Whether the rate of honour killings are more or less in Islamic nations than in India is besides the point. (and who would even begin to know those statistics anyway given the secretive nature of the crime). Religion is besides the point too - didn't even think of religion while I was watching the documentary . It was a heinous crime that no religious or cultural excuses can absolve.
Of course we have to have defence lawyers , that's part of a fair judicial system, but in no system do we need ones that are prepared to speak outside court in such a vile and backwards thinking manner.
This is the twenty first century, India is a democracy , it has many fine women in government and in charge of institutions, it just looks to the outside world like a divided country.
From your own point of view Ashdoc, leaving religion aside please, what can be done or is being done in India to change that type of mans attitude towards women?
Of course we have to have defence lawyers , that's part of a fair judicial system, but in no system do we need ones that are prepared to speak outside court in such a vile and backwards thinking manner.
This is the twenty first century, India is a democracy , it has many fine women in government and in charge of institutions, it just looks to the outside world like a divided country.
From your own point of view Ashdoc, leaving religion aside please, what can be done or is being done in India to change that type of mans attitude towards women?