let's go to emma fulu, also mary ellsberg, director of global women's institute, and kavita krishana. we've heard about people taking matters in their own hands by staging protests. >> these kinds of actions help women to show the world that it's not the women who are to blame for rape, that the accountability is with the women who rape. that they have a right to walk and to dress the way they want to, and it's really shifting, as kavita said, shifting the accountability of the rape from the victim. >> what are the discussions going on in fixes things, and in terms of creating solutions? >> we're trying to emphasize here that we really aren't interested in politicians from the government or opposition telling us how much they want rapists to be hanged. we are trying to tell them that we are interested in knowing how much money they plan to allocate for rape crisis centers in india, across the country, how much money they plan to allocate to ensure that we have more courts and judges in india so trials can be speedier rather than rape trials taking over a decade in some cases. and whic