Bengaluru: Amid the outrage over the Kathua and Unnao incidents, Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman lamented on Saturday that crimes against women were getting politicised based on the identity of the perpetrators.
Addressing a gathering as part of BJP's women outreach interactive programme called 'Karunada Mahila Jagruthi', Ms Sitharaman said "You see every morning how such crimes against women are vitiating the atmosphere. It is even more painful when that gets politicised."
She said that the agony of crimes against women are being replayed based on who is the perpetrator and who is not and that charges are also being leveled on that basis.
"But does that mean that you don't talk of politics at all in the context of women? You do! You make parties which don't mouth or make lip services for women in parliament, their emancipation or empowerment," the Defence Minister said.
Ms Sitharaman felt that security of women was not a new topic for India at all.
"But periodically the country faces such unfortunate situation of one after the other diabolically human crimes, especially one targeting women, adolescents and sometimes even children who are not even in their teens," she said.
Nirmala Sitharaman emphasised that while discussing about crimes against women, a fine line should be drawn so that the issue does not get politicised and the exercise should not restrict only to lip services but finding out a concrete solution to the problem.
Every government, Ms Sitharaman said, has the responsibility to make sure such crimes are prevented.
"If there is difficulty in preventing crime, the government should have stringent laws," she said.
Citing the example of BJP government at the centre passing an executive order that provided stringent punishment including death penalty for those convicted of raping girls below the age of 12 years, the Defence Minister said the government came up with the ordinance because the parliament was not in session.
She said "We brought in an ordinance to make sure that the punishments are even more stringent."
The Union Cabinet approved the ordinance amid a nation-wide outrage over cases of sexual assault and murder of minors in Kathua and Surat and the rape of a girl in Unnao.
Taking a dig at the Congress government in Karnataka, Ms Sitharaman said the state government failed to identify that such crimes have to be prevented with "methods which meets something."
"We are tolerating a lot in Karnataka.... Corruption has known no boundary," said Ms Sitharaman.
During the question and answer session, a woman asked why the BJP, which talks about women empowerment, gave inadequate number of tickets to women to contest in the May 12 assembly polls. Ms Sitharaman said it was not the gender but the candidate's winning chances which mattered in the decision making process.
In this context, she cited the example of BJP MP Shobha Karandlaje, who was sitting next to her.
Addressing a gathering as part of BJP's women outreach interactive programme called 'Karunada Mahila Jagruthi', Ms Sitharaman said "You see every morning how such crimes against women are vitiating the atmosphere. It is even more painful when that gets politicised."
She said that the agony of crimes against women are being replayed based on who is the perpetrator and who is not and that charges are also being leveled on that basis.
Ms Sitharaman felt that security of women was not a new topic for India at all.
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Nirmala Sitharaman emphasised that while discussing about crimes against women, a fine line should be drawn so that the issue does not get politicised and the exercise should not restrict only to lip services but finding out a concrete solution to the problem.
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"If there is difficulty in preventing crime, the government should have stringent laws," she said.
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She said "We brought in an ordinance to make sure that the punishments are even more stringent."
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Taking a dig at the Congress government in Karnataka, Ms Sitharaman said the state government failed to identify that such crimes have to be prevented with "methods which meets something."
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During the question and answer session, a woman asked why the BJP, which talks about women empowerment, gave inadequate number of tickets to women to contest in the May 12 assembly polls. Ms Sitharaman said it was not the gender but the candidate's winning chances which mattered in the decision making process.
In this context, she cited the example of BJP MP Shobha Karandlaje, who was sitting next to her.
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