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Wife Was Never Eve-Teased Because She Wears Sarees, Says Goa Minister

Wife Was Never Eve-Teased Because She Wears Sarees, Says Goa Minister
To go with story 'India-media-social-poverty-technology,FEATURE' by Rachel O'BrienVideo journalist and slum dweller Amol Lalzare, 27, interviews Sonali Ravindra More at Dalit Seva Kendra community centre for his news report on 'eve teasing' in the Sathe Nagar slums of Mumbai on April 20, 2012. One video shows police beating protesters with sticks. Another shows two lifeless, dirty bodies dragged from their workplace in the sewers. In a third, a man explains why his hand was slashed. Such everyday discrimination is nothing new, but it is rarely documented with such intimacy and insider knowledge in India's mainstream domestic news media. 'The mainstream media just report on the superficial events but they don't have depth,' said Amol Lalzare, a Dalit and one of the 'community correspondents' working for Video Volunteers, a media and human rights group. AFP PHOTO/Indranil MUKHERJEE (Photo credit should read INDRANIL MUKHERJEE/AFP/GettyImages)
INDRANIL MUKHERJEE via Getty Images
To go with story 'India-media-social-poverty-technology,FEATURE' by Rachel O'BrienVideo journalist and slum dweller Amol Lalzare, 27, interviews Sonali Ravindra More at Dalit Seva Kendra community centre for his news report on 'eve teasing' in the Sathe Nagar slums of Mumbai on April 20, 2012. One video shows police beating protesters with sticks. Another shows two lifeless, dirty bodies dragged from their workplace in the sewers. In a third, a man explains why his hand was slashed. Such everyday discrimination is nothing new, but it is rarely documented with such intimacy and insider knowledge in India's mainstream domestic news media. 'The mainstream media just report on the superficial events but they don't have depth,' said Amol Lalzare, a Dalit and one of the 'community correspondents' working for Video Volunteers, a media and human rights group. AFP PHOTO/Indranil MUKHERJEE (Photo credit should read INDRANIL MUKHERJEE/AFP/GettyImages)

PANJIM — After there were reports of his wife's comments about Western culture causing rape, Goa Minister for Factories and Boilers Deepak Dhavalikar defended her statement, claiming his spouse has never been eve-teased because she wears sarees.

In a public endorsement of his wife comments, Dhavalikar, who dodged queries from journalists all through Monday, said rapes were fewer in the past because of non-infiltration of the Western culture.

"She has lived her entire life wearing kumkum and sarees. She was never a victim of eve-teasing. That is what she must have explained to people," Dhavalikar has been quoted as saying in media reports on Tuesday.

"In the past, rape cases were less because they (women) adhered by Hindu dharma and now such cases are on the rise because of the western style of living," he has been quoted as saying.

In a meeting organised by the Hindu Janajagruti Samiti on Sunday, Lata Dhavalikar said: "Incidents of rape are on the rise, largely owing to the fact that women have adopted western culture."

Deepak Dhavalikar, who along with his brother Sudin, is a senior leader of the Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party, a regional political outfit which is a part of the Bharatiya Janata Party ruling alliance in Goa.

In April last year, Deepak Dhavalikar demanded the formation of a Hindu nation under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.