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Photos Of Women's Orgasm Faces Show True Female Desire Is Nothing Like Porn

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A photographer has captured women’s faces before, during and after they orgasm to lift the lid on real female sexuality.

Brazilian photographer Marcos Alberti said he took the pictures to show a true female orgasm is nothing like the spectacles you see in porn.

“I wanted to talk about the taboo topic in a fun and light hearted way,” he told HuffPost UK. 

“I want to show the reality of life, because this is not the way we see orgasms in television or the internet. This is real.”

Alberti’s latest series, ‘The O Project’, follows his popular series ‘3 Glasses Later’, which showed what people look like after drinking three glasses of wine.

‘The O Project’ was created with Smile Makers, a sexual toy brand on a mission to normalise female sexuality and empowering women to celebrate desire. 

Alberti captured the facial expressions of more than 20 women before, during, and after they used a personal sex toy.

The four photos unveil the slow or, in some cases, rapid progression of each woman’s facial changes as she reaches and recovers from orgasm. 

The women who appear in the series all responded to a Facebook advert originally posted by Smile Makers, appealing for individuals to take part.

They span various ethnicities and nationalities, coming from seemingly more sexually liberated countries, such as the USA and France, to more stereotypically conservative communities, like China and Singapore.

The underlying message of the series is that “all women deserve to be in control of their sexuality, no matter their background”.

One of the women photographed, Cassie, said “excited doesn’t even cut it” in terms of how she feels about the pictures.

“I’m thrilled and I am empowered. We are sending the message to women everywhere that this is not a shameful secret. This is real, it is raw and it is beautiful,” she said.

Another participant, Camille, added: “Taking part in this project was great because the message behind is to let every woman know their sexuality is not a taboo and that enjoying a full sexual life is a good start.

“Women should not be afraid about taking pleasure. It can bring happiness, well being, it’s an important part of everyone’s life.

“I’m happy I did it, because it was quite a challenge for me, and I feel myself more entitled to explore my own sexuality.” 

While the project has a serious message, Alberti also encourages viewers to embrace the silly side of orgasms. 

 “I hope the viewers have fun looking at it [the series], and they can see themselves in that situation,” he said.

“I want woman to feel free and start to talk about it.”

In a statement, Fan Yang, global brand manager of Smile Makers, added: “Female sexuality is more often shrouded in shame and secrecy. Our partnership with Marcos allowed us to create this series to upend that social stigma around female sexuality, and encourage the normalisation of female pleasure.

“All the women who modelled were in awe of their photos, especially the final shot where they were glowing and radiant.

“That final shot, of a strong female grinning into the camera, is exactly what we want people to see. We hope that everyone viewing this project will feel more confident about their bodies and sexuality. All it takes is one smile at a time.”

Check out photos from the series below or visit Marcos Alberti’s website to see more of his work.

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Why Men Need To Be Cautious About Tweeting #ItWasMe

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In the wake of the Harvey Weinstein allegations, the hashtag #MeToo has been a powerful tool enabling women to share their experiences of sexual harassment and assault. It's allowed us to show naysayers once and for all that rape culture does exist, it isn't a fictional concept invented by "angry feminists".

My own newsfeed has been filled with women sharing their stories or simply posting those two powerful words, and the fact that both men and women have commented to thank them for speaking out has given me hope for a better future.

But now, a second hashtag is doing the rounds that's left me feeling both vulnerable and infuriated.

Men are responding to #MeToo by posting admissions of guilt, using the hashtag #ItWasMe. The hashtag is used by men wishing to identify themselves as either a perpetrator or bystander of sexual assault or harassment, with a promise to do better. A typical tweet might read something like: "I've catcalled women, I've groped women in clubs. I'm sorry. I will do better #ItWasMe."

Let me start by saying it's great that #MeToo has led to men rethinking their own behaviour. If we are going to end sexism, men must be involved, and #ItWasMe is a sign many are stepping up and taking responsibility. But while the majority of #ItWasMe statuses are positive, there are some that could have devastating effects.

Some of the longer #ItWasMe admissions, particularly those posted on Facebook, contain information that makes the women spoken about identifiable.

In one example I've read a man describes his guilt about pressuring his ex-girlfriend into having sex with him when she explicitly said she wasn't ready to. The man provides details of himself and his then-girlfriend, such as their ages.

If you are friends with this man, you may well know who he dated in his late teens. If you went to school or university together, you may even still be friends with his ex-girlfriend on Facebook. That woman may not want you to know that someone pressured her into having sex.

For a start, public discussion about the incident could be triggering for the woman involved. As numerous articles have pointed out over the past few days, women shouldn't feel pressured to share their #MeToo experiences. For some it may be cathartic, but for others it could be traumatic.

Sadly, there is also a culture of shame that follows harassment and assault that means many of us choose to stay silent. I write about personal experiences of catcalling, nightclub groping and everyday sexism on a regular basis, but there is one past incident I never touch on. Because I'm not ready to. Because it's still painful to think about. Because I don't want to change the way my friends and family think about me. And because that's my choice. To have that choice taken away from me by the perpetrator posting an #ItWasMe status would feel like being violated all over again. If men think these types of posts are helping, they're wrong.

The second issue I have with some of the #ItWasMe posts is the language used, because in some instances it only risks fuelling misconceptions about assault and harassment.

Two posts that riled me up include the phrases such as "I had sex with her when she didn't want to" and "I tried to penetrate her [while she was asleep]".

To make things clear: there is no such thing as "sex" with a woman who doesn't want to have sex. It's rape. If you tried (but failed) to penetrate a woman while she was asleep, that's attempted rape. Let's call these crimes what they are and stop sending men mixed messages about consent.

As a side note, these men have also potentially opened themselves up to prosecution in the future. I'm no lawyer, but I'd hazard a guess that if you've admitted you're guilty of rape on Facebook, then a woman decides to prosecute, telling a jury you didn't understand the language you were using may not wash.

My final grievance with these statuses is the sanctimonious tone of some of them. Posting a status stating that you have never harassed a woman but apologising if you have ever been a bystander feels disingenuous. It feels like the most half-assed kind of apology there is, like when celebrities say "I'm sorry if anyone was offended" rather than simply saying "I'm sorry". Why are men posting these statuses? It's not an admission of guilt, it's not even really a promise to try harder, so I can only assume you are posting this to get a few likes and boost your own ego.

Again, I want to stress that I am not talking about all #ItWasMe posts. Many have been created sensitively and it is uplifting to see men finally take part in a conversation about sexual harassment - something that's been seen as a "women's issue" for far too long.

But before you post an #ItWasMe status, please think about why you're posting it and who you are posting it for. Take a step back and look at the language you've used. Can a woman be identified? Are you whitewashing assault with euphemisms? If you want to join the movement, your status is just as valid if you post those three words, and nothing else.

Alternatively, check out the hashtag #HowIWillChange. Instead of dragging up incidents from the past that could do more harm than good, the movement looks towards the future. The hashtag is full of men promising to never catcall a woman again, committing to never touch a woman's body without her permission and insisting they will speak up next time they hear a sexist comment. We've done a lot of talking about sexual assault and harassment over the last few days, but if we truly want to enable a culture shift, it's time for positive action.

7 Signs You Are In A Happy Relationship, According To Science

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Many relationships go through ups and downs, but only some of them are going to stand the test of time. 

And because we don’t have a crystal ball to look into our romantic future (as much as we would like one), we’ve called on science for some good old-fashioned evidence that our relationship is as good as we believe it is.

So here are seven signs that you are in a happy place with your partner.

1. You have had previous long-term relationships.

No one likes to dwell on past relationships when you’re busy falling in love with someone new, but it turns out it might help our new endeavours.

According to relationship expert, Dr Jacqui Gabb, those of us who have loved and lost shouldn’t “lock that experience away in a cupboard”. Instead we should learn from those experiences, picking up on relationship warning signs and learning who to hold on to.

 

2. You met each other on Tinder.

...or any other online dating app for that matter.

A study found that couples who met online, rather than at work or in a bar, are more satisfied with each other and less likely to break up.

The study said: “This data suggests that the internet may be altering the dynamics and outcomes of marriage itself.”

3. You don’t post annoying photographs on Facebook.

As much as it might seem really tempting to post that #couplegoals selfie on Facebook, a study has found that those who don’t post their relationship all over the internet are the happiest.

This is because they aren’t anxiously seeking other people validate their romance. So remember that fact next time you’re picking out the best filter to optimise your smugness.

4. You enjoy watching Netflix together. 

It’s Friday night, and you’ve settled down with a takeaway and a night in front of the television for the third week in a row. While it might not feel like you’re living your best social life, watching boxsets and movies is “good for relationships” and for your health, according to researchers.

This is because it supposedly enhances the quality of your time together (they clearly haven’t seen you arguing over GOT plot spoilers). 

5. You make time to pay them compliments.

Everyone likes to hear nice stuff said about themselves, but in a relationship things can easily get a little stale and forced on that front.

So you’ll be pleased to hear that science wants us all to pay a few more compliments and say “thank you” more often, as it is one of the most important factors in keeping a relationship healthy across all groups.

6. You have sex once a week.

If you’re worried everyone is getting between the sheets more than you, then you might be comforted to know that the optimum amount of sex for a happy relationship is just once a week.

While having an adult sleepover more than once a week doesn’t hurt, it also isn’t making a difference to your happiness levels, so you might want to conserve your energy.

7. You do not have any children together.

Although this may not be the plan forever, you should enjoy your childless years, as one of the biggest ever studies of relationships in Britain revealed that if you want to be as happy as possible, you’re better off not having kids.

Childless men and women are more satisfied with their relationships and more likely to feel valued by their partner.

Women Who Frequently Dye Their Hair Have An Increased Risk Of Getting Breast Cancer

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Ladies, it might be time to start letting your hair grow in.

According to a new study by London surgeon Kefah Mokbel, women who frequently dye their hair increase their risk of developing breast cancer by about 14 per cent, reports The Independent.

In fact, Mokbel says that women should dye their hair no more than two to five times a year, which could be an issue for women who prefer to cover up greys, or those who are used to dyeing their hair regularly, which can be as much as every three weeks.

And that's not the only change Mokbel suggests we make. According to him, we should be using more natural products on our hair including henna, beetroot or rose hip.

"What I find concerning is the fact that the industry recommends women should dye their hair every four to six weeks," Mokbel said.

"Although further work is required to confirm our results, our findings suggest that exposure to hair dyes may contribute to breast cancer risk."

We should be using more natural products on our hair including henna, beetroot or rose hip.

Mokbel also added that the link between frequent hair dye use and breast cancer is just a correlation. "The positive association between the use of hair dyes and breast cancer risk does not represent evidence of a cause-effect relationship," he wrote on Facebook.

He also took to Twitter to further explain his findings, noting that women over 40 should undergo regular breast cancer screenings and that hair dyes that contain natural ingredients are safe.

This research confirms a previous 2017 study published in the journal Carcinogenesis, which found a link between hair dye and relaxers and breast cancer.

According to researchers at Rutgers University in New Jersey, carcinogens in the hair products may be contributing to the increased risk.

"We found that use of dark shade hair dyes was associated with a 51 per cent increase overall risk in developing breast cancer among African American women, and a 72 per cent increased risk of estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer among African Americans," researchers told the Women's Circle Health Study. "We also found that use of chemical relaxers or straighteners was associated with a 74 per cent increased risk among Caucasians, with some differences in breast cancer risk observed by estrogen receptor status."

More from Huffpost Canada:


Another study published earlier this year also found that hair dyes increased the risk of breast cancer, noting that researchers observed a 23 per cent increase in the risk among women who dyed their hair.

However, according to the National Cancer Institute, while some studies have shown a link between hair dye usage and increased risk of some cancers, other studies have not shown these links.

"Studies of breast and bladder cancer have also produced conflicting results," they note. "Relatively few studies have been published about the association of hair dye use with the risk of other cancers. Based on its review of the evidence, the IARC (International Agency for Research on Cancer) Working Group concluded that personal use of hair dyes is 'not classifiable as to its carcinogenicity to humans.'"

While some studies have shown a link between hair dye usage and increased risk of some cancers, other studies have not shown these links.

Because there's still no strong link found between personal hair dye use and increased cancer risk, the American Cancer Society notes that more studies need to be conducted and that there is no specific medical advice for people who dye their hair other than to stick to a healthy diet, be physically active, quit smoking, and get routine exams.

They also note that some people might want to avoid hair dye if they cause allergic reactions and that some doctors recommend women avoid getting their hair dyed when they're pregnant.

If you are concerned about the safety of hair dye, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommends reading the package instructions carefully, testing for allergic reactions before you use it on your hair, wearing gloves when using the product, not leaving the dye on your head longer than the recommended time, and rinsing your hair thoroughly with water after you're done.

Also on HuffPost:

The Morning Wrap: Firecracker Ban Gone Bust; PM Spends Diwali With Jawans

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The Morning Wrap is HuffPost India's selection of interesting news and opinion from the day's newspapers. Subscribe here to receive it in your inbox each weekday morning.

Essential HuffPost

In Uttar Pradesh, Yogi Adityanath made sure that the "gods" literally descended from the heavens in his attempt to celebrate a grand Diwali in his first year as the chief minister. Read more.

When two women in isolated yet similar incidents of sexual harassment in two Bundelkhand districts came forward to lodge complaints with the police, we knew what it meant for them, we knew what it took. But does the system play a role of coercion, or cooperation?

Man Booker Prize winner 2017 George Saunders speaks to HuffPost India about his writing process, his relationship with the Internet and a reading list for US President Donald Trump, among other matters.

Main News

A quiet, smoke-free Thursday gave way to the usual thick haze and noise on Diwali night, dashing any hope of a firecracker-free festival following a Supreme Court ban on their sale in the National Capital Region.

The Kerala high court on Thursday held that all inter-religious weddings cannot be viewed as 'love jihad' as it upheld a marriage between a Hindu woman and a Muslim man.

Browsing internet using public wireless computer network at railway stations and airports may leave you vulnerable to cyber attacks, government agency Indian Computer Emergency Response Team has warned.

Off The Front Page

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on Thursday, celebrated Diwali with troops posted along the Line of Control in Jammu & Kashmir's Gurez sector and lauded the soldiers for their sacrifice, adding that he considers them his family.

The Central Industrial Security Force, which provides security at 59 airports, has written to the home ministry complaining about the Airport Authority of India's failure to clear its dues of Rs 350 crore.

Eight employees of Tamil Nadu State Transport Corporation (TNSTC) were crushed to death when the roof of a building at the Porayar depot collapsed early on Friday.

Opinion

"The Delhi pollution problem shows how even a tangible public health crisis that affects every citizen equally can be turned into a political football in India," writes Mihir Sharma in Mint.

The US backing the ISIS draws upon strategies once deployed by Pakistan, writes Khaled Ahmed, consulting editor of Newsweek Pakistan, in The Indian Express.

"Liberalism and nationalism mean different things to different people, depending on who is speaking and who is listening," writes Krishnan Srinivasan in The Telegraph, drawing on the South Asian context. "The two concepts do not necessarily blend well together, and are often mutually exclusive."

Also on HuffPost

George W. Bush Condemns Trumpism, But Skips His Role In Its Rise

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Former President George W. Bush critiquedPresident Donald Trump’s worldview in a speech Thursday, but failed to acknowledge his own part in creating conditions that powered Trump’s rise.

Bush, speaking at the George W. Bush Institute-hosted “Spirit of Liberty” forum in New York City, outlined what he said were “new and serious threats” to democracy.

He didn’t mention Trump by name. But much of the speech was a rebuke of the ethos of the pro-Trump movement. Bush condemned the trend of “nationalism distorted into nativism.” He criticized blanket rejections of globalization, arguing that “conflict, instability and poverty follow in the wake of protectionism.” He condemned anti-immigrant rhetoric, reminding his audience of the “the dynamism that immigration has always brought to America.” He lamented that bigotry now “seems emboldened” and that “our politics seems more vulnerable to conspiracy theories and outright fabrication.”

Some of Bush’s barbs were even more sharply pointed at the president.

“Bullying and prejudice in our public life sets a national tone, provides permission for cruelty and bigotry, and compromises the moral education of children,” he said. “The only way to pass along civic values is to first live up to them.”

He explicitly condemned white supremacy, something many Republicans, including Trump, have failed to do.

“Bigotry or white supremacy in any form is blasphemy against the American creed,” Bush said. 

But Bush failed to acknowledge his own significant role in the rise of Trump.

As Ryan Grim and Alexander Zaitchik wrote for HuffPost earlier this year, policies implemented by Bush and his administration “created the conditions that brought Trump to power.”

The rise of nationalism and the rejection of globalization, for example, is directly tied to the economic anxiety that followed the 2007-2008 financial crisis. Many of the key factors in Trump’s appeal to voters — including his promises to bring back jobs from overseas — can be linked to conditions created by the recession. 

Bush’s decision to invade Iraq, meanwhile, had catastrophic ripple effects in the Middle East and beyond, spurring recruitment for extremist organizations, which in turn fueled the Islamophobia that helped propel Trump into office. 

“Without Bush’s two most fateful decisions ― letting Wall Street run amok and invading Iraq ― it’s hard to imagine Trump’s metamorphosis from a second-rate reality TV star to president of the United States,” Grim and Zaitchik wrote.

And while Bush has publicly supported a “compassionate” approach to immigration reform, he also approved construction of a 700-mile fence along the U.S.-Mexico border, a precursor to Trump’s proposed border wall — his signature campaign promise. 

Bush also failed to mention his support for a current GOP candidate who openly embraces many of Trump’s most xenophobic and nativist proclivities. 

Ed Gillespie, a former Bush adviser, is running for Virginia governor, and is largely seen as an “establishment” Republican. But in an apparent play to attract the Trump-supporting base, Gillespie has been running racist, fear-mongering ads, as Vox outlines. In one misleading ad, for example, Gillespie ties his opponent, Democratic nominee Ralph Northam, to violence perpetuated by the predominantly Latino MS-13 gang, leaning heavily on race-baiting rhetoric about so-called sanctuary cities.

Bush is raising money for Gillespie and appearing alongside the gubernatorial candidate at several events

From Raqqa to Marawi, Military Campaigns Against ISIS Take A Devastating Toll

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After a four-month military offensive, U.S.-backed forces this week drove militants from the self-described Islamic State out of what was once their de facto capital of Raqqa, Syria. But the city Kurdish-led fighters entered bares hardly any resemblance to what extremists captured in 2014.

Years under ISIS rule and a destructive campaign to retake Raqqa has left the city in shambles. Hollowed out buildings loom over piles of rubble in the street, while ISIS has left behind booby traps and improvised explosive devices. Citizens have been without access to power, clean water and medical care for months. 

The U.S.-led coalition has launched thousands of airstrikes on Raqqa since it came under ISIS control, and international monitors estimate the bombings have killed at least 1,000 civilians and destroyed key parts of the city’s infrastructure. The aid group Save the Children estimates that 270,000 people have fled the city since April because of conflict there.

The destruction in Raqqa mirrors other urban areas that have recently been recaptured from ISIS. In Iraq, Syria and the Philippines, aerial bombing campaigns and harsh urban warfare have irreparably scarred cities this year and exposed the high humanitarian and military cost of such operations.

A fighter from the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) stands next to debris of damaged buildings in Raqqa, Syria, on Sept. 25, 2017.

The level of damage left in the wake of these major anti-ISIS operations has necessitated rebuilding processes that could take years and cost billions. Media reports from inside Raqqa this week, for instance, have detailed near ubiquitous destruction and desolation, meaning that if those who fled the city return, they may find that their homes no longer exist.

Much of the destruction in urban areas witnessing anti-ISIS campaigns is attributable to airstrikes, which offer a key advantage for anti-ISIS forces on the ground and have become a favored means of rooting out the militants. But in response to the threat from the air, ISIS fighters have often dug into tunnels and entrenched themselves in dense urban areas ― leading to protracted campaigns that demolish entire neighborhoods.

ISIS has also continuously launched attacks on cities after being driven out of them, especially as the group has shifted to become more of a traditional insurgency as it has increasingly lost urban territory in Iraq and Syria. Such ISIS counter-attacks are likely to make rebuilding and stabilizing cities even more difficult, as well as keeping the massive displaced populations from returning home.

Soldiers walk through a battle damaged street in Marawi City in the Southern Philippines on Oct. 17, 2017.

The same week that Raqqa was retaken, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte announced that government forces had driven the ISIS-linked Maute group out of Marawi. But as in Raqqa, daily airstrikes and artillery shelling have ripped apart buildings and roads in the city. Bullet holes riddle the landscape, and martial law persists over Marawi and its surrounding region. 

Philippine military officials told the country’s media that the battle to take back the city was complicated by extremists taking hostages and looting homes for more supplies. They also found tunnels built to withstand the powerful airstrikes targeting the group.

The nearly five-month-long fight for Marawi, which was aided by U.S. and Australian aircraft, displaced 400,000 people from the area around the city. The Philippine military says that at least 824 militants have died in the fighting, as well as 60 government troops and dozens of civilians. 

It will likely take years to rebuild Marawi, and the Philippine Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana claims that there is around $1.1 billon in damages as a result of the fighting. 

A before and after look at Mosul's urban destruction. 

The fight for Iraq’s second-largest city of Mosul earlier this year saw a similar pattern of devastation, as Iraqi forces backed by U.S. air power recaptured the city in July. 

Rights groups alleged that during the offensive to take back Mosul, U.S.-led coalition airstrikes began killing an increasing number of civilians as jets dropped larger bombs with less careful oversight. Basic city infrastructure like roads, bridges and power lines were all destroyed in the blasts and fighting.

Simply restoring Mosul back to a functioning metropolis with access to power and water is expected to take a year and cost $1 billion, according to U.N estimates. Long-term stability and rebuilding projects will cost even more. 

Much like in Raqqa, when ISIS left Mosul it rigged the city with improvised explosive devices that could take as long as a decade to fully clear out.

Mosul also saw a mass exodus as a result of the fighting and ISIS occupation. Around 900,000 people were displaced from the city, a depletion of about half of the city’s population. 

A view of a part of downtown Raqqa after it was liberated from ISIS on Oct. 17, 2017.

Mosul and Marawi both face huge challenges in order to return to being functioning cities, and Raqqa has an even more convoluted and daunting path ahead. The conflict in Syria has divided the country along shifting battle lines, and there’s no comprehensive coordinated international effort in place to secure Raqqa in the long term.

Efforts to immediately restore order to Raqqa are likely going to fall to the Syrian Democratic Forces, or SDF, a U.S-backed coalition of Kurdish and Arab fighters that were in charge of taking back the city from ISIS.

But there are questions over how the SDF will be able to maintain security, as well as what role local forces and councils will play in the city’s future. Outstanding concerns include how the majority Sunni local populace will view the Kurdish-led forces. The influential Syrian activist group Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently has already begun to portray these forces as new occupiers. 

Your Wages Are In My Pants: Bengaluru Contractor Allegedly Told Women Sanitation Workers

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Image used for representational purpose.

Imagine the frustration and ire of not having your salary paid for months at a time. Now imagine being sexually harassed and physically abused when you ask your employer to cough up your outstanding dues. Sounds unbelievable, right?

This is what happened to a group of women civic workers in Bengaluru recently. In Bengaluru's KR Puram area, women sanitation workers and garbage collectors -- called pourakarmikas -- haven't been paid their salaries by the contractor who hired them on behalf of the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) for the last three months. When the women protested and demanded that he pay them their money, he not only abused them with casteist slurs, but also sexually harassed them by taking his pants off in their presence and threatening to rape them, reported The News Minute.

The contractor allegedly told the women, "Your wages are in my pants, come and take it," according to a report in Times Of India,

Enraged, the women complained to their union. On hearing their plight, the union filed complaints with the BBMP Sexual Harassment Committee and the Karnataka Social Welfare Department.

But even impending legal trouble did not deter the brazen contractor from further harassing the women. When he heard of the complaint, on Thursday, the contractor, Nagesh, allegedly again threatened the workers with the help of local goons.

"The contractor brought five local goons along with him who were carrying rods and threatened the pourakarmikas. He even got hold of one of the pourakarmikas and beat her with the rod," TNM quoted Maitree, a member of Alternative Law Forum, the group representing the workers, as saying.

According to the workers, the contractor was able to get away with such deplorable behaviour because he had the support of a BBMP health inspector.

Following the incident on Thursday, a complaint has been registered against Nagesh and three others, an Akshaya, a Nandeesh and a Shadeek, by the KR Puram police under various sections of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), including Section 354A (outraging the modesty of a woman) and Section 3(1)(J) of the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act.

"We asked complainants to give statements in writing. Based on allegations and statements, we registered FIR against Nagesh and three others. We will summon the accused immediately for questioning and initiate legal action on finding them guilty," TOI reported a KR Puram police official as saying.

According to the workers, the contractor was able to get away with such deplorable behaviour and non-payment of dues because he had the support of a BBMP health inspector, Ramakrishna.

Meanwhile, Bengaluru's mayor, Sampath Raj, said that he will ensure that strict action is taken against the guilty party while condemning the incident. "The safety of its workers is of utmost importance to the BBMP. I have directed the concerned BBMP officials to look into the matter. If he is found guilty, then we will ensure that his contract license is suspended. I have also spoken with the concerned health officer as there were allegations that he was supporting the contractor," TNM quoted Raj as saying.

This is not the first time that Bengaluru's pourakarmikas have banded together against contractors and BBMP over terrible working conditions and unfair wages. On 28 August, the city's 20,000 sanitation workers went on a 36-hour strike demanding that their wages for the last three months be paid before they would go back to work. They also complained that contractors refused all their leaves and forced them to work even when they were sick, according to an NDTV report.

Before that, in June, thousands of waste management workers went on strike demanding that their services be regularised and direct payment from BBMP. The mayor had conceded their demands, effectively eliminating the middle-men or the contractors notorious for harassing these workers. Direct payment to pourakarmikas was supposed to start from 1 September, but was soon postponed to October 1, because ground level verification of the names mentioned in the pourakarmika rolls had to be completed before the money was disburses.

Also on HuffPost


India’s Switch To Electric Vehicles Can Be A Global Role Model For Climate Actions

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A range of newly-launched Tata Motors Ltd. hybrid and electric buses stand on display at the company's commercial vehicle manufacturing unit in Pune, India, on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2017. Image used for representational purposes only.

Transportation minister Nitin Gadkari made an announcement recently that India will switch completely to electric vehicles by 2030. Bold indeed! The earlier initiative from 2015 called Faster Adoption and Manufacture of (Hybrid and) Electric vehicles (FLAME) seems to have failed to take off. But Mr. Gadkari said this time he will just bulldoze his way through. Considering that India imports over 80% of its crude oil at a cost of over $80 billion, and air pollution is now blamed for over 1 million premature deaths per year, this transformation would be a giant step towards energy security and air quality improvements of unprecedented levels.

While the United States saw an increase in the sale of bigger vehicles due to the drop in crude oil prices over the last few years, the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government chose to keep petrol and diesel prices the same or even slightly higher during these cheap crude oil years. The additional revenues have largely gone to reducing the fuel-subsidies and to deal with the slowdown in economic growth. The brave initiative to switch completely to electric vehicles will obviously face many social and political challenges. All climate actions that require disruptive socio-technical transitions will face hurdles, some expected and some unexpected. The expected resistance will come from established industries and institutions that stand to lose, and the entrenched behavioral patterns of citizens whose pocketbooks or ways of life get hit by these transitions.

'Creative destruction' to destabilise the old structures is as critical as the innovation, and adoption of the new.

The good news for India's transition to all-electric-vehicles is that charging stations have already popped up in states such as Karnataka and Maharashtra due to their early adoption of electric vehicles for government fleets. Cab services like Ola have also announced their plans to switch to electric vehicles. Some auto-manufacturers have also taken steps towards increasing the production of electric cars and two-wheelers. The cost of batteries and battery charges have seen a significant global reduction while charging speeds as well battery quality have gone up. Companies like Tesla are already salivating at the idea of capturing the Indian electric car market share.

Several policies and incentives have been put forth for facilitating the transition such as the subsidies for hybrid and electric bikes and cars by the National Electric Mobility Mission Plan. While most of the sociotechnical transition plans focus on policies and incentives to drive adoption and innovation towards the new technologies, much less attention is paid towards strategies to dismantle the old technologies. The so-called 'creative destruction' to destabilise the old structures is as critical as the innovation and adoption of the new.

For example, manufacturing and marketing, the workforce, education/training and R&D that support petrol and diesel vehicles cannot simply be wished away by 2030. Planned phasing out of this massive infrastructure is as critical if nst more so, as simultaneously driving the innovation for manufacturing, training a new workforce or retraining much of the existing workforce, mental models to drive large-scale adoption of electric vehicles as well as the infrastructure for electricity production, charging stations, smarter grids, and better and cheaper batteries as well as their recycling.

Unplanned transitions can create long-lasting trauma, the worst case being the mine closures in the UK which have left persistent social problems due to a failure to retrain the mine workers

Unplanned transitions can create long-lasting trauma, the worst case being the mine closures in the UK which have left persistent social problems due to a failure to retrain the mine workers. Some of the current global backlash against immigration, and the swing to the Right in election outcomes are blamed on socio-technical transitions that have not included appropriate policy mixes for creative destruction of the old while transitioning to the new. The framework provided for deep decarbonisation also apply to the many socio-technical transitions India must undergo to live up to its commitments to the Paris Agreement.

The planned transition to electric vehicles may offer a golden opportunity to focus on combining the positive incentives to drive consumers, corporations, local and state governments towards them, with policies and subsidies to transition out of using petrol and diesel vehicles. Removing the subsidies that already exist for petrol/diesel vehicles is obviously the first task. But unintended consequences must be kept in mind. For example: diesel vehicles are now the main mode of transporting food and grains which means the transition to electric vehicles must ensure that food prices are not affected adversely, especially for the poor.

Large-scale social acceptance will require business support as well as efforts to raise awareness of co-benefits such as cleaner air, water and food.

The challenge of the cost, quality, comfort, and maintenance of electric vehicles can hardly be underestimated. As of now, fewer than 25,000 electric vehicles are sold annually but the drop in price expected in the coming years will bump up demand. Past transitions have relied on different but interdependent innovations. Renewable energy advances and its large-scale adoption can combine with novel battery technologies, smart grids, increased electric vehicle demand with supportive policies and subsidies, as well new business models may work as a game-changer for the transition to electric vehicles.

But the government needs to proactively facilitate the synergy of innovations and policies needed for making electric vehicles an attractive alternative, while also driving the creative destruction of the petrol/diesel vehicles as a way of life. Large-scale social acceptance will require business support as well as efforts to raise awareness of co-benefits such as cleaner air, water and food. And a broader discourse on the positive outcomes of a low-carbon economy in terms of global competitiveness and quality of life in addition to standards of living.

Climate policies can benefit from technological innovations which offer solutions and accelerate the green spiral.

Externalities such as unforeseen increases in oil prices or a bottom-up demand on improving air quality may well become important players in this sociotechnical transition. Climate policies can benefit from technological innovations which offer solutions and accelerate the green spiral which can lead to positive feedback of green industries coming together to expand the low-carbon coalition. Such bottom-up coalitions of businesses and societies can make climate action resilient to political setbacks: the continued climate actions by some states in the US under the Trump-administration being a prime example.

India thus need not rely simply on bans and regulations to enforce the transition to electric vehicles, or any of the other transitions necessary to keep abreast of its INDC targets. It can adopt a strategic mix of policies, incentives, regulations and subsidies to drive a smooth and equitable transition. Investments in science and technology education will also need to drive innovations and entrepreneurship to support such transitions, as well train a globally-aware workforce. This workforce will continue to exploit the green markets as well as it has cashed in on IT and other outsourcing. The switch to electric vehicles can thus be a golden opportunity.

The opinions expressed in this post are the personal views of the author. They do not necessarily reflect the views of HuffPost India. Any omissions or errors are the author's and HuffPost India does not assume any liability or responsibility for them.

Why Do We In India Shy Away From Discussing The Desi Harvey Weinsteins?

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Hollywood mega producer Harvey Weinstein's uncontrollable libido has opened a veritable Pandora's jocks. Suddenly, actor Ben Affleck is compelled to issue a public apology to Hilarie Burton , courtesy a freak social media conversation, for a crude fondle in Y 2003. Angelina Jolie and Gwyneth Paltrow have given explicit descriptions of Mr Weinstein's lascivious attempts at forced seduction. Weinstein has been compelled to resign from his lofty towers, and several of his chums have, belatedly, expressed their disgust. It is appalling alright, but those who are feigning ignorance of such organised smuttiness occurring regularly in high places, are clearly being terribly disingenuous.

Incidentally, showbiz globally has the ignoble tradition of the notorious casting couch, sexual favors are often extracted by powerful studio moguls from susceptible starlets, and handsome young men looking for that elusive breakthrough into the stardust lights. Sexual harassment is the elephant in the room, unfortunately, it is fashionable to treat it as a one-off done by some crazy pervert only.

The hard truth is that women across the globe have a formidable challenge even after cracking the glass ceiling by entering corporate boardrooms. The problem is deeply embedded in traditionalism bordering on irrational rigidity that proscribes women's emancipation. There are three examples that come to mind: India's own forensic expert Dr Rukmani Krishnamurthy, and Nobel Prize laureate Elizabeth Blackburn, a molecular biologist, who were told early in their school days: 'what's a nice girl like you doing studying science?'

The hard truth is that women across the globe have a formidable challenge even after cracking the glass ceiling by entering corporate boardrooms.

Clearly, for every Sheryl Sandberg there are a thousand other talented women who are being outrageously segregated against on account of gender prejudice. It is a grave issue, and there are no silver bullets to a historical bias of astonishing proportions. But there is hope.

At the CII Women Nation Summit in Mumbai last week, it was good to see a huge crowd of young women sharing stories of their unique triumph against sturdy walls of stubborn male resistance. Actor-director and talent powerhouse Lilette Dubey was forthright in stating that the Indian film industry was a hotbed of brazen exploitation by unscrupulous producers. Weinstein is in glorious company, only, we in India have the masterful wherewithal to smother stories that cause acute discomfort. Frankly, even the Indian media has a peculiar self-righteousness in dealing with the sexual shenanigans of the rich and famous. It is silly, and worse, crocodilian. While Bollywood's clandestine dalliances regularly feature in Page 3 columns, the licentious tales of corporate titans, political heavyweights, and several from the media industry are quietly buried.

Remember Bill O'Reilly, the TV anchor of Fox News? I asked this question to some, and the response has swerved between being self-serving to sanctimonious balderdash. For instance, "as long as the public figure delivers on fundamental commitments, how does it matter what they do between the bedsheets?". Really? In that case should the global media have ignored the hormonal outpourings of the former IMF honcho Dominique Strauss Kahn in the Sofitel hotel in New York, who was indicted for attempted rape of a surprised housekeeping staff ? France lost a potentially strong presidential candidate.

The double-standards here protect the roving eye of the powerful glitterati, as the unfortunate victims are subjected to astronomical intimidation, including threats.

Then, why at all feature those silly pieces on who is the latest victim of Salman Khan's charm offensive? Surely, that has little to do with his acting prowess on the big screen, right? Or do the ROTFL somersault on reading Bill Clinton jokes about his Monica Lewinsky moment? Why was there no chai pe charcha on a famous unmarried Indian politician who has a foster son-in-law? Was that a biological revolution? The double-standards here protect the roving eye of the powerful glitterati, as the unfortunate victims are subjected to astronomical intimidation, including threats. A journalist in a dangerous alleged liaison with a former NDA minister was killed. Frankly, the media becomes accessory to the crime by not reporting it.

Whatever be the truth, the overwhelming sentiment being cleverly choreographed is that actor Kangana Ranaut 's allegations against colleague Hrithik Roshan is a figment of imagination of a troubled head. It's not that simple. Would Ranaut risk being seen as a self-destructive psycho in an industry so solipsistic about its perceived halo that it seeks public approbation even on the shoes they wear? You wonder, sometimes.

Gender bias is a global problem

While it is indisputably a humongous social problem in India, gender bias is not restricted to geographical boundaries. The incorrigible superbrat John McEnroe mocked Serena Williams' extraordinary triumphs, saying a lowly ranked male player could demolish her. Perhaps he forgot the result of the Battle of the Sexes game between Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs. Equal pay continues to incapacitate corporate HR in well-established multinational firms even with liberal predilections.

And while Shah Rukh Khan's decision to have his female co-star rank higher than him on the film rubric is welcome, we are still stuck in the quagmire of hollow sloganeering like 'Beti Bachao'. This is just such synthetic symbolism stretched too far. The reality is disturbing, worrisome. At least there are celluloid aspirations that signal rising woman power: an all-female star cast for Star Trek, a Wonder Woman franchise , and creative talent in India like Zoya Akhtar, Nandita Das, Gauri Shinde and Alia Bhatt are pushing the boundaries.

I read that former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said: "There is a special place in hell for women who do not help each other". Hillary Clinton will probably agree. In the meantime , there are several predatory Weinstein's still walking around with a belligerent countenance in their five-star bathrobes. One braggadocio of the same ilk is today the most powerful man in the world. He was elected.

The opinions expressed in this post are the personal views of the author. They do not necessarily reflect the views of HuffPost India. Any omissions or errors are the author's and HuffPost India does not assume any liability or responsibility for them.

Jharkhand’s Kitchen Gardens Add Nutrition To Rural Diets, And Lower Food Bills

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by Soumi Kundu

A health screening of adolescent girls and young women in Gumla district of Jharkhand showed that 90% of them were anemic, and had less than normal blood components. The study was conducted by Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI) on a random sample of 100 young adults aged between 16 and 22 years from villages in Gumla.

Gumla district has 71 % tribal households across its rural expanse, according to the Gumla District Census Handbook, 2011. Over 65% of the tribal population are cultivators while 20% are agricultural laborers. Farming carried out in villages such as those in Gumla, provides us with a reservoir of food. But as we choose what we eat, from the bounty of diverse food crops grown by farming families, what do they themselves eat?

While a study revealed that the villagers' diet consisted mostly of rice and leafy vegetables, the National Family Health Survey (2015-16) revealed that the percentage of rural women with anemia and lower body-mass index in Jharkhand was higher than the national average. To enrich villagers' diet, and make it more nutritious in a cost-effective manner, reviving traditional kitchen gardens appear to be the best option.

The tribal diet is frugal

Everyday diet of the tribal households of Raidih block of Gumla includes rice gruel, and a vegetable curry or chutney. Pulses or animal foods are consumed once a week, at the most. Even this minimal diet is not followed throughout the year: it is a common practice to reduce the number of meals in a day when there is scarcity of food or income. "Food is rice and leafy vegetables, usually marua saag, commonly found here after the monsoons. Good food would mean eating rice with lentils, potatoes, vegetables and curry. We cannot eat good food every day," 40-year-old Rita Devi from Patratoli village in Nawagarh panchayat told VillageSquare.in. Hailing from the Oraon tribal community, Rita has no land and works as a sharecropper half the year. The rest of the year she works as a daily wage laborer in Gumla town, which is 20 km away.

"We grow urad dal (black gram) every year, yet we consume it only occasionally. To eat it more often, a family would need 20 to 30 kg, but a household will keep only five kg, as the rest is sold," added Seema Devi, a self-help group member from Panantoli village in Silam panchayat.

Local diets have changed drastically

With the adoption of rice and wheat-based food, consumption of once-popular millets has drastically reduced. Only a handful of households grow millets now. Major crops cultivated in the district include cereals like paddy, maize and finger millet, pulses such as arhar and urad, and oilseeds such as groundnut, mustard and linseed.

While a wide variety of food is available in the markets, the food consumed by rural households is less nutritious. Use of locally abundant high-nutrient greens such as lebri saag, charota saag, bhatua saag and karonda saag has reduced. Villagers are more interested in growing and consuming hybrid varieties of vegetables such as radish, cauliflower, cabbage, carrots and spinach.

"When men in our village waste so much money on liquor, can't we spend 100 rupees to buy seeds to grow vegetables for ourselves?"

It is also found that miscellaneous foods, oils and fats account for more than half (52 %) the calorie intake of villagers. Vegetables, fruits, meat, eggs, milk, and pulses, account for a slim share of the calorie intake.

Kitchen gardens to the rescue

In Gumla, there is an existing trend of growing select food crops in homestead lands, and between rows of crops in farmlands, during monsoons. The families grow maize, vegetables, cowpea and dolichos beans for consumption at home, buying seeds at the market or preserving them from earlier harvests.

Those without homestead lands use available spaces near the house, or with mutual consent, homestead lands of others. Based on this practice, PRADAN (Professional Assistance for Development Action), an NGO, piloted an initiative named Poshan Vari in July 2016. Designed as a nutrition-based cultivation in homestead lands, Poshan Vari gardens were grown in 47 villages across nine panchayats.

The intervention covering over 600 households was intended to enrich the diet, and improve the nutrition status of the family. All the households did not have homestead lands, where available, the size varied between two and 10 sq., the most common being five sq. ft to seven sq. ft. Families of small and marginal farmers with farmlands measuring less than two hectares grew kitchen gardens.

Nutritional intervention

The number and nature of plants grown in kitchen gardens depend on many factors. These include availability and extent of homestead land, family size, manpower in the house and source of water if grown after monsoons, besides the family's knowledge and purchasing power of seeds.

A group discussion in Shahitola village centered around growing vegetables. "For how many days can we buy vegetables from the market? Where will we find money to buy them?" the women asked VillageSquare.in. The women's words echo one of the primary goals of kitchen gardens: enriching their diets by growing food for home consumption.

In a study done by Centre for Development Research, Pune, on the status of kitchen gardens, it was observed that in Gumla, with about 60 to 90 hours of labor invested across four months, the households could save Rs 1,600 to Rs 3,200. This is the money saved on expenditure for food from local markets because of the produce available in home gardens.

"When men in our village waste so much money on liquor, can't we spend 100 rupees to buy seeds to grow vegetables for ourselves?" said a Shahitola woman growing kidney beans and French beans in her kitchen garden. In addition to saving on income, kitchen gardens substantiated the existing diet. From their kitchen gardens, participant households availed seven types of vegetables, three types of legumes, three types of green leafy vegetables, and a fruit, cereal and tuber each for at least one agricultural cycle. Vegetables can be used in rotation and there is a wide availability of food for at least 3 to 4 months in one cycle.

In the first year of implementation of the Poshan Vari initiative in Gumla, villagers showed an enthusiastic interest in continuing the practice. Women are the key participants in growing kitchen gardens. Given that today nearly 70% of the total agricultural work in India is done by women, Poshan Vari is designed in a way that it does not add to the women's work burden. They spent less than two hours a day to nurture the gardens.

The way ahead

As an intervention, Poshan Vari provides a rich blend of seeds of local varieties of cereals, pulses, vegetables, and green leafy vegetables that are organically grown, to increase both the availability and diversity of food in rural households.

In the present design of the intervention, it is a challenge to include families with neither farmland nor homestead land and to use spaces near such households optimally, to grow food.

Such interventions are still relegated to development literature, despite the need to promote them to overcome the present agriculture-nutrition disconnect in India. It is time that such initiatives are replicated and agricultural processes are reconfigured so as to increase availability of food among rural households.

Existing users in Gumla acknowledge the value of kitchen gardens. Kitchen gardens can fix the skewed gender patterns in food consumption prevalent today in Gumla district and across India, besides improving the nutritional status of women.

Soumi Kundu is a research scholar with an M Phil in Development Practice from Ambedkar University, Delhi. This article was first published on VillageSquare.in, a public-interest communications platform focused on rural India.

The opinions expressed in this post are the personal views of the author. They do not necessarily reflect the views of HuffPost India. Any omissions or errors are the author's and HuffPost India does not assume any liability or responsibility for them.

What The SC's Firecracker Ban In Delhi-NCR During This Diwali Says About Us

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Did the firecracker ban imposed by the Supreme Court of India on Delhi-NCR, ahead of Diwali this year, turn out to be a case of sound and fury signifying nothing?

The answer to this question depends as much on the empirical data as on public perception, especially of those living in the region and forced to breath the polluted air there through the year, and worse, during the most toxic autumnal and winter months.

Let's begin with the data.

According to reports, the Central Pollution Control Board reported that pollution levels in Delhi are lower compared to the air quality recorded during Diwali in 2016. The Air Quality Index (AQI) value on Thursday was 319, or in the very poor category category. Contrast this number with last year's AQI, which hit severe level after recording an index value of 431.

SAFAR, or System of Air Quality and Weather Forecasting And Research, found that the 24-hour average of PM2.5 and PM10, ultra-fine particulate matters that can enter the human bloodstream, were 154 and 256 micrograms per cubic metre, respectively, at around 11 pm. Both these numbers are at least 10-20 times the permissible limits for such pollutants in the air.

Of course, in certain parts of Delhi, the levels were much higher, with PM2.5 and PM10 crossing 800 and 1,000 micrograms per cubic metre around the same time in RK Puram.

Since the burning of crops by farmers in Haryana and Punjab lead to air pollution around this time of the year in Delhi-NCR, many are of the opinion that the firecracker ban is pointless unless the states are able to stop these farm fires.

In another article on HuffPost India, Shivam Vij said, "It is not reasonable to argue that if we are unable to stop farm fires, Diwali firecrackers must be allowed to pollute the air as well." As case studies show, farm fires alone do not causing the heavy cover of smog over Delhi. Those who deny or underplay the correlation between firecrackers and air pollution are merely perpetuated an insidious perspective.

Unfortunately, the cost of such petty politicking is apparent from the numbers. Here's a piece of (hopefully terror-inducing) news for those who are aggrieved by the firecracker ban or flouted it with impunity: India recently topped the list of countries with pollution-related deaths in 2015, according to a report by Lancet, the medical journal.

As many as 2.51 million people in the country have died prematurely that year due to diseases linked to air, water and other forms of pollution. India accounted for about 28% of an estimated 9 million pollution-linked deaths worldwide in 2015, as the study further found.

If these numbers fail to jolt the public into becoming more conscious of the damage they are causing to the environment, as also to the generations to come, no court order or state ban can hope to have any lasting impact on us either.

Also on HuffPost

Air Quality In Delhi Was Slightly Better This Diwali, But Is That Enough?

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Supreme Court's ban on the sale of firecrackers made Diwali a comparatively quiet affair in the Delhi NCR this year.

However, the order did little to help keep the pollution levels in control. According to NDTV, data from the Central Pollution Control Board reflected Delhi's Air Quality Index (AQI) value at 319, putting it in the "very poor" category. Some areas in the city recorded a steep hike in pollution levels with more than 24 times the average level.

As per the indicators of pollution monitoring systems, on Friday morning Delhi's RK Puram monitoring station recorded PM2.5 and PM10 at 878, which is quite hazardous.

But in comparison to last year, pollution levels this year seems much lower. In 2016, the day after Diwali, the Air Quality Index was recorded at 431, as compared to 319 this year.

In 2016, particulate matter (PM)10 and PM2.5 was recorded at over eight times the safe limit. This year, however, PM10 and PM2.5 levels were over two and half times the satisfactory limit.

Several news agencies and people from the city have been tweeting images of smog and pollution from Friday morning.

Here is a post showing India Gate a day after Diwali from 2016 and 2017.

Also on HuffPost India:

Lupita Nyong’o Accuses Harvey Weinstein Of Sexual Harassment, Recalling ‘Massage’ Incident

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Lupita Nyong’o has become the latest actress to accuse Harvey Weinstein of sexual harassment, recalling a series of incidents that took place over a number of years.

The ‘12 Years A Slave’ star first encountered the movie mogul when she was still a student in 2011 and says on their second meeting, Weinstein asked if he could massage her in his bedroom.

riting in a New York Times op-ed, Lupita explains that the incident took place when she was at his house to watch a film, with his young children present.

Lupita Nyong'o 

“I felt unsafe,” she writes. “I panicked a little and thought quickly to offer to give him one instead: It would allow me to be in control physically, to know exactly where his hands were at all times.

“Part of our drama school curriculum at Yale included body work, using massage techniques on one another to understand the connection between body, mind and emotion, and so I felt I could rationalize giving him one and keep a semblance of professionalism in spite of the bizarre circumstance.”

The actress then left when he asked if he could remove his trousers.

“I reasoned that it had been inappropriate and uncalled-for, but not overtly sexual,” she says of the encounter. “I was entering into a business where the intimate is often professional and so the lines are blurred.”

This would not be Lupita’s last meeting with Harvey and the second came when he invited her to a staged reading of his Broadway play ‘Finding Neverland’.

The actress attended with two male friends and at a dinner that took place afterwards, she found herself placed next to Harvey, while her companions were sat at a different table.

At their third meeting, Weinstein directly propositioned her, Lupita says.

Harvey Weinstein

Explaining how she responded when he suggested they leave the restaurant and eat in his room instead, Lupita writes: “I was stunned. I told him I preferred to eat in the restaurant.

“He told me not to be so naïve. If I wanted to be an actress, then I had to be willing to do this sort of thing. He said he had dated Famous Actress X and Y and look where that had gotten them.

“I was silent for a while before I mustered up the courage to politely decline his offer.

“‘You have no idea what you are passing up,’ he said. ‘With all due respect, I would not be able to sleep at night if I did what you are asking, so I must pass,’ I replied.”

The actress claims that the next time she saw Weinstein was two years later, at the Toronto Film Festival premiere of ‘12 Years A Slave’.

“He said he couldn’t believe how fast I had gotten to where I was, and that he had treated me so badly in the past,” she writes. “He was ashamed of his actions and he promised to respect me moving forward. I said thank you and left it at that.

“But I made a quiet promise to myself to never ever work with Harvey Weinstein.”

In a statement obtained by People.com, a spokesperson for Weinstein said: “Mr Weinstein has a different recollection of the events, but believes Lupita is a brilliant actress and a major force for the industry.”

Lupita’s words came as Quentin Tarantino, one Harvey’s long-time collaborators, admitted he knew about many of the accusations.

Speaking to the New York Times, the director said he wished “I’d taken responsibility for what I heard”, explaining that he previously excused Harvey’s alleged behaviour because “I chalked it up to a ’50s-’60s era image of a boss chasing a secretary around the desk”.

“As if that’s O.K,” he said. “That’s the egg on my face right now.”

Over 30 women have come forward to accuse Weinstein of harassment, assault or rape. While he has apologised for some of his behaviour, the producer “unequivocally denies” nonconsensual sex.

Director John Madden On Harvey Weinstein, Hollywood's Reluctance To Address Gun Violence, And Cinema In The Trump-Era

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John Madden attends the 'Miss Sloane' Paris Premiere at Cinema UGC Normandie on March 2, 2017 in Paris, France.

At the coffee shop of JW Marriott, Mumbai, British filmmaker John Madden is hurriedly finishing a quick breakfast. The past week has been particularly exhausting — as jury president for the International Competition at the Mumbai Film Festival, Madden has been immersed in back-to-back screenings, mulling and deliberating over them with other jury members, including Alexis Zabe (he shot Pharrell Williams' Happy), Celina Jade, and Konkona Sen Sharma.

Madden, who attained global spotlight with the Oscar-winning drama, Shakespeare in Love (for which he was nominated in the Best Director category), went on to direct several films, some of which were produced by the Harvey Weinstein-led company, Miramax. Madden also directed the commercially successfully and critically-adored The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel and its sequel, The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel.

In a nearly hour-long interview, Madden spoke passionately about making films in India, Hollywood, and ensuring safety of women in the film industry.

Edited excerpts from the interview:

There's nearly unprecedented global outrage after stories of Harvey Weinstein's transgressions were exposed by The New York Times and The New Yorker. While this has led to a lot of conversation around the very serious issue of exploitation of women within the industry, a lot of talk has also been directed around how this isn't an aberration but it's probably the norm...

It's alarming to think that this could possibly be the norm. I feel a profound sense of dismay for not having known this. We just slept at the wheel. This was happening all through the time when I was associated with that company. What we should be paying attention to is what was happening to women and what probably still is. We should recognise that very seriously. I would lock horns with him whenever I did meet him but that was more about creative differences over films. He wields a lot of power and the instances that have come out are about his abuse of it. I assume it's happening elsewhere too. Luckily, this has opened some floodgates where a lot of people must be shifting uncomfortably on their seats. Power is routinely abused by people who are in the position to do so. We all experience it in different ways. This happened in a much greater degree in Harvey's case. It's shocking.

Have you heard any such instances within the British film community?

Honestly, I can't imagine it is. I am sorry. I am really not aware of that. My film career has been entirely associated with American finance so I am probably not the right person to know about it, but even then, I don't believe it is. Irrespective of that, I do think women are compartmentalised not only by film content but even in their access to the director's chair. Slightly less in the UK than in America, but it exists. Television, I feel, has tried to correct that balance to a certain extent.

As a filmmaker, what would you do to ensure a safe work culture for women on your film sets and even beyond?

Everybody has to look at things very differently now. I tend to have a lot of women on my crew. My films happen to be about women. They are often at the centre of the story that I tell. Gender diversity is the most important thing one can do and one has to keep that issue at the forefront just to correct the balance. I am not in a position of awarding jobs, except to my own crew so within that capacity I will of course try everything to ensure a sense of safety.

This is perhaps your fifth or the sixth trip to India. You've shot two major movies here — The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel and The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel. Is there an aspect of the country or the culture that you took home and which changed the way you view your own reality?

Oh, definitely. At the heart of both the Marigold movies is a very interesting idea: what happens to people when they get old? What happens when their options narrow down? Not everybody can afford to do what they did. What the film really is about is cultural collision and cultural stimulation. The great thing about India is how accepting and inclusive the culture really is — that was really my big takeaway. It's a culture shock at first. But you eventually blend in beautifully.

There is some synergy between the specific reality and the fictional content. In a way, the film mirrors the experience of the actors, who probably also discovered the idea of India for the first time...

Absolutely. So what you take back is this holistic experience which keeps you with this longing urge to come back. There are a few characters in the film that are too overwhelmed. One says, "Oh, I cannot cope with this, it's too much to take in." But eventually the warmth of the country makes everyone feel belonged. There's this wonderful energy that I was responding to. This sense of calmness.

A still from 'The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel.'

The calmness, I feel, is a bit exoticised by foreigners, as the country is also full of contradictions. Along with the calm, there's maddening chaos too. What I found great about both films is the representation it offers to a demographic (elderly people) that's largely ignored not just by Hollywood but by industries across the world.

Yes, the demographic was sitting there but nobody was looking at it. It's an existing force which largely gets ignored, unlike say, millennials or the slightly older ones or whatever the current grouping is. But these are people who've lived their lives watching cinema and probably now have the time to actually go and watch a movie in a cinema as opposed to the youngsters who are consuming films on all sorts of online platforms. But the films aren't telling their stories. So we were quite surprised by all the heartfelt reactions. Not just old people, everybody loved it.

As a British filmmaker venturing into a different culture, more specifically Indian, the obvious challenge would be to avoid whitewashing stories set in that context. How do you navigate that thin line of being sincere without coming across as patronising?

That's a really, really big concern. The key to it is to respect the culture you are dealing with. You need to write it sensitively. In the Marigold series, it didn't really work against us as the whole film deals with the idea of outsiders coming into an unfamiliar culture. As a filmmaker I go into different cultures all the time — I have dabbled into cultures as varied as American and Greek. An outsider's view is always refreshing. The reverse is also true — Ritesh Batra, an Indian director, has made a British film (The Sense of an Ending) and now an American film (Our Souls at Night). The freshness of a story when told from an outsider's perspective is always unique.

The foreigner perspective is particularly relevant in your last film, Miss Sloane. In the film you take on the powerful gun-lobby in America and talk about gun violence, a problem that is uniquely American. For outsiders, like you or even me, the very issue — of Americans having easy access to weapons —​​​​​​​ and its seemingly intransigent status in itself is baffling, simply because of the alienness of it.

It absolutely is. It's as baffling to me as it is to you. How does a sensible, evolved, democratic nation even embrace this idea as something important? But once you look at it carefully, you understand its nuances and get a better perspective although that obviously doesn't change the side of political argument I stand for.

Jessica Chastain in a still from 'Miss. Sloane.'

What perspective does it leave you with? If you take away the politics and the lobbying power of the NRA, is there any way you are able to rationalise it from a humanist point of view?

Well, you have to make an effort to understand how the situation is to a large number of law-abiding, decent citizens who otherwise display all the characteristics of human behaviour that you and I can recognise and identify with. And then there is this. You dig a bit deeper and you realise this notion (of possessing guns) is built into the framework of American individuality and comes from a deep mistrust of the government.

The Second Amendment was famously framed in way that allows American citizens to arm themselves. It has been wholly misappropriated and distorted by a big, special-interest business, which is the armaments industry. The narrative is entirely controlled to make sure that no infringement happens on those rights. The situation has become even more screwed-up thanks to the disruptive presence of Trump who wants to break the system apart and run it his own way. The horrors of gun-possession were particularly revealing in the most recent catastrophe in Vegas. It is inexplicable that this man had access to 47 semi-automatic weapons. What are you going to do with those other than cause havoc and carnage? There's no ideology, it's just someone flipping out.

What happens next is the whole nation goes into mourning but nothing ever changes because the NRA creates this atmosphere where any conversation about gun-control is equated with gun-confiscation.

Miss Sloane didn't quite do well. Do you believe it has to do with how contentious the issue is in America, in the sense that people aren't too comfortable addressing it? Or was it just that people needed time to recover from the trauma of Trump being elected as President?

We opened days after the election results. There was, yes, post-traumatic stress, depression, and a general sense of dismay. I was surprised that anyone even showed up. It's hard to overestimate the effect it had, kind of similar to the Brexit situation back in the UK. It had a seismic effect on people. It was an odd moment for the film to come out and didn't help us commercially. The film was immediately leapt upon by the Alt Right, assuming that we were out to get them, bleeding with our liberal point of view. Post Trump, everything has just become so much worse. Unfortunately, it's not restricted to the US but it's happening everywhere in the world. The growing nationalism is polarising everyone around the world. It's alarming and I feel technology hasn't helped. People are sitting in echo chambers where they see and read views that mirror theirs, ideas that reinforce their own beliefs. There's this intolerance towards an opposing point of view. I was very anxious about not demonising the other side but to just put forth a perspective.

The Second Amendment was famously framed in way that allows American citizens to arm themselves. It has been wholly misappropriated and distorted by a big, special-interest business, which is the armaments industry. The narrative is entirely controlled to make sure that no infringement happens on those rights

From Columbine to Sandy Hook, from Colorado to the shooting at Pulse nightclub in Orlando to now, the Vegas massacre, things have gotten progressively worse. Every shooting is the 'worst shooting in modern American history' until the next one, which is often worse than the previous. As an artiste who has engaged with the issue, do you believe films can act as a tool of social change?

To a certain degree, yes. I still do believe in that thought. For me, films are a way through which people connect with each other. When it comes to cinema, I have a humanist perspective. I make a Miss Sloane because it offers me the chance to examine one character of a country. There are other filmmakers who are more socialist in their approach. Ken Loach, for example, focuses on the marginalised folk of a community and I think that is incredibly valuable. As far as politics is concerned, I am a political filmmaker with a small 'p.' The issue of gun violence is a scandal. But the issue is also simple — it's the easy accessibility to weapons. And I think there isn't enough political will in America to change that. It's really shaming. At the same time, it's easy for me to point a finger because I am not even a part of that world.

Fair. But the sense that I get is that Hollywood isn't all that interested in addressing gun violence at all. The passion with which they produce movies and TV shows on, say, external Islamic terror, I don't think they do so when it comes to home-grown terror involving the abuse of guns.

Oh, there are very, very few movies on that. An American friend of mine told me that no American could make this film (Miss Sloane was largely financed by European production companies). I think the topic is too hot an issue for America. I am amazed that it hasn't been taken on. In any case, film is a very hard needle to thread when it comes to politics. Television, on the other hand, isn't. You have House of Cards, Veep etc but films on politics, like All The President's Men, are relatively lesser. Even with the star power of George Clooney, The Ides of March couldn't command an audience.

Director John Madden poses during a photocall for his film "The Debt" at the 36th American film festival in Deauville.

We live in times of great social and political uncertainty and I mean not just Trump and Brexit, but across countries, barring Canada perhaps. You've made romantic dramas and comedies in the past, but as time changes, does that also change the way you choose your subjects? Are you more tempted to focus on issues that have a stronger social resonance? After all, chronicling the times is an important function of cinema.

It certainly very much is. Most of my films are character-driven dramas because that's what I like the most. There is politics, yes, because I am interested in it. As a filmmaker, I am always looking for complex stories, ones which somewhere have a relation between the private and the public. While I do get your point that as a filmmaker one should definitely engage as much as one can, I don't think film is a political medium.

As the most accessible medium, films can dramatically sway public opinion.

They are but they aren't terribly successful at conveying messages. What films can do though is make people examine aspects of their own behaviour and look at situations differently.

I think that's an important function of cinema as well.

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KFC Is Only Following 11 People On Twitter For A Totally Genius Reason

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KFC’s Twitter game is finger lickin’ good.

In a marketing move that Colonel Sanders himself would have been proud of, someone on Twitter noticed the fast-food chain is highly selective about who it follows on the micro-blogging service.

As Twitter user @edgette22 noted on Thursday, KFC  only follows 11 people ― the five former members of the Spice Girls, and six men named Herb.

“11 Herbs & Spices. I need time to process this,” the tweeter wrote.

Indeed, the analysis is correct:

KFC has long marketed its chicken as the product of a secret recipe with “11 herbs and spices.”

It’s unclear how long KFC had to wait until someone spotted the subtle stunt, which appears to have gone down well with other Twitter users:

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Pollution Killed More Than 9 Million People Worldwide In 2015, India One Of The Worst Affected: Study

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NEW DELHI -- An estimated nine million people died worldwide in 2015 due to diseases caused by pollution -- the biggest cause globally of all premature deaths -- more than AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis combined and even more disastrous than all violence, with India and China contributing to 5.4 million of the pollution-related mortalities, a study has found.

"Pollution is the largest environmental cause of disease and premature death in the world today. Diseases caused by pollution were responsible for an estimated 9 million premature deaths in 2015," the study released on Thursday in The Lancet medical journal noted.

The study, the first to put together data on disease and death caused by all forms of pollution combined, said 16 per cent of all deaths worldwide were attributable to the environmental pollution.

This figure is three times more than the deaths from AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria combined and 15 times more than from all wars and other forms of violence. It is also one-and-a-half times higher than the number of people killed by smoking and over six times the number of people dying in road accidents.

In the most severely affected countries, pollution-related disease are responsible for more than one death in four, it said.

"In 2015, the greatest numbers of deaths due to pollution occurred in Southeast Asia (3·2 million) and the western Pacific (2·2 million). Southeast Asia includes India and the western Pacific region includes China," said the study.

Epidemiologist Philip Landrigan, dean of global health at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and the lead author on the report said pollution has never received the desired attention of world leaders, civil society and health professionals.

"There's been a lot of study of pollution, but it has never received the resources or level of attention as, say, Aids or climate change," Landrigan said.

"Despite its substantial effects on human health, the economy, and the environment, pollution has been neglected, especially in low-income and middle-income countries, and the health effects of pollution are under-estimated in calculations of the global burden of disease."

The report said that pollution in low-income and middle-income countries caused by industrial emissions, vehicular exhaust, and toxic chemicals has particularly been overlooked in both the international development and the global health agendas.

"Although more than 70 per cent of the diseases caused by pollution are non-communicable diseases, interventions against pollution are barely mentioned in the Global Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Non-Communicable Diseases."

Stating that several cities in India and China had recorded alarming annual concentrations of PM2·5 pollution, the study said over 50 per cent of global deaths due to ambient air pollution in 2015 occurred in India and China.

"Ambient air pollution in rapidly expanding mega-cities such as New Delhi and Beijing attracts the greatest public attention. However, WHO documents that the problem of ambient air pollution is widespread in low-income and middle-income countries and finds that 98 per cent of urban areas in developing countries with populations of more than 100,000 people fail to meet the WHO global air quality guideline for PM2·5 pollution of 10 µg/m3 of ambient air annually."

Other countries like Bangladesh, Pakistan, North Korea, South Sudan and Haiti have seen nearly one in every fifth premature deaths caused by pollution.

Pollution, the report said, was also "costly", costing some $4.6 trillion in annual losses - or about 6.2 per cent of the global economy.

"Pollution-related diseases cause productivity losses that reduce gross domestic product (GDP) in low-income to middle-income countries by up to 2 per cent each year. Pollution-related disease also results in health-care costs that are responsible for 1·7 per cent of annual health spending in high-income countries and for up to 7 per cent of health spending in middle-income countries that are heavily polluted and rapidly developing.

"Welfare losses due to pollution are estimated to amount to $4·6 trillion per year: 6·2 per cent of global economic output. The costs attributed to pollution-related disease will probably increase as additional associations between pollution and disease are identified," it said.

Quentin Tarantino On Weinstein: 'I Knew He Did A Couple Of These Things'

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WASHINGTON — Academy Award-winning filmmaker Quentin Tarantino for decades has been hearing about Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein’s alleged sexual abuse, and regrets not taking the accusations more seriously, he told The New York Times in an interview published Thursday.

“I knew enough to do more than I did,” Tarantino told the paper. “There was more to it than just the normal rumors, the normal gossip. It wasn’t secondhand. I knew he did a couple of these things.”

“I wish I had taken responsibility for what I heard,” he added. 

Weinstein is facing ever-growing allegations of sexual harassment and sexual assault, following bombshell investigations by The New York Times and the New Yorker. So far, at least 40 women have accused him of rape, assault or sexual harassment, including Ashley Judd, Gwyneth Paltrow, Angelina Jolie and TV journalist Lauren Sivan.

Tarantino and Weinstein have been longtime friends and business associates. Weinstein distributed or produced several of Tarantino’s films, including “Pulp Fiction,” “Kill Bill” and “The Hateful Eight.”

Tarantino told the Times that over the years he had heard numerous stories about Weinstein’s behavior, including from his former girlfriend, Mira Sorvino. With many rumors, he “chalked it up to a ’50s-’60s era image of a boss chasing a secretary around the desk,” he said. 

“What I did was marginalize the incidents,” Tarantino added. “Anything I say now will sound like a crappy excuse.”

Along with regretting not speaking up, Tarantino said he regrets continuing to work with Weinstein. And he called on others who knew what was going on to “acknowledge that there was something rotten in Denmark” and “vow to do better by our sisters.”

In a statement last week, Tarantino said he was “stunned and heartbroken about the revelations” about his friend and promised to soon speak publicly about it. 

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Harvey Weinstein Anthology Copy

Why We Should View Religious Reform Through The Child Rights Lens

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Image used for representational purposes only.

"At 11, he dropped out of school to devote all his time towards learning religious scriptures. He spent the next two years studying the ways of an ascetic life under his guru. In a month's time, he's going to renounce the world and start life afresh as a monk," says linguistics professional Mishti Shah* of her 13-year old cousin whose family is bustling around proudly preparing for his diksha ceremony next month. "You can't drive before 16, you can't marry before 18, you can't drink alcohol before 21, but you are allowed to give up worldly life at 13, or even earlier. This is ridiculous!" she says with barely concealed frustration.

The controversy surrounding this religious service cropped up again last month when a young Jain couple from Madhya Pradesh relinquished their assets and took diksha, leaving behind their 3-year-old daughter in the care of relatives. Both stories raise questions about the cultural and religious factors that infringe upon child rights, the helplessness of the state in ending it and the need for liberal social reforms.

In the past, attempts by child rights activists and human rights bodies to prohibit the practice of Bal Diksha (renunciation by children) have been met by severe resistance from Jain community leaders, and disputed legal judgements regarding the extent of state interference with religion. A bench of the Bombay High Court proclaimed Bal Diksha to be "as bad as Sati" in 2008 and pondered over the conflict between the Right to Childhood and the Right to Religion in 2011.

For decades, traditional notions of gender and morality have dominated the exercise of human rights, especially those of women and children.

Nicole Menezes, co-founder of Leher, a child rights organisation, says: "this practice is not in the best interests of children. They are not capable of making informed decisions for themselves. Moreover, there is a grey area concerning the legality of the issue. But I believe that the society really needs to collectively develop its own conscience and decide what it wants for children."

In recent times, members of the Jain community – legally recognised as minority – have been divided over the ramifications of this practice. "Bal Diksha has been a contentious subject within the community, with resistance to the practice developing in the early 20th century The Bal Diksha Pratibandh Andolan, a reformist movement led by a section of the Jains themselves sought prohibition of the practise, not so much out of concern for the ascetic child, but out of fear that children could not possibly uphold the rigours of an ascetic life.

For decades, traditional notions of gender and morality have dominated the exercise of human rights, especially those of women and children.

The controversy has continued into the present, but the terrain of arguments has seen a shift, with the more recent opposition centering on the rights of children," says Manisha Sethi, author of Escaping the World: Women Renouncers among Jains. For decades, traditional notions of gender and morality have dominated the exercise of human rights, especially those of women and children. When religious doctrines join hands with established cultural systems, it leaves barely any space for a broader interpretation of individual justice and freedom. And when left unchallenged, these often intolerant norms pave the way for the exploitation of rights in the name of rituals, conventions and spirituality.

Instead of treating a child's so-called disavowal of the worldly life as an occasion to rejoice, we, as conscious beings of a civilised society, ought to deplore the loss of his right to childhood, right to education, and more importantly, right to life.

The conflict between rights and religion is very real. When religion, society and culture start overshadowing the essence of human rights, it's time to step back and consider where one must draw the line. It is irrational to always leave it up to the law to govern the character of the society that evolves from time to time. This reformist confrontation is not about joining forces against religion; rather it entails standing up for the rights of children, transcending the prevalent social and cultural forces.

"The reluctance to challenge norms prevails among followers of almost every religion. Even when people sense a right from wrong, most are unwilling to publicly call attention to it because of the religious bearing attached to it," says Ektaa Jain, research scholar at the Centre for the Study of Social Systems at Jawaharlal Nehru University.

*name changed to protect privacy.

The opinions expressed in this post are the personal views of the author. They do not necessarily reflect the views of HuffPost India. Any omissions or errors are the author's and HuffPost India does not assume any liability or responsibility for them.

Triple Talaq Is Banned, But What Happens To Salma, Shaheen and Sajjida Now?

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Images used for representational purposes only.

When you get a phone call from your husband who is based abroad, you expect a general conversation about his everyday life, when he'll be visiting next, your daily life and as the conversation peters out, the last question is always when will he call next. What you don't expect even in your wildest of dreams, is to have the conversation as 'Mrs. Salma Khan' and end the conversation as 'Miss Salma Ahmed'.

Nightmare or fiction? Neither, this is the truth of Triple Talaq (TT) in the lives of Indian Muslim women before the recent landmark judgement pronounced by the Supreme Court banned it by a 3:2 majority. The judges stated: "given the fact that Triple Talaq is instant and irrevocable, it is obvious that any attempt at reconciliation between the husband and wife by two arbiters from their families, which is essential to save the marital tie, cannot ever take place. This being the case, it is clear that this form of Talaq is manifestly arbitrary in the sense that the marital tie can be broken capriciously and whimsically by a Muslim man without any attempt at reconciliation so as to save it.

The rampant abuse of this form of talaq made the men all powerful, and soon there were triple talaqs being emailed, even sent on WhatsApp.

This form of Talaq must, therefore, be held to be violative of the 393 Fundamental Right contained under Article 14 of the Constitution of India. In our opinion, therefore, the 1937 Act, insofar as it seeks to recognise and enforce Triple Talaq, is within the meaning of the expression 'laws in force' in Article 13(1) and must be struck down as being void to the extent that it recognizes and enforces Triple Talaq." Justices Kurian Joseph, UU Lalit and RF Nariman delivered the majority Judgment. Chief Justice Khehar and Justice Abdul Nazeer dissented. In layman's terms triple talaq is not a legally valid type of divorce after this judgement.

Triple talaq is a form of divorce practiced by Muslim men where even the an utterance of 'talaq, talaq, talaq' was enough for them to divorce their wife. This form of divorce was only available to the Muslim men and not the women, who if they wanted a divorce from their spouse would have to approach the courts and seek a divorce.

Let's take Mrs. Salma Khan's case where she went to speak to her husband, who had called from the Middle-East, on a neighbour's phone, only to be stunned when he pronounced the triple talaq on the phone.

Let's take Mrs. Salma Khan's case where she went to speak to her husband, who had called from the Middle-East, on a neighbour's phone, only to be stunned when he pronounced the triple talaq on the phone. Similarly in my client Shaheen's case, which was even more bizarre, where her husband smsed her the triple talaq. When Shaheen first came to me I thought it was a joke but soon I realised that the joke was on her because the triple talaq was supported by the law. She essentially had no recourse, except to seek maintenance for herself and her children. But it's not always about the money, it's also about a sense of dignity and self-respect as a human being.

Triple talaq divests a woman of all sense of equality in a marriage. When a man is all-powerful and has the ability to end his marriage regardless of whether his wife wants to or not, is it not a violation of human rights? When there is a unilateral and unequivocal application of power we speak of it as an abuse of human rights, which is exactly what TT had become over a period of time. The rampant abuse of this form of talaq made the men all powerful and soon there were triple talaqs being emailed, even being sent on WhatsApp, reducing the woman to a helpless piece of chattel, because she had no absolute rights to contest this form of divorce.

The power balance which was skewed in favour of men will now tilt considerably towards women.

Triple talaq coupled with polygamy is akin to handing over a nuclear bomb to Kim Jong Un, which is what happened to Sajjida's marital life. Whilst she was in court fighting over the validity of the triple talaq, her husband married another woman. I can feel Sajjida's anger, hurt and humiliation each time we go to court to challenge the validity of the talaqnama and also fight for maintenance in court. When the thought of even sharing a boyfriend, with another woman doesn't cross my mind one can't even imagine, having to share a husband with another wife, especially when you have been so unceremoniously divorced using triple talaq.

However, with the passing of this path breaking judgement the socio-legal parameters of Muslim divorces will change in India. The power balance which was skewed in favour of men will tilt considerably towards women. The judgement also emphasises the implementation of Fundamental Rights, and it will be pave the path forward for the Uniform Civil Code. One thing is for sure, the lives of the new Salmas, Shaheens, Sajjidas will definitely not be turned upside down ever again, thanks to the death of the instant triple talaq.

The opinions expressed in this post are the personal views of the author. They do not necessarily reflect the views of HuffPost India. Any omissions or errors are the author's and HuffPost India does not assume any liability or responsibility for them.

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