MUMBAI, India – Thousands of Indians, many fuming over a recent assault on women in a pub, are vowing to fill bars on Valentine’s Day and send cartons of pink panties to a radical Hindu group that has branded outgoing females immoral. A “consortium of pub-going, loose and forward women,” founded by four Indian women on social networking Web site Facebook has, in a matter of days, attracted more than 25,000 members with over 2,000 posts about the self-appointed moral police. The women said their mission was to go bar-hopping on February 14 and send hundreds of pink knickers to Sri Ram Sena, the militant Hindu group that has said pubs are for men, and that women should stay at home and cook for their husbands.The same Hindu group was blamed for attacking women in a bar in the southern city of Mangalore in January, an incident that sparked a national debate about women’s freedoms in India.

Collection centers have sprung up in several cities, with volunteers calling for bright pink old-fashioned knickers as gifts to the Sri Ram Sena as a mark of defiance.

“Girl power! Go girls, go. Show Ram Sena… who’s the boss,” reads one post on Facebook from Larkins Dsouza.

‘Hooligans’
There is a separate campaign to “Walk to the nearest pub and buy a drink (and) raise a toast,” that has found supporters from Toronto to Bangkok to Sydney, with even teetotalers saying they will get a drink on Saturday to show solidarity.

“Though I don’t promote smoking or drinking for both sexes, we definitely don’t need hooligans telling us what to do and what not. Best of luck!,” reads one post from Iftehar Ahsan.

There are more heated discussion threads as well that range from the limits of independence to religion and politics, reflecting the struggle facing a country that has long battled to balance its deep-rooted traditions with rapid modernization.

Growing numbers of young and independent urban women have become an easy target for religious fundamentalists and aging politicians trying to force traditional mores on an increasingly liberal, Western outlook.

Not to be outdone, the Sri Ram Sena, which has cautioned shops and pubs in southern Karnataka state against marking Valentine’s Day, has promised to gift pink saris to women and marry off canoodling couples to make them “respectable.”

Fifteen-year-old Ashwini committed suicide because she felt humiliated.
But the men who caught and thrashed her and her Muslim friend haven’t been arrested yet.
In the Mangalore pub attack earlier, right wing Hindu activists thrashed women publically. The men from Sri
Ram Sene were bailed out within a week.
So when Mangalore’s reputation is under attack what do the authorities do?
The Mayor presses charges against a Union Minister for calling the developments Talibanisation.

On Wednesday, a court allowed Mayor Ganesh Hosebettu to file an FIR against Women and Child Development Minister Renuka Chowdhury.
“I am amazed and amused . They must actually go against those who attacked. In fact papers also called it Talibanisation,” she says.

But what’s even more shocking is the candid admission to NDTV by Mangalore’s top cop.
Sateesh Kumar, SP of Mangalore, says: “We have managed to find out who the accused are, we will be shortly arresting them.”
“If the police take action nobody will dare do it again. We have the Police, the home minister only to protect us. But their statements shock and scare me,” says a local.
The Managlore Mayor has acted against a Central Minister to prove a point. But many question, why are those who tarnished Mangalore’s image in the first place free?