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Deepika Bhardwaj: The woman who fights for men's rights

Deepika Bhardwaj


In India, where wrongdoings against ladies are widespread, a female extremist and narrative movie producer emerges for being an uncommon voice for mishandled men. The BBC's Geeta Pandey in Delhi profiles Deepika Narayan Bhardwaj as a feature of an arrangement on the Asian ladies liable to make the news in 2017.

India routinely gets pulled over the coals for its shabby treatment of ladies. What's more, as it should be.

Like clockwork an assault is recorded, at regular intervals an occurrence of aggressive behavior at home is accounted for, a lady is killed for endowment at regular intervals and consistently a huge number of female babies are prematurely ended and baby young ladies are murdered, prompting to a horrifyingly skewed sex proportion. Young ladies and ladies likewise need to fight deep rooted separation, preference, viciousness and disregard.

In an atmosphere like that, 31-year-old Deepika Narayan Bhardwaj knows she stands out like a sore thumb, however she has a few inquiries that are sufficiently sensible: "Are men not helpless? Do they not confront separation? Could they not be casualties?"

Also, she goes ahead to include: "Similarly as you don't need to be a lady to battle for ladies, correspondingly, you don't need to take care of business to battle for men. I don't discuss outrages against ladies on the grounds that there are millions who are discussing it."

Challenge against settlement lawImage copyrightDEEPIKA BHARDWAJ

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Challenges the extreme against endowment law have been developing

Her battle right now is against the abuse of Section 498A of the Indian correctional code which is an intense hostile to endowment law. Ms Bhardwaj is bridging India, screening Martyrs of Marriage, her first full length narrative, trying to convince the experts to re-compose the law.

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