Cuma cewek dungu model si arra yg terus jadi Islam setelah tahu kayak apa
Islam memperlakukan cewek, bukan?

Maklum, si arra itu ga keberatan sama sekali diomongin mau dibuntingin di
muka umum oleh orang yg bukan lakinya, malahan terus ngejilat pantat si
peleceh wanita tsb.

Dasar idiot sih


"Sudan has been exposed to the brutality of the dogmatic ideology of
political Islam, and the people have been stripped of their
dignity"<http://www.jihadwatch.org/2013/10/sudan-has-been-exposed-to-the-brutality-of-the-dogmatic-ideology-of-political-islam-and-the-people-h.html>

Hala Alkarib is the Director of the Strategic Initiative for women in the
Horn of Africa <http://www.sihanet.org/> (SIHA). In this article she speaks
honestly and passionately about political Islam and the plight of women in
Sudan in ways that, if a non-Muslim in the West said the same things, they
would be branded a "racist, bigoted Islamophobes."

"Sudanese Women - You Can Beat Us but You Cannot Break Us," by Hala Alkarib
for Pambazuka News via
AllAfrica.com<http://allafrica.com/stories/201310072206.html?viewall=1>,
October 3:

Political Islam in Sudan remains very strong and manifests itself in
floggings of Sudanese women that are justified by the constitution in the
Indecent and Immoral Acts. Yet, Sudanese women remain defiant and resist
these unjust and misogynistic laws

While the anger is accumulating in Sudan and peaceful demonstrators are
being injured and killed by the Sudanese regime forces, this comes as a
natural result of years of injustices.

Sudan has been exposed to the brutality of the dogmatic ideology of
political Islam, and the people have been stripped of their dignity. The
story here is just a tip of the iceberg. Sudanese women are the mirror of
the cruelty and disparity imposed by the ruling regime.

*For 25 years now, women in Sudan have been flogged publicly. The current
Sudanese regime's ideology was clear from day one; terrorizing women -
which amounts to paralysing a whole nation. Like all dogma in political
Islam, the regime sat and agreed that the road to secure their position was
through controlling women's bodies, minds, existence and interaction in
public.*

Their misogynistic ideology is based on women being problematic and in need
of being disciplined and controlled: that women are both dangerous and the
main instigator of immorality, equally responsible for all evil in society,
hence the need to be told how to behave in public.

CRIMINALISING WOMEN TO JUSTIFY MISOGYNY

'It's not enough to talk to them; we have to punish them and install fear
in their minds because they are not intelligent and are spiritually unfit.
Their fathers and husbands are unable to control them.'

These are the beliefs that underpin Article 152 of the Sudan criminal code,
'Indecent and Immoral Acts' - on the basis of which Amira Osman, a Sudan
activist, is currently facing trial, and under which thousands of invisible
poor women have already been tried, sentenced and publicly lashed. Their
laughter is seen as a crime, their presence provoking sin.

This is how the regime vaguely drafted Article 154 of the criminal code,
'Practicing Prostitution." The article defines a 'place of prostitution' as
"any place designated for the meeting of men and women between whom there
is no marital relationship, or kinship, in circumstances in which the
exercise of sexual acts is probable to occur".

*Hundreds of women are being charged under this article every day, inside
their homes and work places.* The breadth of interpretation effectively
allows women in any public place in which a woman can be in the same room
as an unrelated man to be tried under this article.

The offence of 'possession of materials and displays contrary to public
morality' of Article 153 has exposed thousands of young women to the
madness of the public order police and deprived them of simply living
normally, and with dignity.
*
The Sudan public order laws are written in a vague and elusive way in order
to allow judges and the law enforcers to employ their own interpretations
of the law. This has turned the legal system into self serving machinery
manipulated and twisted against women's presence and participation in
public.*

Sara is a 25 year old artist and school teacher at a private school. Early
this year, while on her way back home, she was stopped and picked up by the
public order police. She was wearing trousers and a long sleeved T- shirt.

She was sexually assaulted, verbally humiliated and then charged under
Article 152 for wearing trousers. According to her story, by the time they
picked her up, there were twelve other women inside the vehicle all of whom
had been picked up randomly by the public order police while walking on
public roads. None of them had committed any crime, all were just walking
along minding their own business.

They were detained for 24 hours, their phones were confiscated. In the
morning the judge called them out by name and when her name was called Sara
says the judge asked her, 'what do you want 40 lashes or paying 1000 SDP?'

She said she only had ten pounds, then he yelled '40 lashes' and the
soldier grabbed her. They took her to the yard inside the detention block,
made her sit on the sand floor and they started whipping her. 'After 10
extremely painful lashes', she said. 'I was numbed and I could only hear
the mocking and the laughter of the soldiers standing around and asking the
flogger to beat harder.'

BEATING WOMEN TO SUBMIT

Forty-four year old Halima brews alcohol locally and sells it to men from
all over Khartoum. She is the breadwinner of her family of six children and
two elderly parents, all of whom depend on her for their care. She said she
has been flogged and jailed many times, 'every time they come they take
away the alcohol, re-sell it to consumers or they drink it, and beat me for
making it.'

THE DEAD ARE MORE POWERFUL THAN THE LIVING

Amena, 56 years old, sells tea next to a private hospital. She says, 'they
keep taking my kettle and cups all the time, sometimes they flog me, or if
I have some money I give it to them. These days I have found a place next
to the graveyard to sell my tea. I still get customers, but the police
rarely come close to me - I think the dead in our country are more powerful
than the living.'

*The tales of these women reflect more or less how millions of Sudanese
women are living.
*
FAILURE TO COVER HER HAIR

Hundreds of women flocked to court to attend Amira Osman's trial, a
Sudanese activist who was charged under Article 152 for not covering her
hair with a scarf. Her trial has now been postponed until 4 November 2013.
These women will not give up their humanity and dignity, despite the whip
being held to their heads.

The battle against Sudan's public order regime, which has been infused
within the criminal code of the country, has been going on for years across
the country. This regime has been utilized to repress women, to compromise
their livelihoods, to impoverish them, to limit their participation in
public life, sport, cultural activities and mobility, as well as to limit
their political participation.

The Sudanese discriminatory laws and the public order regime are affecting
communities for generations to come by imposing the subordination of women
in the mindset of the younger generation, and hence taking away any
potential for progress and peace.

  Posted by Robert <http://www.jihadwatch.org/> on October 7, 2013 2:48 PM

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