CaptainPrice
FULL MEMBER
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2010
- Messages
- 124
- Reaction score
- 0
51pc girl students stalked
Sunday, November 14, 2010
51pc girl students stalked, Seminar told
Staff Correspondent
Fifty-one percent girls, aged between 11 and 20, are harassed by stalkers on their way to schools and colleges, said women leaders at a seminar in the capital yesterday.
Salma Khan, president of Women for Women, revealed the information at the seminar titled Sexual harassment on women at workplace: Bangladesh perspective.
Bangladesh Federation of University Women (BFUW), a 56-year-old organisation, hosted the seminar at the Bangabandhu International Conference Centre.
Thirty-nine percent girls from middle income and 10 percent from higher income families are being harassed or become victims of stalking, she said referring to a recent study of Steps, a non-government organisation (NGO).
Women also often face harassment at their workplaces, including garments, NGOs and multinational companies, said the speakers.
The stalkers are mostly aged between 20 and 25 and among them 15 percent belong to upper class and influential families, 60 percent to middle class and 25 percent to low-income families.
The society and families must show 'zero tolerance' for the evil-mongers.
The existing laws and guidelines of the country are sufficient to stop sexual harassment and we need to work to this end, observed the chief guest Salma Ali, executive director of Bangladesh National Women Lawyers' Association.
Parents will have to take responsibilities to educate their children properly at family level to eradicate stalking, suggested Dr Maleka Begum, a teacher at Department of Women and Gender Studies under Dhaka University (DU).
Prof Nazmunnesa Mahtab and Dr Nazma Siddique of Women and Gender Studies of DU, president Monowara Islam, general secretary Rasheda Hussain and members Dilara Chowdhury and Nilufar Sultana of the BFUW, among others, addressed the seminar.
Well that's funny