Three-Member Panel to Probe Delhi Golf Club’s ‘Dress Code’ Case

The three-member panel will include lawyer Renu Sehgal and journalist Sunayana Arora Singh, founder of an NGO, Organ India.
PTI
India
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Tailin Lyngdoh, who was wearing a ‘Jainsem’, a traditional Khasi dress, told reporters she was asked to leave a lunch hosted by a member of the club.
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(Photo Courtesy: Facebook/Nivedita Barthakur)


Tailin Lyngdoh, who was wearing a ‘Jainsem’, a traditional Khasi dress, told reporters she was asked to leave a lunch hosted by a member of the club.
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Justice (retired) Mukul Mudgal will head a committee to look into a Meghalaya woman's charge that she had been turfed out of the dining room of the Delhi Golf Club because her traditional Khasi attire looked like a "maid's uniform" to the staffers.

The three-member panel, set up by the club on Wednesday, will include lawyer Renu Sehgal and journalist Sunayana Arora Singh, the CEO and founder of an NGO, Organ India.

The club said in a statement:

Since there are conflicting versions of the incident, it is deemed appropriate to institute an inquiry by independent persons who are not members of the club

Tailin Lyngdoh, who was wearing a 'Jainsem' – a traditional Khasi dress – told reporters she was asked to leave a lunch hosted by a member of the club in the heart of the capital on 25 June.

Lyngdoh said the manager informed her that the outfit she wore was not allowed in the club.

The club, an elite golfing establishment situated in acres of rolling greens, added that Shailja Laxman, its HR manager, will provide administrative assistance to the three- member committee.

"The club shall take further action in this regard after receiving a report of the inquiry committee," it said.

Union Minister of State for Home Kiren Rijiju on Wednesday called the incident a "case of racial discrimination" and asked the city police chief to take appropriate action on it.

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The Union Urban Development Ministry also sought a report from the club on the issue.

The Delhi Golf Club said on Wednesday that it had apologised to the member who had invited Lyngdoh and her employer to lunch, but added that Lyngdoh had not been asked to leave the club.

Mudgal, retired Chief Justice of the Punjab and Haryana High Court, had earlier headed a committee which was directed by the Supreme Court to conduct a probe into allegations of corruption in the Indian Premier League.

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