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Leniency in Delhi Laws taking their toll on women.

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  • Leniency in Delhi Laws taking their toll on women.

    Leniency in Delhi Laws taking their toll on women.

    Summary: Since Sikh community people are not allowed to wear a cap, hat, etc. for their religious responsibilities, it is not compulsory for Sikh men to wear helmets. But, the Sikh ladies are not that identifiable among other ladies, and this might result in discrimination, so the law makes a judgement that for all women in Delhi, helmets are optional.
    Sadly, this is resulting in more and more female accident casualties in Delhi.

    --
    Article: AFP - Priya Mahindroo, 25, zips through New Delhi traffic on the back of a motorbike every day to get to work. While the law mandates a helmet for her male driver, as a woman she can legally go without.

    Campaigners are becoming increasingly vocal about the consequences of this anomaly which results in dozens of lives needlessly lost each year as well as thousands of serious injuries that wreck families and burden hospitals.



    Others see it as a sad reflection on patriarchal Indian values: that women are men's inferiors, their lives simply worth less in a country with a culture of celebrating sons over daughters.

    For women such as Mahindroo, however, the considerations are mostly aesthetic and unless she is forced to wear a helmet by law, she'll continue to ride some of the world's most dangerous streets with her head unprotected.

    "It ruins my hair," she told AFP in New Delhi as she arrived for work at her newspaper's office in the busy central area of the city. "I don't wear a helmet because I feel really hot and suffocated inside so I don't really think about the safety."

    India's federal Motor Vehicles Act of 1988 stated that every person driving or riding a two-wheeler had to wear a helmet, but this sparked an uproar from the Sikh community which raised religious objections. Sikh men were later exempted, largely because of the religious demand for them to wear turbans.

    The local New Delhi government decided it was impossible to tell a Sikh woman from a non-Sikh and so made helmets optional for all female motorcycle riders.

    About 133,938 people or 366 a day died on India's roads in 2010, according to the National Crime Records Bureau, more than any other country.

    On the streets of New Delhi -- where rash and drunk driving is commonplace, as is the sight of a family of four or five squeezed onto a bike -- 64 women were killed in accidents involving two-wheelers in 2010 and 50 last year.

    Many of these victims end up at the capital's busiest trauma centre, the public-funded AIIMS hospital, where doctor Sanjeev Bhoi is in no doubt about the cost of New Delhi's law.

    "Each day there is a new story where you have severe dramatic brain injuries especially in women and even in children. "It's very stressful to see a young girl with a severe brain injury, someone who is a mother or a daughter of someone," he added.

    "The ladies must wear a helmet not just for themselves but also for their families." For writer Antara Dev Sen, the law reeks of discrimination and is another proof that women are seen as second-class citizens.

    "In India, women are programmed to neglect themselves," she told AFP. "To be a good woman you need to ignore yourself. "It is also not quite done to talk about your own safety. It comes from the patriarchal values by which we are programmed to live."

    She along with others is involved in the campaign to change the status quo, which has been helped by a challenge in the Delhi High Court and complaints from police and medical figures.

    Last month, the Delhi government introduced harsher penalties for road safety violations, including a bigger fine for male motorcyclists wearing sub-standard helmets.

    It had seemed an opportunity to change the law, but one that was ultimately not taken, partly out of fear of antagonising Sikh women or other female voters ahead of local polls, some observers said.

    Paramjit Singh Sarna, president of a prominent Sikh organisation in Delhi, said the community would adamantly oppose any regulatory change.

    "We consider a helmet to be like a cap or a hat -- the wearing of which is technically banned by our religion," Sarna said.

    Acknowledging the safety benefits of helmets, Sarna said there would be "no objection" if an individual Sikh woman chose to wear one, but stressed that ordering the community to do so would prompt a passionate backlash.

    "Sikhs are a minority community and a sensitive one. A mandatory order would inflame sentiments, lead to protests and make the whole thing into a major issue," he warned.

    The New Delhi police have made numerous appeals for the helmet exemption for women to be rescinded, arguing that safety concerns should trump all other considerations.

    "It may be a bit inconvenient but everybody has to make a call on what is more important: the safety, or the convenience," said Satyendra Garg, joint commissioner of the city's traffic police.

    Delhi Transport Commissioner R. Chandra Mohan said the police demands were "under examination" but suggested that public awareness campaigns might be more fruitful than legislation that could hurt "religious sentiments of some groups."

    "Those who value the safety provided by a helmet are wearing it on the roads out of personal choice," Mohan told AFP. "With a greater awareness build up, the need for a mandatory law will become less and less urgent."


    --
    In most cases, the awareness is the reason why people survive through accidents and not the law.
    Wearing a helmet is a fine self-initiated habit, no doubt about it. However, the law doesn't catch someone wearing a properly fastened helmet. Which is as good as not wearing a helmet, as it will just fall off in event of a crash.

    And it should NOT be optional for women to wear helmets, but obviously that's the situation now.

    With all due respect to the Sikh religion, I must say that Men may be exempted from wearing helmets, as they still have the basic protection of a half face helmet, in form of their turbans.

    But they should go ahead, and encourage women to wear helmets while riding, without making it a community-matter. Because, the law won't do anything here obviously. Mr. Sarna should himself encourage ladies wearing a helmet.
    ---
    Brotherhood, Rules, Freedom. Xbhp.
    Indian riding = Alertness, Anticipation and Adjustment.

  • #2
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    • #3
      people in India forget that when the rider goes down the pillion wont just start flying in air....

      they think helmet is nothing but burden... god save us....
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      • #4
        Originally posted by kinshuk.arya View Post
        people in India forget that when the rider goes down the pillion wont just start flying in air....

        they think helmet is nothing but burden... god save us....
        Trust me buddy, with such type of attitude these women have makes me laugh at times...

        Helmet se baal kharab hote hai!! make up nikal ata hai and what not.
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        • #5
          I think Delhi Govt. should make brakes optional too. That essentially means cheaper bikes and scooters. People will only learn when either they are forced to do something or start dying by the dozens. Make it optional and the entire thing goes to the dogs.
          Advice is a form of nostalgia.
          Dispensing it is a way of fishing the past from the disposal, wiping it off, painting over the ugly parts and recycling it for more than it's worth.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Eshan-P180 View Post
            Trust me buddy, with such type of attitude these women have makes me laugh at times...

            Helmet se baal kharab hote hai!! make up nikal ata hai and what not.
            inse poocho sir hi nahi rahega to baal kahan ugaoge???
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            • #7
              Individual's responsibility

              First of all people need to understand govt. rules and regulations like wearing a helmet is just there to help us. It is up to the individual to understand the importance of wearing a helmet. Pardon me but religion should not be mixed when it comes to individual's safety. If your religion does not permit wearing a helmet that doesn't mean your skull is made of weapons grade titanium. You are going to die if you get hit at the wrong place and worst still get paralysed for the rest of your life. The next time you venture out thing about your family and people you are waiting for you back home.

              DONT BLAME THE GOVT. IT IS YOU WHO CAN MAKE THE DIFFERENCE.

              And for the rest you who feel that a helmet is not permitted by religion or you hair gets messed up I have only one thing to say. ALL THE BEST!!!

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              • #8
                why only women, i see a lot of guys riding bikes not wearing helmets, instead carrying them along. if you carry the helmet along and still choose not to wear it. what can be said...?? may be the rider thinks that just by carrying the helmet he will be saved, as if the helmet has some supernatural powers.
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                • #9
                  How stupid the media is....
                  They make helmets optional for women and media shouts that the Govt. isn't serious about female lives.
                  They make it compulsory, and they will shout that people's religious rights are being infringed upon.
                  Shame on people. Shame on media. Shame on the Pseudo Secular Monarchy.
                  Some of the Happiest people in the world don't have everything. They just make the best of everything life brings their way !!! Stay happy, Smile always :)

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                  • #10
                    I think that basis of not wearing an helmet is just lack of education rather then religion. Most of our fellow brethren lack education and thus fail to understand importance of personal safety, which is the root cause. This lack of open mindedness keeps them from comprehending the other side of story. That is why they feel that such laws are atrocious and try to do bare minimum to avoid them. The only way to change their behavior is to lead by example and try to educate them without challenging them or arguing with them.

                    P.S. Holding a college degree doesn't necessarily make you educated. Best example is your (insert college degree) cousin who thinks your stupid and/or pussy because you wear a helmet.
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                    • #11
                      @ cicatrix: Agree with most of the members here, specially your post.

                      Realistically and arguably, government didn't have a choice I believe. The Delhi government had to make wearing of helmets for women as an option as it is difficult to identify Sikh women from the women of other religions. So, as of now, I really can't see a different, yet safe and fair judgement coming on this issue.

                      ----------
                      ----------


                      I have to share one more link on this issue, a more mature one in my opinion:

                      Making helmets mandatory for Sikhs driving two wheelers and bikes for safety aspect? | www.punjabnewsline.com

                      Summary of the above link: Even Sikh people have started understanding that safety's top priority, beyond beliefs, genders and religions.

                      The article quotes one Sikh lady going against crash helmets in the name of religion, while the other supporting it, after facing an accident whereby her head was injured, without helmet of course.

                      The article also argues that Harbhajan Singh and Monty Panesar have to wear cricket helmets, to save their heads from above 140 kmph balls bowled. Plus, "Speedy Singhs" (a movie) also showed Sikh people wearing iron armor helmets, when the ice hockey rules made it compulsory to wear helmets. Even in Indian Army, they use special headgear turbans which protects them.
                      The debate continues though...
                      ---
                      Brotherhood, Rules, Freedom. Xbhp.
                      Indian riding = Alertness, Anticipation and Adjustment.

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                      • #12
                        well she was pillion rider so gave the excuse, here i see many aunty's bringing their children from school and not wearing the helmet.
                        Some time i feel that "is m only stupid to wear a helmet"...but then i think its only for my safety.
                        its nothing about religion or lack in rules or regulation.
                        its just people are very uneducated and brainless ..
                        i see guys keeping the helmet tuck on their shoulder and switch it immediately when they see the cops., just to avoid the fine.(what they think helmet is for).
                        They dont even know a helmet can save their life its not fancy item to avoid the "chalaans".
                        its useless to teach them, because for them hairs are more important that head
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                        • #13
                          do we need law to make us wear helmet.
                          2030 " we used to ride petrol motorbike and you can not even afford one drop of it"

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                          • #14
                            people here expressing their concerns over people's stupidity of not wearing helmets,but for me the positive side is rising no. of people wearing proper helmet while riding in my locality.
                            and the question remains why do i race?
                            every finishing line is the begining of a new race.

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                            #i don't subscribe to co-incidence,either it is the rider or the other moron on the road

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                            • #15
                              @Samarth +1
                              Here in India the law is a matter of perspective.
                              Above all, religion is the most stupid thing human being has accomplished.

                              Why the hell law allows Sikh to carry a weapon everywhere? Govt give national "pledge" to schools to recite and behave exactly opposite in reality.
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