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Expressing displeasure at the practice of covering women’s faces with a ”ghoonghat” or veil in some rural areas, Gehlot said the custom belongs to a bygone era.
“Time has changed now but the practice of ”ghoonghat” is still there in villages. What is right in confining a woman to ”ghoonghat”? Women cannot progress till the ”ghoonghat” exists,” he said at a programme in Jaipur organised by an NGO.
Gehlot said women will be able to come forward and play a constructive role in nation-building only when they are not forced to cover their faces.
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“You (women) move forward with strength, the state government is with you,” he said.
Ashok Gehlot also emphasized the importance of completely eradicating the practice of child marriages, saying it destroys the lives of children.
The chief minister said his government is serious about crime against women and therefore decided earlier this year to depute a senior police officer at the district level to monitor cases of crime against women.
“The officer will look after all such cases and will ensure that justice is done,” he said.
Ashok Gehlot also said that while the state government has been providing self-defence training to school girls, he has now directed officials to extend the programme to all girls willing to join it.
He also highlighted schemes and programmes of his government and launched a book based on women’s struggles.
State Women and Child Development Minister Mamta Bhupesh was present at the event.