Friday, August 14, 2009

State of the Nation: Dress Indian, please

In just over 24 hours from now, India will be celebrating its independence day. All through this Independence Day week, CNN-IBN and Hindustan Times present a survey on how Indian society has changed since Independence. On Thursday, the topic of discussion was what Indians feel about a dress code.

No one dresses up in as many different shades as Indians do with jeans, skirts or kurta pyjamas, salwar suits and sarees and many other dresses a part of the wardrobe. But school and college authorities have often come down heavily against youngsters dressing up, a bit too casually.

The panel of experts included fashion designer Rina Dhaka, Principal of Mount Carmel School, New Delhi, VK Williams; Principal of Vaishnav College for Women, Chennai, Nirmala Prasad and Chairman, Delhi Minorities Commission, Kamal Farooqui.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

CNN-IBN debate: Homosexuality vs Indian morality

The Delhi High Court has reinterpreted a 149-year old colonial law and held that a homosexual in India is no longer a criminal. In a historic judgement the court held that "Section 377 of the Indian penal Code insofar as it criminalises consensual sexual acts of adults in private violates personal freedom and liberty.

So does the attaining of legal sexual freedom by homosexuals mark progress and social reform in India, or is the court upholding values that the majority of Indians simply do not identify with?

CNN-IBN debates on issue on a special show Gay and Indian with renowned Indo-Canadian photographer, HIV positive and gay, Sunil Gupta, gay rights activist and lawyer Aditya Bandhopadhyay, actor Samir Soni, Editor, Manushi Madhu Kishwar, Delhi Catholic Archdiocese spokesperson Dominic Emmanuel and All India Muslim Personal Law Board member Kamal Faruqui.

All India Muslim Personal Law Board member Kamal Farooqui agreed with Madhu but added that sexual preferences should be kept inside the house.

“The judgement has been good as gays were treated as criminals and harassed. My Constitution does not allow it. My problem is exhibitionism. Privately you can do whatever you like. But don’t try to do it in public,” he added.

“Between the extremes lie millions of people and their rights are at stake here,” Gupta said while replying to the point that gay parades were more about exhibitionism.