Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
India

India, US can partner to promote women's rights: US

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Nov, 2014 10:51 AM
    Based on their "shared values", India and the United States can be partners in promoting women's rights around the world, United States Under-Secretary for Human Rights Sarah Sewall said Thursday.
     
    Giving a lecture on "Human Rights Challenges and Opportunities in the 21st Century", the senior US official spoke about the challenges before women in India observing that some citizens like women and children face challenges that require special attention from society.
     
    "They (women) are frequently denied an education. Discrimination against females is what both countries face in different forms," she added.
     
    "In many places in India as well as the United States, forensic evidence in women's crimes go unreported," she said adding the two countries can share ideas about how to challenge these common problems.
     
    Sewall is the Under Secretary for Civilian Security, Democracy and Human Rights and Special Coordinator for Tibet Issues for the United States department of state.
     
    Sewall also spoke about the rights of sexual minorities observing that culture was not a valid excuse for denying rights to minorities including the LGBT community.
     
    She gave the example of United States which she said had travelled a long way as far as giving rights to the LGBT community was concerned.
     
    "One of the things that we have learnt is that attitudes that are very firmly held that deny the personhood of a person can change," she said.
     
    "We have seen an enormous change towards lesbian and trans-sexual people in United States over the years," the senior US official said. This shows that "dominant attitudes are now dissipating".
     
    "So culture is not really an excuse for human rights," she added.
     
    Sewall said that India and the United States were both vibrant democracies. "In the United States, we have long seen diversity as our strength".
     
    "The US stands with each of you who believe that India's growth should benefit the entire population including the scheduled castes, schedules tribes and the religious minorities," she said.
     
    "We have to think beyond economic growth. All these discussions must take place with civil society on how to address societal needs," she added.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Kejriwal threatens media in Nagpur, retracts after uproar

    Kejriwal threatens media in Nagpur, retracts after uproar
    Targeting the media again, AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal alleged large sections of it were indulging in "paid publicity" favouring BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi and threatening to jail them if his party won. He retracted Friday after his comments led to an uproar from media and political parties.

    Kejriwal threatens media in Nagpur, retracts after uproar

    2014 Election Special: Modi's Life Dominates Publishing Space

    2014 Election Special: Modi's Life Dominates Publishing Space
    BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi's controversial political journey and secretive personal life has provided literary fodder to many authors to write on his "charismatic" personality and "controversial" past and books on him have been hot sellers in the past year.

    2014 Election Special: Modi's Life Dominates Publishing Space

    Varun not to campaign against cousin Rahul Gandhi

    Varun not to campaign against cousin Rahul Gandhi
    BJP general secretary Varun Gandhi has ruled out campaigning against his estranged cousin and Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi in Uttar Pradesh's Amethi constituency.

    Varun not to campaign against cousin Rahul Gandhi

    From tea-stalls to drawing rooms, politics reigns supreme

    From tea-stalls to drawing rooms, politics reigns supreme
    Be it a Metro train or a tea stall, drawing rooms to restaurants, market gossip to office banter, politics has undoubtedly become the main topic of social conversation in a politically conscious India

    From tea-stalls to drawing rooms, politics reigns supreme

    'Tainted' Pawan Bansal, Nagma in Congress' second list

    'Tainted' Pawan Bansal, Nagma in Congress' second list
    The Congress Thursday renominated former railway minister Pawan Kumar Bansal from Chandigarh dismissing allegations of "taint" against him by the opposition as it released a second list of 71 names including actor Nagma from Meerut.

    'Tainted' Pawan Bansal, Nagma in Congress' second list

    The Blood & Tears of 1947

    The Blood & Tears of 1947
    The summer of 1947 was unlike any across the sun-baked plains of northern India. Mass communal violence had engulfed cities, and villages had gone up in flames and in some places entire populations were decimated. Millions upon millions were uprooted from their ancestral homes as an unprecedented population exchange took place. 

    The Blood & Tears of 1947