3rd, Dec 2014
Mumbai : Actress Gauahar Khan, who was slapped by a man on the set of a reality show, says laxity in the security arrangements led to the incident. An audience member on the sets of a relity show attacked her for wearing skimpy clothes.
She said, “If any lapse has happened, then it was in security. Without security check how could you give him the card? Isn’t it terrorising? “This is also a terror and it has nothing to do with any belief. No religion or culture gives you the permission of being violent.
“This loser does not represent my beautiful faith, which in itself means peace and submission,” the actress told reporters at a press conference. Reportedly, the accused Mohammad Akil Malik got up and went to the stage. Initially, he tried to touch her and then slapped her. He asked her how she could wear skimpy outfits and dance to cheap songs despite being a Muslim.
“I am not here to promote any kind of dress code, or state that one must or must not wear certain clothes.
I am only here to state that no one has the right to attack or hurt anybody for excising one’s personal thoughts or beliefs,” said Khan. She wonders that if actresses are subject to such harmful mindsets, then how safe a common girl or a woman would be? “It angers me to realise that a man thought it’s okay to raise his hand and be violent to a woman at his will.” She feels one can oppose any ideology in a peaceful manner. IANS:
Mumbai : Actress Gauahar Khan, who was slapped by a man on the set of a reality show, says laxity in the security arrangements led to the incident. An audience member on the sets of a relity show attacked her for wearing skimpy clothes.
She said, “If any lapse has happened, then it was in security. Without security check how could you give him the card? Isn’t it terrorising? “This is also a terror and it has nothing to do with any belief. No religion or culture gives you the permission of being violent.
“This loser does not represent my beautiful faith, which in itself means peace and submission,” the actress told reporters at a press conference. Reportedly, the accused Mohammad Akil Malik got up and went to the stage. Initially, he tried to touch her and then slapped her. He asked her how she could wear skimpy outfits and dance to cheap songs despite being a Muslim.
“I am not here to promote any kind of dress code, or state that one must or must not wear certain clothes.
I am only here to state that no one has the right to attack or hurt anybody for excising one’s personal thoughts or beliefs,” said Khan. She wonders that if actresses are subject to such harmful mindsets, then how safe a common girl or a woman would be? “It angers me to realise that a man thought it’s okay to raise his hand and be violent to a woman at his will.” She feels one can oppose any ideology in a peaceful manner. IANS:
