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NARI 2025 Data Reveals Safest Cities For Women, But Why Does Fear Still Shape Every Choice They Make?
Every woman in India knows the quiet rituals of safety she performs daily-sending a text to say she's reached, clutching her keys between her fingers while walking at night, avoiding a lonely street even if it means taking the longer route home. Safety for women in India is not just a statistic, it's a lived experience shaped by fear, caution, and compromise.
The latest National Annual Report and Index on Women's Safety (NARI) 2025, released in Delhi by National Commission for Women (NCW) chairperson Vijaya Rahatkar, lays bare this paradox. While data claims cities like Mumbai, Kohima, Visakhapatnam, Bhubaneswar, Aizawl, Gangtok, and Itanagar are among the safest, the lived reality is far more complex. Because for many women, safety exists only on paper, not in their lives.

1. Fear Shapes Choices Even In the "Safest" Cities In India
The NARI 2025 report surveyed 12,770 women across 31 cities and rated India's national safety score at 65 per cent. Six in ten women said they felt safe, while four in ten described themselves as "unsafe" or "not so safe."
This means that even in so-called "safe" cities, almost half the women live with constant fear. Cities may top rankings, but if a woman avoids certain areas at night or hesitates to take public transport alone, can they truly be called safe?
2. Safety Changes Between Day And Night
The
contrast
between
safety
in
the
day
and
at
night
is
striking.
While
86
per
cent
of
women
said
they
felt
secure
in
schools
and
colleges
during
the
day,
that
sense
of
assurance
collapsed
after
dark.
Streets,
public
transport,
and
recreational
areas
became
danger
zones
after
sunset.
This
suggests
that
safety
in
Indian
cities
is
conditional-dependent
on
time
and
place-forcing
women
to
redesign
their
daily
routines
around
invisible
curfews.

3. Harassment, And Crime Records
Official records often underplay the scale of harassment women face. Seven per cent of respondents reported harassment in 2024, but the figure doubled to 14 per cent among women aged 18 to 24. Incidents ranged from catcalling and lewd comments to unwanted touching. Neighbourhoods (38 per cent) and public transport (29 per cent) were named as hotspots.
Yet only one in three women reported these experiences. With two-thirds staying silent, the NCRB data misses the bulk of everyday harassment, revealing a troubling trust gap.
4. The Trust Deficit With Authorities
Only
25
per
cent
of
women
expressed
confidence
that
authorities
would
act
effectively
if
they
filed
a
complaint.
While
69
per
cent
felt
existing
safety
measures
were
"somewhat
adequate,"
more
than
30
per
cent
flagged
serious
gaps.
This
lack
of
trust
forces
women
to
rely
on
self-protection
rather
than
institutional
mechanisms.
In
other
words,
women's
safety
often
depends
more
on
personal
survival
strategies
than
systemic
safeguards.
5. Why Some Cities Do Better
Cities that ranked higher-like Mumbai, Kohima, and Aizawl-shared common factors such as stronger gender equity, community participation, women-friendly infrastructure, and more responsive policing. On the other hand, cities at the bottom of the index, including Patna, Jaipur, and Delhi, reflected weak institutional responses, patriarchal social norms, and poor urban infrastructure.
These findings underline that women's safety is not merely about law and order but about the cultural and structural environment of a city.
6. Beyond Law And Order: Redefining Safety
NCW chairperson Vijaya Rahatkar highlighted that women's safety cannot be seen only as a policing issue. It affects education, employment, health, and freedom of movement. She pointed to four dimensions of safety: physical, psychological, financial, and digital. The rise of cybercrime and data misuse now threatens women's security in the online space as much as harassment does on the streets.
The report acknowledged progress-such as women's helplines, CCTV coverage, and more women in police forces-but also emphasised that society as a whole must share responsibility. A safe city is one where women don't have to restrict themselves, because women limiting themselves holds back the nation's growth too.
While some cities show that stronger policies and inclusive urban planning can make women feel safer, the fact that 40 per cent of women still feel unsafe is a reminder that safety is not just a matter of statistics. Until women can move freely without redesigning their lives around fear, India's cities will remain "safe on paper but unsafe in reality."



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