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What is happening in India? A new rape case

My Blood Boils Every Time I Read These Vicious News Reports: What Is Happening in India?


Harsh truth behind the rising crimes against women in our country. 

Why This Headline? Because It’s Not Just Another Rape Case Anymore. It’s a Pattern. Every time I open a news website, scroll social media, or read the morning paper — there it is again.

“Young girl raped and murdered.”

“Minor gang-raped.”

“Victim denied justice.”

It doesn’t feel like news anymore. It feels like a disease eating India from the inside out.

I am not writing this for views. I am writing this because my blood boils when I see how normal these headlines have become.

I ask you — What is happening in India?

Why is this country — that worships goddesses — so unsafe for real women walking its streets?

Why Are So Many Men Still Free to Commit These Crimes?

The sad truth is this:

Men in India are not afraid of the law.

Why? Because trials take years. Because they know they can buy silence, bribe police, or even blame the victim. Because society is more interested in a woman’s character than the rapist’s crime.

Even worse, powerful people often protect the criminals.

Politicians, local goons, even some police officers — they delay the case, shame the girl, and protect the predator.

This sends a message to every sick mind:

“You can do this and still walk free.”

India’s Image Abroad: What Do Other Countries Think?

India has so much to be proud of — culture, spirituality, talent, brains.

But when it comes to women’s safety, the global image is shameful.

Every time a brutal case goes viral — like Nirbhaya in 2012 or the Unnao case, foreign media calls us a “rape nation.”

Tourists cancel their trips.

Indian women abroad get asked awkward questions like,

“Are you safe in your own country?”


And we can’t even say YES with confidence.

Do we really want the greatest democracy in the world to be known as the most unsafe for women?

Whose Responsibility Is It to Stop This?


Let’s be clear: It’s not just the government’s job.

It’s everyone’s.


The Government Must:

1)Create fast-track courts for rape cases.

2)Make police officers more accountable.

3) Ban politicians with rape charges from elections.

4) Give mental health support to survivors.

5) Create real, visible fear of the law.

 Citizens Must:

1) Raise their voices when they see injustice.

 2)Teach boys respect, not just rules.

3) Raise sons who see women as equals, not objects.

 4) Stop shaming victims. Start shaming rapists.

5) Help survivors heal — not hide.

How Can We Actually Prevent Rape in India.

Here are not just ideas, but real actions:

 1. Sex Education in Schools

Let’s stop pretending kids don’t know about sex. Let’s teach them respect, boundaries, consent, and consequences early.

 2. Stronger Police Patrolling in Dangerous Areas

Most attacks happen in poorly lit, quiet places.

Why don’t we fix those first?

3. Free Helplines and Mobile Safety Apps

Technology exists. Let’s use it to protect, not just entertain.

 4. Change the Narrative

Rape survivors are not weak, they’re warriors.

Let’s change our language, our attitude, and our reaction.

5. Shame the Rapist — Not the Survivor

This is key. Society must stop blaming the clothes, the timing, the location.

Rape is never the victim’s fault.

This Is Not a Women’s Issue. It’s a National Emergency.

If women can’t feel safe walking in the streets of India —

Then we’ve failed as a nation.

We’ve built smart cities, bullet trains, digital revolutions —

But if our daughters can’t come home safe, then what’s the point?

Conclusion: The Fight Starts With Us

Every time a woman is raped in India, a piece of our soul dies.

But it doesn’t have to stay this way.

Raise your voice.

Support change.

Raise better boys.

Hold the system accountable.

And the next time you read another heartbreaking headline, don’t just scroll.

Burn with anger. But also, burn with purpose.

Because silence is no longer an option.

And neither is fear.

🧩 Share this blog if you believe India deserves better — and if you believe no woman should live in fear, ever.

Let’s be the generation that said, “Enough is enough.”

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