Makin kuat keIslamannya makin gila sex dan makin jadi tukang merkosa orang2 
Islamnya.




>________________________________
> From: Sunny <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected] 
>Sent: Friday, July 13, 2012 4:31 PM
>Subject: [proletar] Sexual violence rises in Egypt's Tahrir
> 
>
>  
>Ref: Untuk melihat video footage, click situs di bawah ini :
>
>http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/07/20127414100955560.html
>
>Sexual violence rises in Egypt's Tahrir 
>
>Increasing number of women fall victim to gang assaults in square that was at 
>the centre of last year's revolution.
>Sally El-Sabbahy Last Modified: 05 Jul 2012 14:27 
>Cairo, Egypt - Nearly a year and a half after Lara Logan was sexually 
>assaulted by a mob of men in Tahrir Square, women have increasingly been 
>coming forward with disturbing personal testimonies of similar attacks.
>
>Natasha Smith, a British journalism student who was in Cairo on a research 
>internship, recently lit up the social media sphere with a detailed blog 
>account of an attack she suffered in Tahrir.
>
>The posting recounts how a horde of men encircled and quickly overpowered 
>Smith, who was accompanied by two male friends, on the outskirts of the Square 
>on June 24.
>
>"Hundreds of men pulled my limbs apart and threw me around. They were 
>scratching and clenching my breasts and forcing their fingers inside me in 
>every possible way," she wrote. "Although a few men tried to form a human 
>shield around me, offering me rags to cover my bruised body, men were still 
>able to touch me. There were just too many."
>
>After being hidden in a tent, Smith only escaped her attackers by donning a 
>niqab and being smuggled out of Tahrir by a man who ordered her not to cry for 
>fear it would alert her assailants to her identity.
>
>In another account, an anonymous victim, who called herself "C", was also 
>subjected to a vicious gang assault in Tahrir on June 2 after being separated 
>from her group of friends.
>
>"Before I knew it, I was thrown up against a wall where a motorcycle was 
>parked," she recalled in her testimony to the Egyptian centre, Nazra for 
>Feminist Studies, a feminist organisation that has been seeking to record as 
>many of these incidents as possible. "I was standing on top of the bike while 
>my friend and a few other men tried to make a half circle to protect me. But 
>there were more men trying to hurt me than protect me and I was grabbed all 
>over and my pants and shirt were ripped."
>
>After being dragged into the foyer of a nearby apartment building, "C" was 
>continuously violated until she was finally rescued by a group of men that hid 
>her with a family living in one of the flats. Much like Logan and Smith, the 
>men attacking her not only forced their fingers into her body repeatedly, but 
>also brutally beat her throughout the attack.
>
>A surge in violence
>
>The month of June ushered in a series of startlingly volatile sexual assault 
>cases across Tahrir.
>
>"In areas where there is conflict or transition or clashes, there is always 
>violence against women. "
>
>- Dalia Abd El Hameed, researcher 
>
>In addition to recorded individual attacks like those above, an attempted 
>women's rally scheduled to take place in the Square on June 8 ended in 
>terrorwhen the women participating in the demonstration were beaten and 
>violently groped, despite having male companions form a human chain around 
>them for protection.
>
>While these are not the first such incidents - the women demonstrating in 
>commemoration of International Woman's Day in Tahrir on March 8, 2011 were 
>also groped and attacked until the intervention of an army soldier - private 
>organisations like Nazra are saying that June witnessed a sudden and alarming 
>increase in their frequency.
>
>Dalia Abd El Hameed, a researcher for the Egyptian Initiative for Personal 
>Rights (EIPR), confirmed a noticeable increase in the violence.
>
>"While sexual assault was also a case in the first days of the revolution, it 
>was less obvious and less harsh and wasn't committed by gangs… what's 
>remarkable about these [incidents] is that they are [all] gangs," she 
>explained. "There was the incident of Lara Logan and a couple others, but 
>other than that it was primarily harassment in the frontlines in places like 
>Mohamed Mahmoud Street where the violence was highest."
>
>According to Abd El Hameed, one possible cause for the rise in violence is the 
>general increase in violence throughout the country since January 2011. "The 
>process of militarisation that the country is undergoing now is creating a 
>parallel culture of normalised violence," she said. "In areas where there is 
>conflict or transition or clashes, there is always violence against women."
>
>A high-ranking police official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, also 
>linked the increase in sexual violence to "the overall instability in the 
>country and the lack of law enforcement".
>
>He added that it was especially true in Tahrir, where "the police are as 
>helpless as anyone else. They fear the crowd would turn on them."
>
>No justice
>
>In spite of growing sexual violence in the Square, it is unclear how - or if - 
>these cases are being investigated.
>
>The anonymous police officer explained that daily reports containing all of 
>the crimes registered in police stations throughout Cairo are sent on a daily 
>basis to the Office of the Commissioner of the Police in the city's Bab el 
>Khalk district.
>
>The reports are then supposed to be reviewed by the commissioner, but when 
>asked about how the department follows up, the officer replied, "[only] God 
>knows what happens".
>
>In addition, the official also revealed his suspicion that officers omit some 
>incidents from the reports to give the impression that they are managing crime 
>effectively, and sometimes discourage sexual assault victims to file cases by 
>"mentioning how shameful the whole process will be for the victims' families".
>
>In a report published in 2008 by the Egyptian Centre for Women's Rights 
>(ECWR), only 2.4 per cent of Egyptian women and 7.5 per cent of foreign women 
>in Egypt victimised by sexual violence said they reported the incident to the 
>police. 
>
>Among the reasons they gave were the beliefs that the police would be 
>ineffective, or that filing a report could negatively impact their 
>reputations. 
>
>Twitter response
>
>A sense of frustration and helplessness about the sexual violence in Tahrir 
>has become increasingly evident across social media platforms, which have been 
>set ablaze with the subject since the beginning of June.
>
>The Stream - Egyptian bloggers fight harassment 
>One of the organisers of the doomed demonstration on June 8 and a popular 
>figure in the local women's rights movement, @sallyzohney, tweeted that same 
>day: "Stop calling it harassment, a march of over 100 was attacked in #tahrir 
>and no one gives a [expletive]. I'm sick to my stomach. It's assault. #EndSH."
>
>Another popular Egyptian activist, @NoorNoor1, tweeted on June 26 that Smith's 
>account "nearly brought me to tears", also ending his tweet with "#EndSH."
>
>The hashtag #EndSH stands for "End Sexual Harassment"; its recent predominant 
>use in the Egyptian twitter scene is a strong indication of how much attention 
>the violence has drawn in social media outlets.
>
>But amidst online outrage, twitter has also showcased varying degrees of 
>denial among the Egyptian twitter community. 
>
>@RositaMexica, a friend of "C" who was also assaulted on June 2, angrily 
>tweeted: "I'm getting disgusted by tweeps who don't find @natasha_journo story 
>credible becuz no1 else tweeted about it."
>
>What next?
>
>Despite the escalating violence, Abd El Hameed said that women should not stop 
>protesting in Tahrir.
>
>"The right to protest and to peaceful assembly is ensured for every person, 
>this is what any person is entitled to any place in the world. [We] don't have 
>the agency to tell women to go or not to go to a certain place," she said. 
>"What we should call for is that women must have the right to participate 
>safely."
>
>Rebecca Chiao, the Founder of HarassMap.org, differed on this point, saying 
>"that the solution lies in society rather than in government. We waited years 
>for the government to pass a [sexual violence/harassment] law. They passed one 
>in March/April 2011, and nothing changed."
>
>"I think we need to go back to community pride in the safety and dignity of 
>our streets, and I think the way to do this is to ask everyone to stop 
>ignoring or giving excuses and tell [offenders] to stop," she added.
>
>Following the attack on Smith, Ikhwanweb, the official English language 
>website of the Muslim Brotherhood, posted a message from MP Azza al-Garf, who 
>condemned the incident and called for the enforcement of law.
>
>However, it still remains to be seen if the Brotherhood's former party 
>chairman and Egypt's newly appointed head of state, Mohamed Morsi, will make 
>sexual violence against women in Tahrir and the rest of the country a priority 
>on his domestic agenda.
>
>If last month was any indication of what is to come, Morsi should be acting 
>fast.
>
>The Stream - Egyptian bloggers fight harassment 
>One of the organisers of the doomed demonstration on June 8 and a popular 
>figure in the local women's rights movement, @sallyzohney, tweeted that same 
>day: "Stop calling it harassment, a march of over 100 was attacked in #tahrir 
>and no one gives a [expletive]. I'm sick to my stomach. It's assault. #EndSH."
>
>Another popular Egyptian activist, @NoorNoor1, tweeted on June 26 that Smith's 
>account "nearly brought me to tears", also ending his tweet with "#EndSH."
>
>The hashtag #EndSH stands for "End Sexual Harassment"; its recent predominant 
>use in the Egyptian twitter scene is a strong indication of how much attention 
>the violence has drawn in social media outlets.
>
>But amidst online outrage, twitter has also showcased varying degrees of 
>denial among the Egyptian twitter community. 
>
>@RositaMexica, a friend of "C" who was also assaulted on June 2, angrily 
>tweeted: "I'm getting disgusted by tweeps who don't find @natasha_journo story 
>credible becuz no1 else tweeted about it."
>
>What next?
>
>Despite the escalating violence, Abd El Hameed said that women should not stop 
>protesting in Tahrir.
>
>"The right to protest and to peaceful assembly is ensured for every person, 
>this is what any person is entitled to any place in the world. [We] don't have 
>the agency to tell women to go or not to go to a certain place," she said. 
>"What we should call for is that women must have the right to participate 
>safely."
>
>Rebecca Chiao, the Founder of HarassMap.org, differed on this point, saying 
>"that the solution lies in society rather than in government. We waited years 
>for the government to pass a [sexual violence/harassment] law. They passed one 
>in March/April 2011, and nothing changed."
>
>"I think we need to go back to community pride in the safety and dignity of 
>our streets, and I think the way to do this is to ask everyone to stop 
>ignoring or giving excuses and tell [offenders] to stop," she added.
>
>Following the attack on Smith, Ikhwanweb, the official English language 
>website of the Muslim Brotherhood, posted a message from MP Azza al-Garf, who 
>condemned the incident and called for the enforcement of law.
>
>However, it still remains to be seen if the Brotherhood's former party 
>chairman and Egypt's newly appointed head of state, Mohamed Morsi, will make 
>sexual violence against women in Tahrir and the rest of the country a priority 
>on his domestic agenda.
>
>If last month was any indication of what is to come, Morsi should be acting 
>fast.
>
>[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
> 
>
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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