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Mumbai may ban lingerie-clad mannequins to curb crimes

Published: 30 May 2013 - 03:53 am | Last Updated: 02 Feb 2022 - 02:03 pm

MUMBAI: The city council here came under fire yesterday for a proposal to ban lingerie-clad mannequin dummies in shops and markets for fear they could encourage sex crime.

Commentators and women’s rights group have ridiculed the draft directive by Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) at a time when the country is trying to curb crimes against women.

The proposal by BMC member Ritu Tawade awaits final clearance from the civic body’s chief. “I believe that mannequins, especially the two-piece clothes (bikinis), have an impact on the incidence of crimes against women in the state. Such a display affects the mindset of men,” Tawade told NDTV television channel on Tuesday.

Mannequins sporting underwear or bikinis are a common sight at retail showrooms along city streets and shopping malls here. Women’s rights activist Sharada Sathe rubbished the idea. “What nonsense. Mannequins are on display in so many countries. Thinking (of committing a crime) is in the head and not from an outside source,” she said.

Tawade’s proposal has sparked jokes and criticism on Twitter, where former journalist and politician Pritish Nandy wrote: “I have never been aroused by a mannequin. Maybe our BMC corporators are?”

An article on Indian news portal Firstpost said: “Except a handful of perverts who don’t need the provocation of a plastic doll in lace to pounce on women, average Indian men don’t break into sweat and run into lampposts at the mere sight of lingerie.”

The parliament has passed a law imposing strong penalties for sex offences against women following the gang-rape of a student on a Delhi bus that sparked nationwide protests about the lack of safety for women. AFP