Agama najis Islam itu merendahkan, menghina dan menindas perempuan...

Nabi babi M%uhamed diriwayatkan bilang perempuan itu tidak cerdas..

Kesaksian perempuan cuman dihargai separuh kesaksian laki-laki..

Perempuan juga nggak boleh jadi imam sembahyang kalau di jemaah ada laki-laki 
dewasa..

Mukmin disuruh memperlakukan istrinya seperti ladang yang bisa dimasukinya tiap 
saat. 

Jadi bukan sebagai manusia.

Dan mukmin diperintahkan memukul istrinya yang bandel.

Udah gitu itilnya boleh dipotong hingga banyak perempuan yang tidak bisa 
menikmati ngentot dan sering susah mencapai orgasme.

Jelasnya, di dunia  Islam hakekatnya perempuan itu cuma sekedar lobang buat 
dientotin laki-laki.

Dan di akhairat?

Penghuni neraka juga banyakan terdiri dari perempuan.

Dan perempuan yang masuk sorga juga cuma bisa melongo abadi, karena disaingi 72 
bidadari yang perawan abadi.

Islam itu, saya bilagn dan  saya ulang adalah agama nanjis yang seyogiyanya 
lekas-lekas dicampakkan dari Indonesia.


http://observers.france24.com/content/20120518-egyptians-debate-female-circumcision-religion-tradition-female-genital-mutilation-FGM-parliament-law-ban

Egyptians debate 'traumatizing tradition' of female circumcision
By Nourhan Refaat / Hussein Gohar on 18/05/2012 - 11:58

Image courtesy of Aktion Mensch.
 
In Egypt, female circumcision, also known as female genital mutilation, was 
outlawed five years ago after a 12-year-old girl bled to death. However, this 
ban has done little to stop the widespread practice, and some conservative 
lawmakers are now pushing to make it legal again, to the despair of those 
fighting the centuries-old tradition.
 
Over 90 percent of all women of child-bearing age in Egypt have undergone 
female genital mutilation, or FGM, according to the 2008 Egypt Demographic and 
Health Survey. And despite educational campaigns, girls between 15 and 17 who 
underwent FGM only dropped from 77 percent to 74 percent between 2005 and 2008. 
In Egypt, FGM generally entails removing part of or the entire clitoris; in 
some cases, the labia may be removed, too. The procedure can take place anytime 
from infancy to early adolescence.
 
The revolution has not made matters easier for anti-FGM campaigners. Two-thirds 
of Egypt's lower house of parliament is now controlled by Islamic parties, 
including the Muslim Brotherhood and the more hardline Salafis. Earlier this 
week, MP Nasser al-Shaker, of the Salafi-led Nour Party, defended FGM on a 
morning television show, arguing that it was mandated by Islam. He also pointed 
to former first lady Suzanne Mubarak's efforts to eradicate the practice as all 
the more reason to repeal the ban. His comments immediately drew the ire of 
women's rights groups.
 
A few weeks ago, a female member of parliament, Azza al-Garf, also called for 
the FGM ban to be repealed. Al-Garf is a member of the Freedom and Justice 
Party, the Muslim Brotherhood's political branch. She too was chastised by 
women's rights groups, one of which is now trying to sue her.
 
These controversies come on the heels of reports that the Muslim Brotherhood 
allegedly organised mobile caravans offering medical treatment – including 
female circumcision – in the region of Minya, in Upper Egypt. FRANCE 24 could 
not independently verify the veracity of these reports. The Muslim Brotherhood 
has denied this ever took place and stated that their organisation is 
officially against FGM.
 
The Muslim Brotherhood commented on the FGM debate on its official 
English-language Twitter account.
"During the Egyptian revolution, we changed a whole political system, but 
deep-rooted beliefs are harder to change"
Nourhan Refaat, 22, lives in Cairo, where she works as a social media 
consultant. She is one of the hundreds who have signed a petition against 
female genital mutilation, addressed to the Egyptian parliament.
 
I was really shocked when I heard the news that members of parliament were 
calling for making FGM legal again, especially in the case of the woman MP. It 
is heartbreaking to see that politicians are still having such conversations 
today; it feels like Egypt is stagnating, and maybe even moving backwards, 
instead of moving forward.
 
FGM is not a religious practice – it's just a traditional one. Unfortunately, 
some members of the Muslim Brotherhood and Salafis lacking religious knowledge 
try to make people think this practice is dictated by Islam, when many serious 
religious scholars agree that it is not, and it is not practiced in most Muslim 
countries. In fact, in Egypt, it is practiced by both Muslims and Christians.
 
Younger Egyptians in their 20s and 30s, who are in the upper-middle class and 
educated, are completely against FGM. Personally, I've never met someone my age 
who is in favour of it. We speak freely about it, thanks to TV campaigns aired 
in the early 2000s that raised awareness of the issue and taught us to think 
about it critically. However, for the older generation, my parents' generation, 
only a small fraction of them are against the idea. (Thankfully, my parents 
were among those.) Even well-educated people in the older generation did this 
to their daughters, because they thought that even if it was painful, it was 
better than taking the risk that their daughters might become sexually 
promiscuous before marriage.
 
"It's the basic right of every woman, when she gets married, to enjoy her 
sexual relationship"
 
Of course, that's ridiculous. The effects of FGM last a lifetime. I believe 
it's the basic right of every woman, when she gets married, to enjoy her sexual 
relationship.
 
Even though young people speak freely about their dislike of this tradition, 
women who have been circumcised don't admit it. That's just too personal, and 
for some of them just too traumatic.
 
During the Egyptian revolution, we changed a whole political system, but 
deep-rooted beliefs are harder to change. I think it might take another 
generation before the practice is eradicated - that is, if extremists don't 
gain more power and make our country slip backwards.
"The circumcision ban is totally ineffective"
Dr. Hussein Gohar is a gynaecologist. He heads the Gohar Women's Health Center 
in Cairo.
 
I would probably put the percentage of circumcised women in Egypt well above 90 
percent. However, because my clinic is in Cairo, where I deal mostly with 
upper-middle class women, much, much fewer of my clients are circumcised. Those 
who are, they're usually from the older generation. Outside big cities, the 
practice is still rampant today.
 
Unfortunately, the circumcision ban is totally ineffective. Many doctors 
throughout the country continue to circumcise girls in private clinics, behind 
closed doors. By law, they're supposed to report parents who do this to their 
daughters, but if they believe in it too, why would they report it? They only 
report it in cases were the procedure goes seriously wrong, and then they have 
no choice.
 
I was in a debate with an advocate of female circumcision on Egyptian 
television a while back. I told him, `If you want to cut off a girl's clitoris, 
you should do the equivalent, and chop off your penis.' In reality, removing 
any part of the genital system doesn't decrease desire, as those who support 
the practice so often argue – if you cut off your tongue, you'd still like some 
soup, you just wouldn't be able to eat it.
 
"Even if they heal well, these girls are in for a lifetime of sexual 
dysfunction"
 
Female circumcision brings with it serious psychological trauma. It's very 
painful, and because the clitoris is close to an artery, it is possible to 
bleed to death. I've also treated women who develop cysts because of it. But 
even if they heal well, these girls are in for a lifetime of sexual dysfunction.
 
Of course I'm worried that government representatives are even considering 
rolling back the ban, but the truth is that ban or no ban, I don't think the 
law makes any difference. This fight will take place in villages, not in 
parliament. What's really needed is much, much more education. And not just 
education on the part of activist, urban youth, who are preaching to the choir, 
or from secular doctors like me, but from religious organisations – moderate 
Muslims – who can explain to those who believe this is a religious practice 
that it is in fact just a tradition, a dangerous tradition that must end. 
Religious groups need to step up their game.
Source URL: 
http://observers.france24.com/content/20120518-egyptians-debate-female-circumcision-religion-tradition-female-genital-mutilation-FGM-parliament-law-ban

Links:
[1] http://www.aktion-mensch.de/
[2] http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs241/en/
[3] http://www.measuredhs.com/pubs/pdf/fr220/fr220.pdf
[4] 
http://www.egyptindependent.com/news/salafi-mp-advocates-female-circumcision-says-suzanne-mubarak-banned-it-news-1
[5] 
http://www.desertflowerfoundation.org/en/egypt-women's-ngo-takes-pro-fgm-parliamentarian-to-court/
[6] http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2012/05/15/214245.html
[7] http://www.ikhwanweb.com/article.php?id=29981&utm_medium=twitter
[8] 
http://observers.france24.com/content/20120518-egyptians-debate-female-circumcision-religion-tradition-female-genital-mutilation-FGM-parliament-law-ban
[9] http://observers.france24.com/content/tweet-oppose
[10] http://observers.france24.com/content/tweet-priority
[11] http://observers.france24.com/profile/222044
[12] http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/no-to-fgm-in-egypt.html
[13] http://www.who.int/reproductivehealth/topics/fgm/prevalence/en/index.html
[14] http://observers.france24.com/profile/222083




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