Amit Kilhor is shamelessly defending Sejal Pawar while criticizing the 370 guy. Even Prakhar Gupta called out his hypocrisy during the podcast. inframe: Amit Kilhor
I usually like his opinions but this one is completely wrong.
I usually like his opinions but this one is completely wrong.
The women trainee kissed the male constable but only the man was suspended.
UP Police is unbelievable! At the Urai Kotwali in Jalaun, a female constable was repeatedly engaging in obscene behavior with her male police colleague. Her actions were captured on CCTV. After the matter came to light, the authorities suspended the male constable instead of the female constable.
The video clearly shows that the woman is the one initiating things. And It is also clearly visible that the man is not showing much interest in it. The man is even distancing himself from the female yet action was taken on him! If a man had done this, it would have become a case of sexual harassment at the workplace.
In the past week alone, Ekam Nyaay Foundation documented 31 cases involving husbands being murdered by their wives, as well as men ending their lives amid matrimonial disputes.
31 lives lost in just one week, yet it barely makes a whisper on national television.
The controversy surrounding Himanshu Jangra dominated headlines, television debates, and social media discussions. While we unequivocally condemn the words used by Himanshu, an equally important question remains unanswered:
Why are the deaths of husbands receiving so little attention?
When men are murdered by their spouses, when fathers die by suicide following prolonged matrimonial conflicts, or when families are torn apart by abuse and litigation, these stories rarely receive sustained national attention.
Every life matters. Every victim deserves justice. Every tragedy deserves acknowledgment.
The issue is not whether Himanshu Jangra should have been questioned, he should have been. The issue is whether the suffering and deaths of husbands deserve the same level of media attention, public debate, and institutional concern.
A society committed to justice cannot selectively highlight victims based on gender. If outrage is warranted in one case, empathy, awareness, and accountability must extend to all victims.
The conversation should not be limited to controversies alone. It must also include those whose stories, suffering, and deaths often go unnoticed.
Justice should not be selective based on gender.