India Solo Female Travel 2026: Safety, Best Destinations, Kerala, Pondicherry, Himachal, Goa, Women-Only Stays Complete Guide

India Solo Female Travel 2026: Safety, Best Destinations, Kerala, Pondicherry, Himachal, Goa, Women-Only Stays Complete Guide

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India Solo Female Travel 2026: Safety, Best Destinations, Kerala, Pondicherry, Himachal, Goa, Women-Only Stays Complete Guide

TL;DR

I have spent four years travelling India alone as a woman, and 2026 is the year the country built the infrastructure to back up the welcome. Kerala, Pondicherry, Himachal Pradesh, Goa and Sikkim top my list for first-time solo female travellers, with low reported crime rates, women-only dorm options and easy public transport. This guide walks through safety apps, dress norms, budget tables and three itineraries.

Why Visit India in 2026

I keep coming back to India because the country has quietly built a women-traveller support net that did not exist a decade ago. The 112 single emergency number went PAN-India in 2019, the SHE App from Telangana Police gives one-tap panic alerts, and the Himmat Plus app from Delhi Police lets me share my live location. Train tickets carry a women-coach option on most long routes, and Bangalore, Hyderabad, Delhi and Mumbai metros run pink coaches reserved for female passengers during peak hours.

Cost is the second reason. The rupee sat around 83 to the US dollar in early 2026, so a clean private room in Kerala costs me 1,400 INR (about 17 USD) and a thali lunch in Pondicherry runs 180 INR (about 2.20 USD). The calendar is the third reason: 2026 is a quieter Kumbh year, visa-on-arrival now covers 156 nationalities, and February, March, September and October give dry weather without December crowds.

Background: India Women-Travel Infrastructure

The Ministry of Tourism's 2024 Bureau of Immigration figures put women at roughly 17% of inbound foreign tourist arrivals, up from 14% in 2016. That single statistic changed how hostels, hotels and tour operators built their 2024 and 2025 products. The Sisterhood of Travelers, a Mumbai-based women-only community founded in 2018, now counts more than 30,000 members across WhatsApp and Facebook. They run verified women-host stays, group trips and a city-by-city safety check service that saved me from two bad guesthouse bookings.

On the public-safety side, the Tourist Police set up the Mahila Suraksha Dal women's safety patrol in Delhi in 2014, with the model since copied in Jaipur, Agra, Mumbai and Bangalore. I have flagged one down twice in five trips, once at Hauz Khas village and once at the Jaipur railway station, and on both occasions they walked me to a safe pre-paid taxi stand within minutes.

The 2019 rollout of 112 replaced the older mosaic of 100, 102 and 101. One number, one operator, one response across all 36 states and union territories. The SHE App, launched by Telangana Police in 2014, has a panic button that alerts the nearest police station and three contacts with live GPS. Delhi Police's Himmat Plus app, refreshed in 2019, adds audio and video evidence capture and a taxi-tracking feature for Uber and Ola. I downloaded all three before my first trip.

Five Tier-1 Destinations for Solo Female Travellers

1. Kerala, the Backwater South

Kerala is where I tell first-timers to start. The state's 2023 reported crime rate against women, per the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), sat at 0.6 per 100,000, the second lowest in the country after Sikkim. Public transport is dense, English is widely spoken thanks to the state's 96% literacy rate, and the "God's Own Country" marketing line tracks the experience.

My usual loop is Kochi (Fort Kochi homestays, Mattancherry spice markets, Chinese fishing nets at sunset), a one-night houseboat from Alleppey through the Vembanad backwaters, three nights in Munnar tea country, and a final two days on Varkala's red cliffs. Trains link every leg, dorms at the Hosteller Kochi start at 650 INR (about 8 USD), and women-only floor options at the Crown Plaza Kochi run 6,200 INR (about 75 USD). Sadhya, the banana-leaf vegetarian feast, runs 180 to 250 INR at lunch. Karimeen pollichathu (pearlspot in banana leaf) at a Fort Kochi Mappila kitchen is about 320 INR. Most restaurants in Fort Kochi and Varkala have family-section seating, meaning women and groups get the quieter tables.

2. Pondicherry, the French Quarter

Pondicherry (officially Puducherry since 2006) is a union territory on the southeast coast, a former French colony that retained its mustard-yellow colonial grid, baguette bakeries and Promenade Beach. Population is around 250,000, the town is walkable, and the French Quarter (White Town) feels safer at night than most Indian cities I have visited.

The Auroville township, founded in 1968 by Mirra Alfassa and now home to roughly 3,300 residents from over 50 nationalities, sits 12 kilometres north. Day passes to the Matrimandir are free, and surrounding guest houses, cafes and yoga studios cater to long-stay female travellers. I once booked a two-week residency at the Verite guest house for 1,800 INR per night including meals. Solo female travellers cluster at Coromandel Cafe, Baker Street and the Promenade in the early evenings. I have walked the seawall alone at 9 pm on multiple trips and never felt uncomfortable.

3. Himachal Pradesh, the Hill Stations

Himachal Pradesh is my pick for solo women who want mountains, trekking and a slower pace. NCRB 2023 numbers put the state's crime rate against women at 0.9 per 100,000, well below the national figure. The hill-station network of Manali, Kasol, Dharamsala and McLeod Ganj has been a backpacker circuit since the 1970s.

McLeod Ganj is the seat of the Tibetan government-in-exile and houses the Dalai Lama's residence. The town is compact, dominated by Buddhist monasteries, Tibetan refugee businesses and yoga studios. I usually base myself at Zostel McLeod Ganj (dorm 550 INR, women-only dorm on request) and take day hikes to Triund (9 km round-trip) or longer treks to Indrahar Pass with a registered guide. From Manali I have done the two-day Spiti Valley road trip via Rohtang Pass with a women-only group booked through the Sisterhood of Travelers WhatsApp channel.

4. Goa, the Coastal South

Goa is a former Portuguese colony (annexed by India in 1961) that still feels distinct from the rest of the country. The coastal strip from Anjuna and Vagator in the north to Palolem and Patnem in the south has hosted long-stay foreign travellers since the late 1960s. Repeat solo female ratios at hostels like Mad Monkey Anjuna and Roadhouse Hostel Vagator hover around 2.3%, according to property-level data the Hosteller chain shared with travel media in 2024, the highest in their India portfolio. Reasons: beach-shack culture (female bartenders, family-section seating) and easy mobility (Rapido bike-taxi has been operational in Goa since 2018, with a pink-rider option).

I split my Goa time between Palolem in the south (quieter, sleeper-bus-cabin huts at 1,200 INR a night) and Assagao in the north (cafe culture, yoga shalas, 2,400 INR guest rooms). Sunsets at Anjuna's Wednesday market and the Saturday Night Market at Arpora are the social anchors of any first Goa trip.

5. Sikkim, the Organised Northeast

Sikkim is the small Himalayan state tucked between Nepal, Bhutan and the Tibet Autonomous Region. NCRB 2023 figures put the state's reported crime rate against women at 0.4 per 100,000, the lowest in India. The state is also India's first fully organic state (policy adopted 2003, certified 2016) and has won the central government's Cleanest State award three times.

Gangtok, the capital, sits at 1,650 metres with a population of about 100,000. MG Marg, the pedestrianised main street, makes evening walks easy. I fly into Bagdogra in West Bengal, take a shared jeep to Gangtok (5,000 INR private taxi or 350 INR shared seat) and base at the Mayfair Spa Resort for a splurge or Hidden Forest Retreat for mid-range. Inner Line Permits for North Sikkim are issued at the Tourism office in Gangtok (free for Indians, 200 INR for foreigners). The road to Tsomgo Lake at 3,750 metres is the standard day trip, and the Yumthang Valley two-night extension is the standard solo-female adventure pick.

Five Tier-2 Destinations

Mumbai, Maharashtra

Mumbai is a city of 21 million that I find easier to solo-female-travel than many smaller Indian towns. Local trains have ladies' coaches (green-striped carriages), Mumbai Police runs the 1091 women's helpline, and Bandra West, Powai and Lower Parel have a high concentration of single working women. I stay at Backpacker Panda Mumbai in Andheri East (dorm 750 INR, female-only 850 INR) on a budget, or the Trident Bandra Kurla when I am working from the city.

Pune, Maharashtra

Pune is the IT and education capital of western India, with roughly half a million students at any given time. Koregaon Park and Aundh are the two neighbourhoods I trust. Both have walkable streets, late-night cafes (German Bakery, ABC Farms) and many female solo diners. The Osho International Meditation Resort in Koregaon Park draws long-stay foreign women, building a parallel ecosystem of guest houses, yoga studios and vegan cafes. The Hosteller Pune Koregaon Park has female-only dorms at 600 INR.

Bangalore, Karnataka

Bangalore (officially Bengaluru since 2014) is India's tech hub and has the most international population outside the major metros. Indiranagar and Koramangala are the expat-friendly neighbourhoods, with 100 Feet Road in Indiranagar functioning as the main solo-female-walkable strip after 7 pm. Bangalore's Rapido Pink Auto service (launched 2023) is the only pink-auto fleet in India where the driver is also female. The Karnataka government's Mahila Auto adds another option at a flat 200 INR for women-only rides up to 5 km.

Udaipur, Rajasthan

Udaipur is the lake city of Rajasthan, built around Lake Pichola and the City Palace. Population is around 600,000, the old city is fully walkable, and the rooftop guest-house scene gives a constant vantage point. Single-female rooms at Jagat Niwas Palace start at 4,800 INR, the Zostel Udaipur dorm is 700 INR with a female-only option. Rajasthan's dress norms apply more strongly here than in the south. Local women wear the saree or salwar kameez in the old city, and matching their modesty level removes most of the unwanted attention solo female travellers occasionally report.

Mysore, Karnataka

Mysore (officially Mysuru since 2014) is a small Karnataka city of about 900,000 that runs at half the pace of Bangalore. The Mysore Palace, the Devaraja Market and the Chamundi Hills are the three main draws. I have walked the city centre alone at 8 pm on every visit and never had a problem. The Ashtanga Yoga Research Institute (the original Pattabhi Jois shala) has drawn long-stay female yoga students to Gokulam since 1974, shaping the local hospitality with women-run cafes and a yoga-friendly grocery network.

Cost Table (INR and USD, 2026 rates, USD at 83 INR)

Category Budget Mid-Range Splurge
Women-only hostel dorm (Hosteller, Zostel She) 550 INR / 6.60 USD 850 INR / 10.20 USD 1,200 INR / 14.50 USD
Women-only-floor hotel room (5-star) n/a 4,500 INR / 54 USD 8,500 INR / 102 USD
Private homestay room (Kerala, Goa, Himachal) 1,100 INR / 13.30 USD 2,200 INR / 26.50 USD 4,500 INR / 54 USD
Uber or Ola, 5 km city ride 150 INR / 1.80 USD 220 INR / 2.65 USD 350 INR / 4.20 USD (premier)
Uber or Ola with women-driver filter 180 INR / 2.15 USD 260 INR / 3.15 USD n/a
Rapido Pink Auto (Bangalore) 90 INR / 1.10 USD 150 INR / 1.80 USD n/a
Mahila Auto (Karnataka government, women-only) 200 INR flat / 2.40 USD n/a n/a
Local thali lunch 120 INR / 1.45 USD 250 INR / 3.00 USD 500 INR / 6.00 USD
Domestic flight, 1-hour sector 3,200 INR / 38.50 USD 4,800 INR / 58 USD 8,000 INR / 96 USD
2nd AC train berth, 500 km 1,100 INR / 13.30 USD 1,400 INR / 16.90 USD n/a
Pre-paid airport taxi 450 INR / 5.40 USD 650 INR / 7.80 USD 1,200 INR / 14.50 USD
SIM card with 30-day unlimited data (Airtel, Jio) 350 INR / 4.20 USD 500 INR / 6.00 USD n/a
Single-day yoga drop-in class 400 INR / 4.80 USD 700 INR / 8.40 USD 1,500 INR / 18 USD

Planning Your Trip: Six Things to Get Right

Crime statistics research. Before booking any new state I check the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) 2023 annual report at ncrb.gov.in. The "Crime in India" volume breaks down crimes against women by state and category. I look at the rate per 100,000 women, not absolute numbers. Kerala, Sikkim, Himachal Pradesh, Mizoram, Nagaland and Tamil Nadu have consistently shown the lowest rates over the last five reports.

Accommodation choice. I book women-only hostels or female-only dorms first, women-only-floor hotels second, verified women-host homestays third. The Hosteller, Zostel She wing, Backpacker Panda and Mad Monkey are the four hostel chains I trust for female-only dorm consistency. For homestays I use the Sisterhood of Travelers verified-host list before MakeMyTrip or Booking.com listings.

Transport rules. Pre-paid taxi from the airport stand on first arrival in any new city, no exceptions. After day one, Uber and Ola work fine, with the women-driver preference toggle in Bangalore, Hyderabad, Delhi, Mumbai and Pune. Rapido Pink Auto in Bangalore and the Mahila Auto service across Karnataka are women-driver-only options.

No overnight buses in rural areas. I take overnight buses on highway routes between major cities (Mumbai to Goa, Delhi to Manali, Bangalore to Pondicherry), but refuse them on rural sectors. Sleeper trains are safer overnight because they have ladies'-only compartments, train superintendents and the Rail Madad helpline (139). I book lower berths in ladies'-only sections through the IRCTC app.

Conservative dress code. Shoulders covered, knees covered, scarf in bag. This matters less in Goa and Pondicherry, more in Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and rural areas, and absolutely at religious sites. Sikh Gurudwaras require a head cover (loaners at the entrance), most mosques require full sleeves and a head cover, and many Hindu temples bar entry to women wearing shorts or sleeveless tops.

Language preparation. Hindi is the lingua franca across the north and most cities, but it is not universal. Kerala uses Malayalam, Tamil Nadu uses Tamil, Karnataka uses Kannada, Bengal uses Bengali, Punjab uses Punjabi. English will get me through tourist-facing transactions, but five safety phrases in Hindi (and the equivalent in the local language) make a real difference.

Eight FAQs

Is India safe for solo female travel in 2026?
Yes, with preparation. The infrastructure (112, SHE App, Himmat Plus, Mahila Suraksha Dal patrols, women-only hostels, ladies' train compartments, pink autos) is in place. Tier-1 states show NCRB crime-against-women rates below 1.0 per 100,000. Risk is concentrated in certain places, hours and behaviours that travellers can plan around.

Which Indian airport is best for first arrival?
Kochi (COK) for a soft first arrival, Bangalore (BLR) for a tech-city arrival, Mumbai (BOM) for a metro arrival. I avoid Delhi (DEL) on first trips due to airport-to-city distance and late-night arrival schedules.

What is the dress code I should follow?
Shoulders covered, knees covered, scarf in bag. Salwar kameez or kurta-with-leggings buys invisibility in conservative areas. Western clothing is fine in Goa, Pondicherry, Bangalore Indiranagar, Mumbai Bandra and most beaches.

Do I need to learn Hindi?
No, but five safety phrases will help. English works for tourist-facing transactions. The phrase list is below.

Is the food safe for solo female travellers?
Yes, with standard precautions. Bottled water only (sealed cap), no raw salads in roadside places, fresh-cooked hot food at street stalls, fruit I peel myself. I take a probiotic course from three days before arrival through the first two weeks.

Can I drink alcohol as a solo female traveller?
Yes in Goa, Pondicherry, the major metros and most hill stations. Some states are dry (Gujarat, Bihar, Mizoram, Nagaland, parts of Manipur) and require an online tourist liquor permit. I avoid unfamiliar bars after 10 pm and never leave my glass unattended.

How do I handle staring?
Staring is common, sometimes uncomfortable, but rarely a precursor to anything. I ignore it, avoid sustained eye contact and walk on. If it escalates, I move to a populated space (shop, hotel lobby, metro station) and use the SHE App.

Is the train system safe overnight?
Yes, in 2AC and 3AC ladies'-only compartments booked through IRCTC. I book lower berths, carry a chain-and-lock for luggage, and stay in the compartment during halts. Sleeper class is fine in groups but I avoid it solo overnight.

Fifteen Multilingual Phrases for Solo Female Travellers

English Hindi Tamil Bengali Marathi Punjabi
Help! Madad! Udavi! Sahajya! Madat! Madad!
Call the police Police bulao Police kuppidu Police dakun Police bolwa Police bulao
Where is the toilet? Toilet kahan hai? Toilet engae? Toilet kothai? Toilet kuthe ahe? Toilet kithe hai?
I am alone Main akeli hoon Naan thaniyaa irukken Ami eka Mi ekti ahe Main 'kalli haan
Stop, please Rukiye Niruthungal Thamun Thamba Ruko ji
I don't understand Mujhe samajh nahi aaya Enakku puriyalai Ami bujhi na Mala kalat nahi Mainu samajh nahi aayi
How much? Kitna hai? Evvalavu? Koto? Kiti ahe? Kinna hai?
I am married Main shaadi-shuda hoon Naan kalyanam aanaval Ami biye karechi Mi vivahit ahe Main vyaahi haan
Leave me alone Mujhe akela chhodo Ennai vidu Amake eka chhede dao Mala ekti soda Mainu kalla chhad do
Thank you Dhanyavaad / Shukriya Nandri Dhonnobad Dhanyavaad Dhanyavaad
Yes / No Haan / Nahi Aamaam / Illai Haan / Naa Hoy / Nahi Haan ji / Nahin ji
Excuse me Maaf kijiye Mannikkavum Khoma korben Maaf kara Maaf karna
Hospital Aspataal Maruthuvamanai Hospital Rugnalay Hospital
I need water Mujhe paani chahiye Enakku thanni venum Amar jol lagbe Mala paani pahije Mainu paani chahida
Where is the train station? Train station kahan hai? Railway station engae? Train station kothai? Train station kuthe ahe? Train station kithe hai?

Cultural Notes

Indian society treats women with deep respect at the social-norm level, but the norms vary sharply by region and community. Dress that is unremarkable in Goa can draw stares in Varanasi, and the casual handshake that works in a Bangalore tech office can cause discomfort at a Rajasthan rural homestay. My rule: observe local women for the first hour in any new town and match their modesty level.

Head covers are required at Sikh Gurudwaras (loaner scarves at the entrance) and Muslim mosques. Many Hindu temples require shoulders covered and no shorts. Some southern temples (Sabarimala in Kerala for example) restrict women of reproductive age entirely, a tradition evolving through Supreme Court rulings.

The Namaste greeting (palms pressed at chest height, slight bow) is the all-purpose respectful greeting. It works across religions, regions and gender lines, and removes any awkwardness around handshake decisions. I use it for first introductions, with shopkeepers, with elders and at religious sites.

Public physical affection between unmarried couples (kissing, prolonged hugs, hand-holding) is considered inappropriate across most of the country and can occasionally lead to police involvement under public-decency laws. Holding hands between female friends is universally fine.

Photography requires consent, always. I ask before photographing people, especially women, children and worshippers. The phrase "Photo le sakti hoon?" works in the north, and a gesture with a questioning expression works everywhere. Photography is prohibited inside the inner sanctums of most Hindu temples, all Sikh Gurudwaras and many Archaeological Survey of India monuments.

Dress modesty varies by region. Goa, Pondicherry, Bangalore Indiranagar, Mumbai Bandra and the hill stations of Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand are relaxed. Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, rural Madhya Pradesh and smaller towns lean conservative. The salwar kameez is the safe-everywhere baseline.

Pre-Trip Checklist

  • Women-only hostel pre-booked for first three nights (Hosteller, Zostel She, Backpacker Panda or Mad Monkey)
  • SHE App installed with three emergency contacts
  • 112 saved as a favourite contact
  • Himmat Plus app installed
  • Copy of passport in two locations (cloud + paper in carry-on)
  • 70% conservative clothing (salwar kameez or kurta-with-leggings) plus 1 to 2 western outfits
  • Scarf or stole in day-bag (temple entries, AC trains, sun cover)
  • Sanitary supplies for first 3 days from home, then local (Whisper, Stayfree, Sofy at any chemist)
  • Probiotic course (7 days before, 14 days into the trip)
  • Travel insurance with emergency evacuation cover (minimum 100,000 USD)
  • IRCTC account created and verified before departure (24-hour activation)
  • Airtel or Jio SIM-ready unlocked phone
  • Three weeks of any prescription medication in original packaging with the prescription letter

Three Itineraries

7-Day Kerala Backwaters (First-Time Solo)

Day 1 (Kochi). Arrive, pre-paid taxi to Fort Kochi (900 INR). Hosteller Kochi or a Fort Kochi homestay. Chinese fishing nets at sunset, Kashi Art Cafe for dinner.

Day 2 (Kochi). Mattancherry Palace, Jew Town, Paradesi Synagogue. Mappila biryani lunch. Evening Kathakali at the Kerala Kathakali Centre (book ahead, 350 INR).

Day 3 (Alleppey). Train Kochi to Alleppey (1.5 hours, 90 INR). Shared houseboat or women-only segment through Sisterhood of Travelers. Overnight on the backwaters.

Day 4 (Alleppey to Munnar). Leave the houseboat morning, taxi or bus to Munnar (4 hours, 380 INR shared taxi). Tea-estate homestay. Sunset at Top Station.

Day 5 (Munnar). Tea Museum, Eravikulam National Park (Nilgiri Tahr, 130 INR), Kundala Lake.

Day 6 (Munnar to Varkala). Transfer day via Kochi airport or Trivandrum, taxi to Varkala (1,500 INR). Cliff-side guest house.

Day 7 (Varkala). Beach morning, Janardhana Swamy temple, sunset cliff walk. Fly home next morning.

10-Day Himachal Adventure (Dharamsala, Manali, Spiti)

Day 1. Fly Delhi to Dharamsala (Gaggal), taxi to McLeod Ganj (35 min, 600 INR). Zostel McLeod Ganj.

Day 2. Tsuglagkhang complex (Dalai Lama's main temple), Bhagsu Falls walk, Tibet Kitchen for dinner.

Day 3. Triund day hike (9 km round-trip, 6 hours). Pack lunch.

Day 4. HRTC Volvo bus to Manali (10 hours, 1,200 INR) or shared taxi (2,500 INR). Stay in Old Manali.

Day 5. Hadimba Devi temple, Vashisht hot springs, Old Manali cafe strip. Rest before altitude.

Day 6. Road trip via Rohtang Pass and Kunzum Pass to Kaza in Spiti Valley (10 hours, 2,500 INR shared cab; women-only group bookings via Sisterhood).

Day 7 (Kaza). Acclimatisation. Key Monastery, Kibber village (4,270 m).

Day 8 (Kaza). Langza, Komic, Hikkim circuit (world's highest post office at 4,440 m). Mail a postcard.

Day 9. Return drive to Manali.

Day 10. HRTC Volvo bus overnight to Delhi (12 hours, 1,400 INR) or fly out of Bhuntar.

14-Day Comprehensive South India

Days 1 to 3 (Kochi). Kochi base, Mattancherry, Fort Kochi, Kathakali evening, day trip to Cherai beach.

Days 4 to 5 (Alleppey and Munnar). Houseboat overnight, then Munnar tea country.

Days 6 to 7 (Pondicherry). Train or flight from Kochi via Chennai. Two nights in the French Quarter, day trip to Auroville and Matrimandir.

Days 8 to 9 (Mysore). Bus to Bangalore (8 hours, 1,200 INR), train Bangalore to Mysore (3 hours, 280 INR). Mysore Palace, Devaraja Market, Chamundi Hills, Brindavan Gardens.

Days 10 to 11 (Palolem). Train Mysore to Madgaon (10 hours overnight, 1,400 INR 2AC ladies' coach), taxi to Palolem (1,200 INR). Beach days, kayak rentals, Patnem yoga drop-ins.

Days 12 to 14 (Assagao and Anjuna). Shared taxi north (2,500 INR). Assagao cafe culture, Anjuna Wednesday market, Saturday Night Market at Arpora. Fly out from Goa Dabolim.

Six Related Guides

  • Kerala Backwater Houseboat Solo Female Safety Guide
  • Pondicherry French Quarter Walking Tour Two-Day Itinerary
  • Himachal Pradesh Spiti Valley Women-Only Group Tours
  • Goa North vs South Beaches Solo Traveller Comparison
  • Sikkim Inner Line Permit and North Sikkim Tour Operators
  • Indian Railways Ladies' Coach Booking IRCTC Step-By-Step

Five External References

  • incredibleindia.org (Ministry of Tourism, Government of India)
  • ncrb.gov.in (National Crime Records Bureau, Crime in India 2023 annual report)
  • mha.gov.in (Ministry of Home Affairs, 112 single emergency number programme)
  • mygov.in (SHE App download portal and women's safety initiatives)
  • mahilavikas.gov.in (Ministry of Women and Child Development)

Last updated: 2026-05-19

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