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Negotiating an increasingly intolerant Mumbai
Updated On: 24 August, 2013 02:58 AM IST | | Gurbir Singh
In Mumbai, this is a shocker. A young journalist working on a shooting assignment at an abandoned textile mill in the heart of Mumbai is dragged away by a gang of hoodlums and gang-raped till she falls unconscious.
In Mumbai, this is a shocker. A young journalist working on a shooting assignment at an abandoned textile mill in the heart of Mumbai is dragged away by a gang of hoodlums and gang-raped till she falls unconscious. It was not very late hour. Possibly 6.30-7.00 pm, when she and her colleague thought they could get the soft light for capturing the archways of the mysterious, crumbling Shakti Mills. The end result of the shooting assignment was not romantic. It was horrific.u00a0
Mumbai has slowly but surely lost its liberal, industrial culture. There was a time when women production journalists from Times of India and Indian Express caught the last train home at 1.00 am after they had put the edition to bed. By the mid-nineties, a couple of cases of suburban auto-drivers making passes at late night commuters changed all that. The Times of India started a dormitory for women working late; other media groups arranged car drops for those who worked late.
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