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Lend your voice to the campaign - Acid Attacks

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prasad1

Active member
There can be few things that are worse than the plight of an acid attack victim whose life is destroyed in a few nano seconds.


According to the home ministry’s data, somewhere in India, every third day, a woman becomes a victim of an acid attack. Yet, despite the alarming rate at which lives are corroded, the government has done little to deal with this most horrific crime.


Laxmi was 15 when she became the victim of an acid attack in 2005. A year later, she went to court petitioning for a ban on the sale of acid. Thus began her long, hard legal battle, which ended only recently with the Supreme Court order regulating the sale of this deadly liquid weapon.


But this order is just one small step.


We at Hindustan Times are proud to have begun an initiative to wake up India against acid attacks. Our campaign, which began on July 21, has received overwhelming support from our readers. The life stories of young victims – mainly women – have inspired many to join HT in its fight against acid attacks.


Our readers have come forward to offer jobs, financial assistance and medical care to many of the victims who have boldly shared their trauma and shaken the consciousness of society. Our readers have been our most valuable partners in the Stop Acid Attacks campaign.


But this is just the beginning. Just the regulation of acid sales is, however, not enough. While there are scores of factories manufacturing acid without a licence, illegal sales of the deadly liquid are quite commonplace too. Moreover, the perpetrators of acid attacks, among the most heinous of crimes, deserve the severest punishment.


After an attack, medical and psychological care is what victims need the most. Join our online campaign and add your signature to our petition demanding that the state reimburses all medical costs and rehabilitates victims who have a right to live with dignity.


Do visit StopAcidAttacks - Specials - Page 1 - Hindustan Times and add power to the petition.


We seek your participation in the fight against acid attacks. You can start at home, by sensitising your family and friends, against a crime that disfigures and scars women.


Lend your voice to a campaign that needs to be fought by each one of us, not just by the victims who have already suffered the worst.


Keep writing in to us and we will keep digging out stories of courage and reporting them in HT.


Join us in the campaign to Stop Acid Attacks.


Sanjoy Narayan
Editor-in-chief
 
why cant they do the same thing to the perpetrator? throw the same acid back at him? or would that be considered too cruel?

after all, is that no, 'do unto others what others would do unto you' means.
 
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