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Chitchat Shitskin girls stripped but not for porn

steffychun

Alfrescian
Loyal
'Period-shaming' Indian college forces students to strip to underwear

India's uncomfortable relationship with periods is back in the headlines.
College students living in a hostel in the western Indian state of Gujarat have complained that they were made to strip and show their underwear to female teachers to prove that they were not menstruating.
The 68 young women were pulled out of classrooms and taken to the toilet, where they were asked to individually remove their knickers for inspection.
The incident took place in the city of Bhuj on Tuesday. The young women are undergraduate students at Shree Sahajanand Girls Institute (SSGI), which is run by Swaminarayan sect, a wealthy and conservative Hindu religious group.
They said a hostel official had complained to the college principal on Monday that some of the students were breaking rules menstruating women are supposed to follow.
According to these rules, women are barred from entering the temple and the kitchen and are not allowed to touch other students during their periods.
At meal times, they have to sit away from others, they have to clean their own dishes, and in the classroom, they are expected to sit on the last bench.

One of the students told BBC Gujarati's Prashant Gupta that the hostel maintains a register where they are expected to enter their names when they get their periods, which helps the authorities to identify them.
But for the past two months, not one student had entered her name in the register - perhaps not surprising considering the restrictions they have to put up with if they do.
So on Monday, the hostel official complained to the principal that menstruating students were entering the kitchen, going near the temple, and mingling with other hostellers.
The students allege that, the next day, they were abused by the hostel official and the principal before they were forced to strip.
They described what happened to them as a "very painful experience" that had left them "traumatised" and amounted to "mental torture".
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One student's father said that when he arrived at the college, his daughter and several other students came to him and started crying. "They are in shock," he said.
On Thursday, a group of students held a protest on the campus, demanding action against the college officials who had "humiliated" them.
The college trustee Pravin Pindoria said the incident was "unfortunate", adding that an investigation had been ordered and action would be taken against anyone found guilty of wrongdoing.
But Darshana Dholakia, the vice-chancellor of the university which the college is affiliated with, put the blame on the students. She said that they had broken rules and added that some of them had apologised.
However, some of the students told BBC Gujarati that they are now under pressure from the school authorities to play down the incident and not to speak of their ordeal.
On Friday, the Gujarat State Women's Commission ordered an investigation into this "shameful exercise" and asked the students to "come forward and speak without fear about their grievances". The police have lodged a complaint.

This is not the first time that female students have been humiliated on account of periods.
In a very similar case, 70 students were stripped naked three years ago at a residential school in northern India by the female warden after she found blood on a bathroom door.
Discrimination against women on account of menstruation is widespread in India, where periods have long been a taboo and menstruating women are considered impure. They are often excluded from social and religious events, denied entry into temples and shrines and kept out of kitchens.
Increasingly, urban educated women have been challenging these regressive ideas. In the past few years, attempts have been made to see periods for just what they are - a natural biological function.
But success has been patchy.
In 2018, the top court in a landmark order threw open the doors of the Sabarimala shrine to women of all ages, saying that keeping women out of the temple in the southern state of Kerala was discriminatory.
But a year later, the judges agreed to review the order after massive protests in the state.
Surprisingly, the protesters included a large number of women - an indication of how deeply rooted the stigma over menstruation is.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-51504992
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Cheebai blood is full of disease and contaminants, hygiene is so important especially in these times.

Don't let the feminazis convince you that there's nothing shameful about menstruation. They are a bunch of godless and rebellious women, modern day Jezebels. They are an accursed bunch of hellbound satanic whores.

Menstrual-Art-Blog.jpeg
 

cloudy

Alfrescian
Loyal
Cheebai blood is full of disease and contaminants, hygiene is so important especially in these times.

Don't let the feminazis convince you that there's nothing shameful about menstruation. They are a bunch of godless and rebellious women, modern day Jezebels. They are an accursed bunch of hellbound satanic whores.

Menstrual-Art-Blog.jpeg
Are you an idiot?

Menstrual blood is nothing but normal human blood mixed with tissues lining the uterus. Contact with menstrual blood is not harmful in any way. If your partner has a STD, you have a high chance of contracting it and you should be using a condom during intercourse, both during periods and otherwise.

Grow up :rolleyes:
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Are you an idiot?

Menstrual blood is nothing but normal human blood mixed with tissues lining the uterus. Contact with menstrual blood is not harmful in any way. If your partner has a STD, you have a high chance of contracting it and you should be using a condom during intercourse, both during periods and otherwise.

Grow up :rolleyes:

A315C87826F3E661E18F37C9548BBBBA6D73C720
 

steffychun

Alfrescian
Loyal
Are you an idiot?

Menstrual blood is nothing but normal human blood mixed with tissues lining the uterus. Contact with menstrual blood is not harmful in any way. If your partner has a STD, you have a high chance of contracting it and you should be using a condom during intercourse, both during periods and otherwise.

Grow up :rolleyes:
Only way to find out is to use sanitary pad for any cut.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Indian students forced to remove underpants to prove they weren't menstruating
Posted about 2 hours ago

A group of girls wearing red skirts and long white socks shown from the waist down are reflected in a big puddle PHOTO: One of the students said that the principal had "abused" them. (Reuters: Ravi Sahani)
RELATED STORY: Nepali girls still forced to sleep in menstruation huts, with sometimes fatal consequences
RELATED STORY: Indian schoolgirls thrashed by mob for confronting sexual harassers
RELATED STORY: Breaking the menstrual taboo that still holds women back
More than 60 young women at a school in India have said they were forced to strip and show their underpants to teachers in order to prove that they were not on their period.

Key points:
  • Menstruation is heavily stigmatised parts of South Asia
  • College rules placed restrictions on students who are menstruating, including requiring them to sleep in the basement and not touch other students
  • In neighbouring Nepal, so-called "menstruation huts" are still widespread


Some 68 female students were told to undress after a used sanitary napkin was found in the garden of Sahjanand Girls Institute in the city of Bhuj.

A 'period revolution'
A 'period revolution'

Could the menstrual cup — a silicone alternative to pads and tampons — help Nepal's girls avoid the deadly chhaupadi ritual?


"The principal abused and insulted us, asking which of us were having our periods. Two of us who were menstruating stepped aside," said one of the students, as quoted by the Hindustan Times.

"Despite this, we were all taken to the washroom. There, female teachers asked us to individually remove our undergarments so they could check if we were menstruating."

The college, located in Prime Minister Narendra Modi's home state of Gujarat, is run by the conservative Swaminarayan Hindu sect.

"The girls were informed about the hostel rules before they took admission," college trustee Pravin Pindoria told the AFP news agency.

"I have called a meeting of the administrative committee, which will take action against the responsible persons."
These rules include restrictions on menstruating females, who are not allowed to enter the temple and kitchen, socialise or touch other students or sleep inside the hostel, according to local media reports. While menstruating, students must stay in the basement.

India's National Commission for Women said that it was investigating the incident.

Menstruation stigmatised in many parts of South Asia
Young girl crouched in a shed PHOTO: In neighbouring Nepal, some 77 per cent of Nepalese girls are forced to sleep outside of their home while on their period. (Reuters: Navesh Chitrakar)


Menstruation is heavily stigmatised in much of India and other parts of South Asia, where women are often forbidden from places of worship while on their period.


NCW

@NCWIndia

https://twitter.com/NCWIndia/status/1229042527564521473

NCW Inquiry Team led by Member Dr. Rajul L. Desai, along with Advocate Malshree Gadhvi (DLSA) visited the Sahjanand Girls Institute at Bhuj today to discuss the incident of 'Strip Test'. Three Females held responsible are suspended by the Administration.
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9:59 PM - Feb 16, 2020
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According to UNICEF, in India, "menstruation is considered dirty and impure and during periods girls are discouraged to attend school and stay at homes".

The country scrapped a controversial tax on sanitary pads in 2018, which was seen as eliminating a major barrier to girls attending school.

As many as eight in 10 Indian women and girls are estimated not to have access to sanitary pads.

In 2017, a 12-year-old girl killed herself after being shamed by a teacher in front of male classmates for having a period stain on her uniform.

In neighbouring Nepal, so-called "menstruation huts" are still widespread, with a recent study showing some 77 per cent of Nepalese girls are forced to sleep outside of their home while on their period.

"A large number of girls drop out of schools around puberty owing to lack of sanitation and privacy," wrote Vageshwari Deswal, a legal scholar at the University of Delhi, in response to the incident at Sahjanand Girls Institute.

"People need to know and understand that it is a normal physiological function of womanhood. Having periods is not something to be ashamed of."
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Cheebai blood is full of disease and contaminants, hygiene is so important especially in these times.

Don't let the feminazis convince you that there's nothing shameful about menstruation. They are a bunch of godless and rebellious women, modern day Jezebels. They are an accursed bunch of hellbound satanic whores.

Menstrual-Art-Blog.jpeg
Sex with the wife just before and during the time of the month is actually quite good,,,the chicks are more sensitive and if afraid of the blood just do it in the bathroom...
 
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