Close X
Tuesday, December 24, 2024
ADVT 
International

Move to ban dowry practice among Indians in Victoria

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 23 May, 2014 02:08 PM
    The Australian state of Victoria is pushing for a ban on the Indian practice of dowry in marriages amid concerns that it is leading to domestic violence and abuse of women within the Indian community here, a media report said Friday.
     
    Economic abuse was made illegal under the Family Violence Act in 2008, but Australian politician Ted Baillieu and women's rights advocates also want a specific ban on dowry, which would bring state law into line with Indian law, The Melbourne Age reported Friday.
     
    Baillieu, a former premier of Victoria, tabled a petition in state parliament in April, calling for amendments to family violence laws. 
     
    "Dowry is clearly part of the issue faced by these women," The Age quoted Baillieu as saying.
     
    Baillieu said the matter may be referred to the Victorian Law Reform Commission.
     
    Manjula O'Connor, an Indian-born psychiatrist and research fellow at Melbourne University, said that dowry must be outlawed.
     
    O'Connor said she witnessed many women plagued by dowry-related domestic violence during her private practice in Melbourne.
     
    "Paying a dowry belittles the woman, it reinforces their role as inferior in the relationship and it makes the marriage an economic transaction," O'Connor said. 
     
     
    Baillieu was contacted by O'Connor, who urged the Victorian government to ban the payment of dowries in the state. 
     
    Baillieu added that some young women who arrive in Australia in arranged marriages face pressure to provide more to their husbands, which can trigger abuse.
     
    The move has caused deep rifts within the state's 190,000-strong Indian community, the report said.
     
    A dowry can be gifts, money or property that a wife or wife's family gives to her husband when they marry.
     
    In India, the payment of dowry has been prohibited since 1961 under Indian civil law with enactment of Sections 304B and 498A of the Indian Penal Code.
     
    The provisions under Section 498A have been criticised in India in the wake of growing complaints about the misuse of anti-dowry laws by women. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Why do Indians get more top US jobs than the Chinese?

    Why do Indians get more top US jobs than the Chinese?
    Language, familiarity with Western culture and a willingness to move are the key reasons Indians are getting more top jobs in the US than the Chinese, who see more opportunity and good pay at home.

    Why do Indians get more top US jobs than the Chinese?

    Payback? NYPD cop arrested in India, eyed as Revenge for Khobragade

    Payback? NYPD cop arrested in India, eyed as Revenge for Khobragade
    Two US lawmakers asked Secretary of State John Kerry to demand India to release a New York police officer after a tabloid termed his arrest as New Delhi's revenge for the Khobragade affair.

    Payback? NYPD cop arrested in India, eyed as Revenge for Khobragade

    Ukraine suspends military cooperation with Russia

    Ukraine suspends military cooperation with Russia
    Ukrainian First Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Yarema Friday said his country is suspending military cooperation with Russia over Moscow's troops movements near the Ukrainian border.

    Ukraine suspends military cooperation with Russia

    10 jobs which involve no actual work

    10 jobs which involve no actual work
    Music lovers paid a small fortune to a rock singer Ted Nugent NOT to sing at their local festival the other day. Officials booked the screaming rocker but Texas residents paid $16,200 for him to shut up and stay away.

    10 jobs which involve no actual work

    World's oldest weather report found in Egypt

    World's oldest weather report found in Egypt
    If you thought weather prediction was a recent phenomenon, you would be in for a surprise if told that weather prediction was done in ancient Egypt some 3,500 years ago!

    World's oldest weather report found in Egypt

    Lost jet: 'Most difficult search in history' continues

    Lost jet: 'Most difficult search in history' continues
    The search for the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 ended for the day Thursday with no sightings made in the search area in the southern Indian Ocean yet again and Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said the search operation is "the most difficult in human history".

    Lost jet: 'Most difficult search in history' continues