Cuma orang Islam aja yg ngebunuh keluarganya krn si korban ogah pake jilbab misalnya.
>________________________________ > From: Abbas <[email protected]> >To: [email protected] >Sent: Monday, August 20, 2012 12:31 PM >Subject: [proletar] Re: Egypt women fearful of attacks as Eid holiday arrives > > > >Jadi di seluruh dunia tak ada pembunuhan saat ini oleh yang bukan orang ISLAM >!? Atau justru yang paling banyak pembunuh adalah yang berKTP Islam sambil >Islam saja gak ngerti !? sehingga ini jadi fitnah terhadap Islam !? > >--- In [email protected], item abu <itemabu@...> wrote: >> >> Ga juga, di US atau Eropa sekarang ini ga pake jilbab jg bisa dibunuh oleh >> keluarganya atau oleh orang soleh dan bertaqwa lainnya. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >________________________________ >> > From: "jack_fanotona@..." <jack_fanotona@...> >> >To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> >> >Sent: Monday, August 20, 2012 10:43 AM >> >Subject: Re: [proletar] Egypt women fearful of attacks as Eid holiday >> >arrives >> > >> > >> > >> >Padahal udah jilbab kok masih takut mending tinggal ∂ï us ato inggris pake >> >bikini nyantai2 aaja tuh >> >Sent from my BlackBerry® >> >powered by Sinyal Kuat INDOSAT >> > >> >-----Original Message----- >> >From: item abu <itemabu@...> >> >Sender: [email protected] >> >Date: Mon, 20 Aug 2012 03:23:17 >> >To: [email protected]<[email protected]> >> >Reply-To: [email protected] >> >Subject: [proletar] Egypt women fearful of attacks as Eid holiday arrives >> > >> >Hehehe... makin kuat Islamnya, makin doyan orang islam melecehkan cewek. >> > >> > >> >Islam melindungi cewek? Ini cuma kaing2 doang, faktanya justru sebaliknya. >> > >> > >> >http://www.bikyamasr.com/75724/egypt-women-fearful-of-attacks-as-eid-holiday-arrives/ >> > >> > >> >Egypt women fearful of attacks as Eid holiday arrives >> >Joseph Mayton | 19 August 2012 | 0 Comments >> > >> > >> > >> >CAIRO: The cafes are crowded early morning Sunday as Egyptians >> >celebrate the end of the holy month of Ramadan, bringing in the Eid >> >el-Fitr holiday with shisha, food and a joyous festival. But not >> >everyone in the country is looking forward to the three-day holiday, >> >especially not the country’s women, who in recent years have seen >> >massive group-style attacks on women in the streets during the holiday. >> > >> >“I just want to enjoy and relax so I came here this morning because I won’t >> >be going out later,” said Assma, a 23-year-old recent university >> >graduate. She told Bikyamasr.com that she and her friends are >> >“concerned” that this Eid, more attacks against women will come. >> > >> >“It’s always there, especially after the past year we’ve had that saw women >> >stripped and violated at protests, not to mention that in other >> >holidays in recent years we women have been attacked by gangs of boys >> >and men for simply walking in public,” she added. >> > >> >June this year saw some of the worst attacks against women, with both >> >foreigners and Egyptians reporting that they had been sexually >> >assaulted in the square take place following the disbanding of >> >Parliament. >> > >> >“I was walking in the square and was hoping to be part of the calls >> >for the SCAF to leave power when a man behind me grabbed by butt and >> >started saying disgusting things to me,” one woman told Bikyamasr.com. >> > >> >“He asked if I was a slut and then swore at me when I yelled at him,” she >> >added. >> > >> >Others also reported being harassed on social media networks, highlighting >> >the growing concern facing women in the country. >> > >> >Earlier in the month, an anti-sexual harassment demonstration >> >organized by over 20 Egyptian women’s groups in protest against the >> >recent escalation of assaults in Cairo’s Tahrir Square was attacked >> >about an hour and half after it began by unknown troublemakers. >> > >> >The participants reported being attacked by a mob of “thugs” who >> >attempted to throw rocks and glass at them, but the clash was over >> >quickly as volunteers securing the protest intervened to stop it. >> > >> >This was not the first time a women’s rights march was attacked in Tahrir >> >Square. >> > >> >Last March, and on International Women’s Day, a march of tens of >> >women was attacked by a cynical mob of men who did not like women >> >protesting for more rights. >> > >> >Several female protesters were injured and one woman had to have 8 >> >stitches in her head. Almost all of them were groped and sexually >> >assaulted in the attack. >> > >> >A 2008 study by the Egyptian Center for Women’s Rights (ECWR) found >> >that well over two-thirds of Egyptian women are sexually harassed daily >> >in the country. >> > >> >The participants held signs that read “It is my right to protest >> >safely,” “Groping your sister is shameful for the square” and “Be a man >> >and protect her instead of harassing her.” >> > >> >“We are fed up,” protester Mai Abdel Hafez, 24, told Bikyamasr.com. >> > >> >“We came to deliver a message that it is our right to protest and we >> >will not avoid the square in fear of harassment,” she said right before >> >the attack took place. >> > >> >But with the Eid holiday arriving, women find it difficult to forget >> >the beginning of the holiday “fear season,” when dozens of young men and >> >boys grobed and mobbed women outside a downtown Cairo theater. >> > >> >That event, in 2006, highlighted the issue of sexual harassment and >> >sexual violence against women in the country, spurring campaigns and >> >online debate. However, much of that debate and anger over the treatment of >> >women seems to be silenced after a day or two, with many returning >> >to what they call “more important issues.” >> > >> >The issue of sexual harassment and violence has left many Egyptian women >> >remaining at home during the holiday. >> > >> >And on Sunday morning, groups of young men were already seen by >> >Bikyamasr.com antagonizing women on downtown Cairo’s Qasr el-Aini >> >street, where they got in the face of two female passersby. >> > >> >“They just yelled horrible things at us and asked us for sex,” said >> >one of the women. “This is what Egypt has become for us, especially >> >during holidays.” >> > >> > >> >[Non-text portions of this message have been removed] >> > >> > >> > >> >[Non-text portions of this message have been removed] >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> >> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] >> > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] ------------------------------------ Post message: [email protected] Subscribe : [email protected] Unsubscribe : [email protected] List owner : [email protected] Homepage : http://proletar.8m.com/Yahoo! 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