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Why Canadians Shouldn't Travel to India

My friend has written on her blog that the media is guilty of sensationalism in the coverage of rapes in India. I disagree with her assessment, however. The attention the media is giving to the rape epidemic in India is long, long overdue. Should you be scared? Not really. But ask, is India as safe to travel as anywhere else? The answer is no, it's not.
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My friend Mariellen Ward has written on her outstanding blog, Breathedreamgo.com, that the media is guilty of sensationalism in the coverage of rapes in India.

Mariellen's points are brilliantly and thoughtfully articulated. I disagree with her assessment, however. The attention the media is giving to the rape epidemic in India is long, long overdue. I don't call it sensationalism, I call it scrutiny. And I want the media to continue to report on the crimes against women, as well as the misogyny that exists within the culture of India, where female babies are killed at an alarming rate because too many fathers still see daughters as a burden, not a gift.

That depraved practice has led to a female-to-male ratio of 914-to-1,000, according to India Times. Such an unnatural skew creates a disturbing imbalance. Combine that disproportion with poverty and a legal system that casually turns a blind eye on crimes against women and you are confronted with stomach-turning facts about rape. A popularly reported figure states that one woman in India is raped every 20 minutes, according to the nation's crime bureau. That's a conservative number because many rapes do go undocumented. Worse, more than 7,200 children are rape victims each year, a BBC report says.

BLOG CONTINUES AFTER SLIDESHOW

Delhi Rape Protests

Delhi Rape Protests

As a Canadian, should you be scared? Not really. As Mariellen points out, and as I agree, travel is a safe and rewarding experience for the overwhelming majority of travellers -- no matter where we go. But ask, is India as safe to travel as anywhere else? The answer is no, it's not.

According to statistics from Canada's Department of Foreign Affairs, the violent crime rate against Canadian travellers in India is much higher than in most other popular destinations. For every 100,000 Canadians who visit India, 7.5 of them are violently assaulted or murdered. By comparison, Mexico has a rate of 3.1 such incidents for every 100,000 Canadian travellers and the United States is at a rate of 0.09 for every 100,000.

Why are these statistics more relevant and believable than the numbers that show India's per-capita rape count is roughly the same as Canada's (1.8 vs. 1.7 for every 100,000 people)?

Because the Department of Foreign Affairs' statistics come from one agency while international statistics rely on accuracy from each nation, and rapes are grossly underreported in India and some other developing nations where politicians and police are not watched as carefully as they are in countries where the rule of law can usurp the will of rulers. While reports say that rape is the fastest-growing crime in India, it's more accurate to say it is the country's fastest-growing reported crime. Indian women are, thankfully, adopting the idea that they should speak out.

Yes, there are more dangerous places than India, and yes, in a nation of 1.2 billion people the cumulative amount of crime will be greater than just about every other country. But when 635 rapes are reported in Delhi, as occurred last year, and only one case sees a conviction, there is something criminal in both the streets of the nation and its legislature.

Sustained media scrutiny from Europe, Canada, Australia, the United States and elsewhere will eventually lead to action. If that helps give women in India the protection they need from their would-be attackers and the attention of lawmakers who haven't shown enough care, then we should welcome more media attention on this ugly aspect of the country -- not less.

If the definition of news is coverage of a situation out of the ordinary, then attempts to persuade the media that what is happening in India isn't unusual in a global context actually works against the best interests of the women of that nation. The argument that it (violence against women) happens everywhere, so India shouldn't be chastised if South Africa isn't only serves to maintain the status quo. It allows the police and the legislators who are facing pressure to argue "we're no worse than anyone else, so stop picking on us."

Use Your Travel Dollars to Send a Message to India

What does this mean for travellers to India?

For one thing, it means you need to understand that India is the most romanticized developing nation on the planet. Its marketing efforts are pinned on the Taj Mahal -- the world's greatest symbol of one man's love for one woman -- and the laudable aspects of its culture, including its deep spirituality that has spurred an industry around yoga travel and the beautiful legacy of non-aggression left by Mohandas Gandhi.

That's the veneer. It's the salespitch that entices you to commit your travel dollars to come. What's the reality?

Read Vacay.ca for the rest of Adrian Brijbassi's article on "Why You Shouldn't Travel to India"

Read Vacay.ca writer Mariellen Ward's take on travelling to India on Breathedreamgo.com

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