74
Fashion Jobs
L'OREAL GROUP
Demand & Supply Planner
Permanent · NEA IONIA
PROCTER & GAMBLE
Junior Brand Manager
Permanent · ATHENS
L'OREAL GROUP
E-Commerce Manager, l’Oréal Dermatological Beauty Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
L'OREAL GROUP
Financial Controller - l’Oréal Dermatological Beauty Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
L'OREAL GROUP
Key Account Supply Chain Manager
Permanent · NEA IONIA
L'OREAL GROUP
Social & Advocacy Manager – Consumer Products Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
PROCTER&GAMBLE
Warehousing Purchasing Junior Manager
Permanent · ATHENS
L'OREAL GROUP
Sales Representative, Professionals Products Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
L'OREAL GROUP
l'Oréal Partner Shop (Lps) Experience Manager, Professionals Products Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
FOOT LOCKER
Συνεργάτης Πωλήσεων
Permanent · THESSALONIKI
RALPH LAUREN
Sales Associate
Permanent · THESSALONIKI
RALPH LAUREN
Sales Associate
Permanent · THESSALONIKI
COS
Σύμβουλος Πωλήσεων
Permanent · MAROUSI
PROCTER & GAMBLE
Brand Specialist
Permanent · ATHENS
GUESS
Part-Time Sales Advisor (Ermou Store)
Permanent · ATHENS
L'OREAL GROUP
Beauty Advisor
Permanent · THESSALONIKI
MANGO
Πωλητεσ / Πωλητριεσ - sa
Fixed-term · ATHENS
SAINT LAURENT
Saint Laurent Stock Associate
Fixed-term · ATHENS
ZARA
Νεο Καταστημα Zara | Πειραιασ
Permanent · ATHENS
ZARA
Αλεξανδρουπολη | Part Time Πωλητεσ
Permanent · ALEXANDROUPOLI
STRADIVARIUS
Ρεθυμνο | Part Time Πωλητεσ
Permanent · RETHIMNO
OYSHO
Ιωαννινα | Part Time Πωλητεσ
Permanent · IOANNINA
By
Reuters
Published
Mar 8, 2018
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Indian acid attack survivors sparkle at fashion show to spotlight equality

By
Reuters
Published
Mar 8, 2018

Sparkling in shades of green, pink and peach, Indian women survivors of acid attacks walked the ramp at a fashion show to boost awareness about violence against women.


Acid attack survivors pose during a fashion show to mark International Women's Day in Thane on the outskirts of Mumbai, India, March 7, 2018. - Photo: Reuters



Scarred faces held high, 11 members of a non-profit group showcased colourful Indian and Western garments, spoke about confidence and posed for photographs on Wednesday, a day ahead of International Women’s Day.

Laxmi, attacked in 2005 at the age of 15 by a 32-year-old man whose marriage proposal she rejected, was the showstopper of the event, held near India’s financial capital of Mumbai.

“I swept aside notions about the face, which society spoke of, and moved forward in life,” said Laxmi, whose plea against acid attacks prompted India’s Supreme Court to order regulations on the sale of acid in 2013.
“We don’t want respect, we want equality.”

More than two-thirds of the 1,500 acid attacks worldwide each year are estimated to take place in India, many by enraged family members or jilted partners.

Few victims report the attacks, for fear of reprisals by abusers, even though the resulting disfigurement often brings isolation and rejection.

“What others think about us does not have relevance, what we think about ourselves is only what matters,” said one participant, Deepmala Tiwary, an attack survivor and member of the nonprofit Acid Survivors and Women Welfare Foundation.

© Thomson Reuters 2024 All rights reserved.