Sriram - you assert:
And that is why I am saying that the report is biased and hyped to create a dramatic effect. It is deliberately and falsely connecting several different things.
This is a profile of the journalist who wrote the article:
Geeta has been with the BBC for more than 20 years and is Women and Social Affairs Editor for BBC Newsonlinein Delhi. She writes news stories and features for the BBC news website and travels through India to report on exclusives. She has worked as a radio producer and correspondent with the BBC World Service and BBC News. Since February this year, she has been working as senior producer putting together ‘Kalki presents: My Indian Life’, a ten-part podcast series by the BBC World Service for India. She worked with several Indian newspapers, including The Pioneer and The Calcutta Telegraph, before joining the BBC.
This profile gives me the confidence to accept what she writes as probably accurate. On what evidence are you able to condemn it as "biased and hyped"?
India is a country with a population twenty times that of the United Kingdom it has a greater range of affluence and poverty than does the United Kingdom and several times the cultural diversity. It should not be surprising that there could be areas where the standards of behaviour towards women falls short of what reasonable people expect. The article names the areas where the practices are prevalent.
You are an intelligent, articulate and cultured man who - for me, and I suspect others on this forum - presents the face of India and enlightens and educates me. I read your submissions eagerly. You are clearly affronted - understandably - when your country is presented in a less than favourable light. But no country is perfect but you always seem to condemn such presentations as inaccurate and malicious.
I was ashamed to learn last week that, in the area of England where I live, 400 people had been kept in conditions of slavery. People had been enticed into the country from eastern Europe and then housed in squalor and used for the enrichment and gratification of others - and that this had gone on for a number of years - apparently undetected. Nowhere is perfect.