Diksha Pathak, 21, and Anjali Srivastava, 23,
have designed a line of 'anti-rape' jeans that send a distress signal to
local police who then can locate and help the victim
Officers can them locate the woman who had been wearing thanks to a specially installed tracker.
Almost 200 police stations in the area have been equipped with the technology to receive the alarm from the jeans when activated.
If tests to be carried out next month are successful, lawmakers will press for the system to be expanded nationwide.
The women said they came up with the idea after a string of brutal attacks against women in India.
Public outrage was reignited last month by the deaths of two girls, aged 12 and 14, who were gang-raped and lynched in their impoverished village in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.
A rape occurs every 22 minutes in India, according to government figures.
They have installed a small electronic device in
the jeans which - when pressed - will send a call to the nearest police
station. Officers can them locate the woman who had been wearing thanks
to a specially installed tracker
'We have been thinking of making this device for a long time,' said Pathak, a science student and daughter of a cab driver.
'My father is often making himself ill with worry each time I am coming home late.
'These terrible gang rapes of women that we have heard so much about recently shocked me and my colleague to the very core. Hopefully no other women will have to suffer if they are wearing our clothing.'
Pathak said she was assisted by her friend, a student in electronics communication.
A pair of the anti-rape jeans cost less than 25p in India, and can be worn for three months before the batteries need replacing.
Indian law enforcement and justice authorities have shirked their responsibility to fight sex attacks, a UN child rights watchdog said last week amid uproar over the horrific gang-rape and lynching of two girls.
'There has been a dereliction of duty in relation to rape cases," said Benyam Mezmur, deputy chairman of the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child.
India has been struggling to overcome its reputation for sexual violence since the fatal gang-rape of a student in New Delhi in December 2012, which sparked mass protests and drew international condemnation of India's treatment of women.
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