An Indian student's internship request was rejected by a professor in Germany citing "rape problem" in India, prompting a sharp reaction from the German envoy to India who condemned it saying India was not a "country of rapists".
Professor Beck-Sickinger of Leipzig University in Free State of Saxony had rejected the internship application, saying she does not accept any Indian male student for internship. "Unfortunately I don't accept any Indian male students for internships. We hear a lot about the rape problem in India which I cannot support. I have many female students in my group, so I think this attitude is something I cannot support," Sickinger said in a reported email.
German professor rejects Indian intern due to 'rape problem'
Taking note of the incident, German Ambassador to India Michael Steiner wrote a strong-worded letter to the professor following which she apologised for her "unwarranted remarks" in the rejection letter to the student whose identity is not known. "I have made a mistake. I sincerely apologise to everyone whose feelings I have hurt," Sickinger was quoted as saying by the German embassy in New Delhi. In his letter, Steiner said, "Let's be clear: India is not a country of rapists."
"In India, the Nirbhaya case has triggered a lively honest, sustained and very healthy public debate - a public debate of a quality that wouldn't be possible in many other countries.
"The Indian Government and Indian civil society organisations are very committed to tackling the issue. Yesterday we celebrated International Women's Day at the German Embassy in Delhi with many local activists including many men," he said in the letter.
He said the Nirbhaya rape case has refocused attention on the issue of violence against women. "Rape is indeed a serious issue in India as in most countries, including Germany."
"Your oversimplifying and discriminating generalization is an offence to these women and men ardently committed to furthering women empowerment in India; and it is an offence to millions of law-abiding, tolerant, open-minded and hard-working Indians,"