated with poor mental health and health-related risk behaviors of abused youth. It is very important to understand and improve public awareness of CSA prevention, especially for the parents. However, there are few published reports on the problem of parents' awareness. To fill this gap, knowledge, attitudes and practice of CSA prevention education were explored in 385 parents of Grade 3 pupils from four schools in Fuxin City of Liaoning Province in the northeast part of China by self-administered anonymous questionnaires. Among this sample, more than 80% of parents approved of school CSA prevention education. However, at the same time, 47.3% of parents expressed some concern that this education may induce the children to learn too much about ‘sex’. Overall, about 60% of parents had told their children that their ‘private parts’ should not be touched by others and discussed strategies of ‘Say "No!", Leave and Tell’ in dealing with CSA situations or the situations that may lead to CSA. Only 4.2% of parents had provided books or other material about CSA prevention for their children. The parents' CSA prevention knowledge was inadequate. The findings from this research will be useful in developing CSA prevention education programs in schools and communities, designed to improve parents' knowledge and practice of CSA prevention.


Awareness of child sexual abuse prevention education among parents of Grade 3 elementary school pupils in Fuxin City, China -- Chen and Chen 20 (5): 540 -- Health Education Research
 
.
World: South Asia

Pakistan's wall of silence on child abuse

Some in the North West Frontier Province see sexual abuse as normal

By Richard Galpin in Pakistan
A new report on attitudes to child sex abuse in Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province paints a horrifying picture of widespread abuse.
The report shows that many of the population believe that the sexual abuse of young boys is a matter of pride.





Richard Galpin reports on the horrifying tales of sexual abuse and what is being done

The United Nations is shortly to publish the first nation-wide survey on child sex-abuse in Pakistan - an acutely sensitive subject in this deeply conservative Islamic country.
The first indications of the scale of the problem have been revealed in this early report from North-West Frontier Province.
It shows that one third of those who took part in the survey did not even believe that child sexual abuse was a bad thing - let alone a crime.
The UN believes the sexual abuse of young children is widespread in some areas of the country but that until now it has been hidden behind a wall of silence.
In Pakistan much of the population lives in squalid slums where children are forced to play their part in the day to day survival of the family. That means working in places such as the notorious Pirwadhai bus station in Rawalpindi.




Poor children need to take every opportunity to make money on the streets
Here there are hundreds of young boys at work in the grimy workshops and sleazy hotels on which the bus station's reputation is based. For this is a centre of child sexual abuse.
One boy told me that local hotels encouraged the trade: "The hotel-owners employ children who are used to attract customers. The customers are then told what kind of services are provided and that they can do what they want with the children. The hotels here are very well known for these services. And it's good money for us."
Their clients are men from all backgrounds - travelling from one part of the country to another - thus freed from the constraints of life at home in this conservative society. With girls mostly kept at home - they prey on these working boys who are extremely vulnerable to abuse.
Although at present there is little data on child sexual abuse in Pakistan, experts such as the clinical psychologist, Kamran Ahmad, believe it is widespread:
"There is a lot of repression of sexuality so what happens is that is shows up in unhealthy forms. You rarely find healthy expressions of sexuality in everyday life so sexual abuse becomes very common"
For the victims it is a terrifying ordeal. A boy told us how he had been raped when he was just 7 years old. He said the men in his village were like dogs - 'they would eat you like a dog' he said. 'It was not safe for any young fair-skinned boy to go out alone. It was a tradition to molest boys'.
According to the report many people in Frontier Province are also well aware that men in the area keep boys specifically for sex.




The Pirwadhai bus station is notorious as a base of the child sex trade
All this seems to be a result of the rigid segregation of men and women in Pakistan, which is most seriously enforced in the Pashtoon areas of the North. Under Pashtoon culture it is very difficult for a young man to interact with the opposite sex - particularly in the rural areas.
Young boys therefore become the targets of abuse.
But the government is starting to recognise the issue. The Secretary at the Ministry of Women's Development and Social Welfare, Muzzafar Quresh, says : "We're beginning to realise that it is a serious problem.
"We've initiated several studies to try to measure the extent and there's also some evidence coming out about what happens to children and the need for greater attention to rehabilitate them and to bring them back to a normal social life."
But in reality only a handful of organisations are helping children at risk of being exploited and abused. The subject is still far too hidden for there to be a concerted campaign to rescue the many victims.
The publication of the nationwide survey on child sexual abuse is a critical test for both the government and Pakistani society as a whole.
It will prompt painful introspection - but the hope is that it will lead to positive reform.

BBC News | South Asia | Pakistan's wall of silence on child abuse
 
.
See aimarraul / Merilion & Communist,

Basically is easy to find such kind of articals and i dont disagree that its not happening, it happen and it happrn all over the world. It is a shamfull thing to happen. And its a disgrace on the human kind that such thing happen. So what think it would be better we think towards of how to stop these kind of illdeed from happening.

No hard feeling, its good that you raised this issue. :agree:
 
.
What a social culture... the society must be so sick to nurture such perverted third class mentality... though its not unexpected...

Nice!

Anyone else has a problem with this guy's trolling, please report the post. I've already done so. His refusal to talk on topic and only pass judgement on us hindoooos is going to lengths where this forum is beginning to suck.

Mods, I know this post is not as per rules, but i'm speaking on behalf of many here and think something must be done to maintain the all welcoming quality of this great forum that brought us here in the first place.

apologize for my out of the line post.
 
.
I know a case that in some remote part of China a teacher(yes a teacher!) sexually abused 20+ of his students. That bastard ended up executed.
This may not be an isolated case. Children need to be educated to be aware of this inhuman thing.

This kind of eveil things may happen everywhere but 53% is still a way too high.
 
.
The first-ever national-level study by the ministry covered 13 of India's 28 states with a sample size of 12,447 children in the 5-12 age group, and 2,324 young adults.

It covered different forms of child abuse physical, sexual and emotional abuse, as well as female child neglect, the minister said. The survey didn't have a margin of error.


So basically they hav included physical, sexual and emotional abuse as well as female child neglect in it. But you are just looking at the first line.
 
.
I know a case that in some remote part of China a teacher(yes a teacher!) sexually abused 20+ of his students. That bastard ended up executed.
This may not be an isolated case. Children need to be educated to be aware of this inhuman thing.

This kind of eveil things may happen everywhere but 53% is still a way too high.

Yes 53% sounds scary high. I do not know what methodology they used, what they classified as sexual abuse etc. Trying to get my hands on the original report.

I was brought up in india, if there's 53% children's sexual abuse, then i must say the abusers are damn clever.
 
.
But this dosent mean low percentage is Ok. even if is 0.00001 percent of 100 percent it is a hedious crime and should be delt with utter most punishment. :angry:
 
.
The first-ever national-level study by the ministry covered 13 of India's 28 states with a sample size of 12,447 children in the 5-12 age group, and 2,324 young adults.

It covered different forms of child abuse physical, sexual and emotional abuse, as well as female child neglect, the minister said. The survey didn't have a margin of error.


So basically they hav included physical, sexual and emotional abuse as well as female child neglect in it. But you are just looking at the first line.

Well, my interpretation is x% physical abuse, 53% sexual abuse and x% emotional abuse as well as x% female child neglect.
Unless the reporter cannot differentiate all the above himself/herself.
 
. .
What a BS article........abuse is bad and it happens everywhere but 53% sounds way of the mark.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom