Foreign visitors should not wear skirts or short dresses, says India's tourism minister

Mahesh Sharma's comments centred on a welcome kit that is issued to tourists and offers safety advice  

Harry Cockburn
Monday 29 August 2016 18:18 BST
Comments
'Indian culture is different from the western,' Mahesh Sharma said, advising foreigners not to wear short skirts
'Indian culture is different from the western,' Mahesh Sharma said, advising foreigners not to wear short skirts (iStockphoto)

Foreign women travelling to India should not wear dresses or skirts and should not walk alone at night “for their own safety”, India’s tourism minister has said.

Speaking to the media in Agra about India’s official safety advice for women, Mahesh Sharma also advised women to take photographs of the number plate of any vehicles they were travelling in.

His remarks have sparked controversy in India, where several high-profile gang rapes and attacks on women in recent years have focused global attention on the problem within the country.

Mr Sharma was speaking on Sunday about a welcome kit for foreign nationals arriving in India, which have been issued since last year and includes the safety guidelines for women.

He said: “In that kit they are given dos and don’ts. These are very small things like, they should not venture out alone at night in small places, or wear skirts, and they should click the photo of the vehicle number plate whenever they travel and send it to friends.”

“For their own safety, women foreign tourists should not wear short dresses and skirts, he said. “Indian culture is different from the western.”

But he denied his comments amounted to a dress code. He later added: “We have not given any specific instructions regarding what they should wear or not wear. We are asking them to take precaution while going out at night.”

“I am a father of two daughters...I would never tell women what they should wear or not,” Mr Sharma said.

Sentences for rape have been toughened in India in the wake of the international outcry over a number of attacks in the country, but critics have said the government is blaming women and curtailing their freedom rather than punishing the perpetrators of the crimes.

“It was very stupid, not a fully thought-through statement,” Ranjana Kumari, the director of gender equality thinktank the Centre for Social Research, told the Guardian. “The minister doesn’t realise the implications of such irresponsible statements.”

She said his remarks were part of “the syndrome of blaming women”.

“But the problem is men and boys in India,” she added. “It’s important for [Mr Sharma] to have said how to punish the perpetrators of crime and stop the nonsense of ogling women and following them”.

Mr Sharma’s comments were described as being “loaded with misogyny”, and “a blatant admission that the Indian state is incapable of ensuring safety and security of women,” by Sreemoy Talukdar of India’s FirstPost website.

The number of foreign tourists visiting India increased by 10 per cent last year, but the proportion of women coming to the country slipped to 40.8 per cent of all visitors, from 41.2 per cent the year before.

Mr Sharma also caused controversy in India last year after he said: “Girls wanting a night out may be all right elsewhere, but it is not part of Indian culture.”

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in