Delhi team wins $1mn XPrize for women's safety device inspired by Nirabhaya

IANS  |  United Nations 

A from inspired by has won the $1 million and for Women's Safety by developing a device that will send out alerts with location and summon help if a woman is threatened.

College of Engineering graduates and Avinash Bansal, and Niharika Rajiv, whose Leaf Wearables team developed the pendant-like electronic device, SAFER Pro, received the prize at an awards ceremony at the UN in on Wednesday.

The prize was funded by Jain, the Indian American who founded the Moon Express, and his wife

A total of 85 teams from 18 countries around the world entered the competition announced two years ago and five teams were chosen as finalists and their devices were tested on trains.

The other four finalists received prizes of $50,000 each from contributions by two other donors who each gave $100,000.

One of the finalists was the Artemis team from Lausanne, Switzerland, led by

Mehta said that they were inspired by the tragedy of Nirbhaya, the student who was brutally gang raped in in 2012 and later succumbed to her injuries. The team wanted to use technology to prevent such tragedies.

If even one women was saved with their device, he said he would feel gratified.

Jain, whose company plans to send spacecraft to the moon to commercially mine metals, said: "How can we go to the moon or Mars if half of us cannot walk outside in safety?"

He said that the idea behind the Xprizes was to crowd source innovation and spur people to find solutions to problems right away.

said: "Safety is a fundamental right. All of us women, regardless of our social and economic status have felt unsafe."

This was a problem around the world and in the US one in five women college students have been sexually assaulted, she said.

Peter Diamandis, the of said that unlike other awards it was not given for something that was done years ago, but to find a solution to an imminent problem.

Bansal told IANS the device, which is about 35 millimetres long and oval shaped, can send an alert within seconds of being activated to the family and to police giving the exact location where the victim is by using the coordinates.

It can also help navigate to the nearest hospital.

Although it requires a SIM card, it is not a phone and works independently through cell networks, he added.

He said that one of their colleagues regularly took a bus from the stop where had boarded the vehicle of doom.

This focused their attention on the problem of women's safety and they tried to innovate technology to protect women from the time they were in college, he said.

They had produced two such devices before entering the competition and developed the third one that won the prize.

Mehta told IANS that they were working with a manufacturer in and another in to mass-produce the SAFER Pro and were also in contact with in and the US.

It would be sold in through and Flipkart, he added.

One of the conditions for the prize was that the device should cost less than $40.

The other members of the Leaf Wearables team are Ayush Banka, and

is known for the Prize competition it ran for robotic space explorer.

It is now running competitions to find solutions to a variety of problems, from illiteracy and water scarcity to exploring oceans and harnessing

(can be reached at arul.l@ians.in)

--IANS

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First Published: Thu, June 07 2018. 09:16 IST