GURUGRAM: A good education and job could be the key to a good life but it won't easily unlock a house for you in Gurugram if you are a single man or woman looking to rent a place.Mohit Agarwal, an MNC executive living in a flat at the swish Palm Grove Heights , was the latest victim of the harassment bachelors face at the hands of moral police, in the garb of housing society RWAs, nosy neighbours or house owners keen only on having 'family men'.Agarwal took to Facebook to voice his anger after a Spanish woman friend visiting him was stopped from entering the society in October. The post went viral as it struck a chord with many who had the same stories of harassment or ostracisation.“There was no basis (for) stopping her to enter my house, except that these guys took it upon themselves to morally police us,“ Agarwal wrote in a post that has gone viral.“ And it was super humiliating. With all the shameful insinuations flying around.“The unnamed Spanish woman, who arrived in India last month to work as an intern for a human rights group, had been intending to stay with Agarwal at Palm Grove Heights, which is at Ardee City in Sector 52. The complex is run by the US-based Colliers International real estate management which said the “exclusion“ rules were framed by the residents of the society . “We have no role in forming the rules. The residents had previously faced some issue leading to introduction of this rule,“ estate manager Sanjay Chaudhary told news agency AFP.Manas Ranjan Nayak, who also lives in Palm Grove Heights, told TOI about a similar experience. “My friends and I had come to my place to celebrate a friend's birthday and the guard stopped us because there was a girl in the group. Despite repeated requests and a long discussion, they did not let her in,“ Nayak said.On another occasion, one of his friends was stopped at the gate because he was sharing a cab with a female passenger.When Nayak asked for the number of the society's RWA president, the guards told Nayak the man was a senior retired officer and his number would not be circulated.Neha Jain, who lives in Royal Court Society , has been at the receiving end of similar harassment for a year. “Let alone boys, even our girl friends are not allowed. When our parents visit, we have to inform the society management in advance and submit their ID proofs,“ she said. “I pay Rs 45,000 a month for this flat and am treated like a second-class citizen. A year of living here has been a harrowing experience,“ she said.Most societies differentiate when it comes to single tenants. In many cases, they are not allowed to use common facilities in a society. The only option the tenants have is to approach the police, but that's a path few are willing to walk down.Agarwal told TOI it was time something was done to address this problem.“My idea was not to propagate a personal agenda but raise the larger issue that troubles people like me. My idea was to start a conversation on the issue,“ he said.Amrik Singh Nimran, president of the Palm Grove Heights Flat Owners Association , said he had nothing to do with Agarwal's friend being denied entry .