The Guardian

How India is battling sexual violence: gender classes for Delhi rickshaw drivers

Five years after a notorious rape and murder, 100,000 taxi drivers are being conscripted in the fight to change traditional male mindsets
To go with India-environment-pollution,FOCUS by Trudy Harris In this photograph taken on December 17, 2015, an Indian tourist wears a face mask as he sits in an auto rickshaw near a bus station in the Anand Vihar District of New Delhi. / CHANDAN KHANNA / Getty Images

In the dim classroom, the low lights form a halo around Achyuta Dyansamantra as he strides back and forth before a whiteboard, intoning into the microphone like a preacher.

“If you stare at a woman for more than 14 seconds, that can land you in jail,” he tells the audience. Singing to women in public or passing lewd remarks is also banned, he says. “Whether you agree with it or not, the law is the law.”

About 100 faces stare back, many scribbling notes, some toying with their phones. These men in grey-blue safari suits are some of more than 100,000 commercial drivers who operate taxis and rickshaws in the teeming Indian capital, Delhi.

Since incensed the nation, such “gender sensitisation” classes have become mandatory to renew commercial driving licences

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