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According to a report published on 2 March 2009 in the British medical journal, The Lancet, over 100,000 young women
Over 100, 000 women died of 'fires' in 2001, a symptom of the gravity of domestic violence
(2% of all deaths) were killed in fires in India in a single year. The causes of these deaths were not accidental, according to the authors, but rather a result of domestic violence.  However, Indian Social Research Organisation Save Indian Family Foundation has said that these figures are totally flawed and this organisation published flaws in the way the estimates were generated.

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Methodology

The authors of the report used a combination of data sources including hospital-based studies, police records and other health datasets to uncover the full extent of the problem, since there are significant lacunae in police and government literature. They computed age—sex-specific fire-related mortality fractions nationally using a death registration system based on medically certified causes of death in urban areas and a verbal autopsy based sample survey for rural populations. They combined this with all-cause mortality estimates based on the sample registration system and the population census.  The data was then adjusted to include ill-defined injury categories that might contain misclassified fire-related deaths, and estimated the proportion of suicides due to self-immolation when deaths were reported by external causes.

Results

Young Indian women are more than three times as likely as young men to be killed by firel. The victims were mainly 15 to 34 years old. The study found that out of the 163, 000 fire-related deaths in 2001 (6 times higher than those in police records), 106, 000 (or 65%) were women.

"The high frequency of fire-related deaths in young women suggests that these deaths share common causes, including kitchen accidents, self-immolation, and different forms of domestic violence. Identification of populations at risk and description of structural determinants from existing data sources are urgently needed so that interventions can be rapidly implemented."

Domestic Violence

Domestic violence is a serious problem in India. Often, in disputes over dowries, women are doused with gasoline and set ablaze, and their deaths are reported as kitchen accidents. Women's rights campaigners have lamented on the passive and inactive response of authorities to the problem. Interviewed by the New York Times,  Indira Jaising, director of the Women’s Rights Initiative of the Lawyers Collective in New Delhi, said the authorities paid the issue nothing more than lip service.

“Once the death takes place they are willing to investigate, but by then it’s too late,” she said. “When women go to them with complaints when they’re alive, those complaints should be taken seriously.”

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