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本帖最后由 ooooo 于 2012-12-31 12:22 编辑
Rape statistics
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rape_statistics
This list[17] indicates the number of, and per capita cases of recorded rape. It does not include cases of rape which go unreported, or which are not recorded.[18] Nor does it specify whether recorded means reported, brought to trial, or convicted. Nor does it take the different definition of rape around the world into account.登记在案,而且未排除不同强奸定义。
Rate per 100,000 population 每10万人强奸发生的件数 2010
美国 27.3
德国 9.4
印度 1.8
Armenia 0.4
瑞典 63.5
另一个排名
Rapes (per capita) (most recent) by country
http://www.nationmaster.com/grap ... me-rapes-per-capita
新西兰 第2,
挪威 第5,
德国 第15,
印度根本不上榜,非常安全。
但印度自己的报道是:
http://www.firstpost.com/india/a ... placent-489080.html
One woman gets raped every 22 minutes in India. One child gets raped in every 76 minutes. Only one in every four accused in the crime gets convicted. Between 1971 and 2011 cases of rape registered a 873 percent jump. That is the biggest among all categories of crime. This is the information provided by the National Crime Records Bureau data. Add to the dismal numbers the fact that most such cases go unreported due to social and other reasons.
而英国的新闻报道把印度与妇女最不安全的国家,比如刚果共和国,索马里比:
http://m.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jul/23/why-india-bad-for-women
Look at some statistics and suddenly the survey isn't so surprising. Sure, India might not be the worst place to be a woman on the planet – its rape record isn't nearly as bad as the Democratic Republic of the Congo, for instance, where more than 400,000 women are raped each year, and female genital mutilation is not widespread, as it is in Somalia. But 45% of Indian girls are married before the age of 18, according to the International Centre for Research on Women (2010); 56,000 maternal deaths were recorded in 2010 (UN Population Fund) and research from Unicef in 2012 found that 52% of adolescent girls (and 57% of adolescent boys) think it is justifiable for a man to beat his wife. Plus crimes against women are on the increase: according to the National Crime Records Bureau in India, there was a 7.1% hike in recorded crimes against women between 2010 and 2011 (when there were 228,650 in total). The biggest leap was in cases under the "dowry prohibition act" (up 27.7%), of kidnapping and abduction (up 19.4% year on year) and rape (up 9.2%).
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