Hehehe.... ratusan orang Islam rame2 nyerang seorang cewek secara seksual 
selama 
25 menit. 


Kenapa sampe bisa ada ratusan orang Islam nyerang cewek bersama2? Krn mereka 
adalah orang Islam, diajarin oleh Islam shg jadi bajingan keparat semuanya.



Lara Logan: "They really enjoyed my pain and suffering. It incited them to more 
violence"
The brutal, opportunistic sexual assault of Lara Logan --  an inconvenient 
incident in the feel-good story the mainstream media  desperately wanted the 
Egyptian revolution to be -- is for many  Westerners an introduction to the 
deplorable treatment and constant  harassment of native as well as foreign 
women 
in Egypt. And as we have  seen, the practice persists due to the mentality that 
women are  possessions of men and do not belong in public, and, crucially, the  
ability to blame the victim for supposedly falling short of Islamic  strictures 
on dress and behavior, as commenters on an Arab News story on  harassment 
openly 
and stridently did here. 

The burden is placed almost entirely on the woman to avoid  "provoking" 
harassment, or worse. That is not the stuff modern, stable  democracies are 
made 
of, not only because of the lack of equality, but  because self government in a 
society cannot survive without the  government of the self on the individual 
level: no excuses, no  displacement of responsibility.
An update on this story. "CBS Reporter Recounts a ‘Merciless’ Assault," by 
Brian 
Stelter for the New York Times, April 28 (thanks to all who sent this in):
Lara Logan thought she was going to die in Tahrir Square  when she was sexually 
assaulted by a mob on the night that Hosni  Mubarak’s government fell in Cairo. 

Ms. Logan, a CBS News  correspondent, was in the square preparing a report for 
“60 Minutes” on  Feb. 11 when the celebratory mood suddenly turned threatening. 
She was  ripped away from her producer and bodyguard by a group of men who tore 
 
at her clothes and groped and beat her body. “For an extended period of  time, 
they raped me with their hands,” Ms. Logan said in an interview  with The New 
York Times. She estimated that the attack involved 200 to  300 men.
Ms. Logan, who returned to work this month, is expected to speak at length 
about 
the assault on the CBS News program “60 Minutes” on Sunday night.
Her experience in Cairo underscored the fact that female  journalists often 
face 
a different kind of violence. While other forms  of physical violence affecting 
journalists are widely covered — the  traumatic brain injury ’suffered by the 
ABC News anchor Bob Woodruff in Iraq in 2006 was a front-page story at that  
time — sexual threats against women are rarely talked about within  
journalistic 
circles or in the news media. [...]
Until now the only public comment about the assault came  four days after it 
took place, when Ms. Logan was still in the hospital.  She and Mr. Fager 
drafted 
a short statement that she had “suffered a  brutal and sustained sexual assault 
and beating.”
That statement, Ms. Logan said, “didn’t leave me to carry  the burden alone, 
like my dirty little secret, something that I had to  be ashamed of.”
The assault happened the day that Ms. Logan returned to  Cairo, having left a 
week earlier after being detained and interrogated  by Egyptian forces. “The 
city was on fire with celebration” over Mr.  Mubarak’s exit, she said, 
comparing 
it to a Super Bowl party. She and a  camera crew traversed Tahrir Square, the 
epicenter of the celebrations,  interviewing Egyptians and posing for 
photographs with people who wanted  to be seen with an American journalist.
“There was a moment that everything went wrong,” she recalled.
As the cameraman, Richard Butler, was swapping out a  battery, Egyptian 
colleagues who were accompanying the camera crew heard  men nearby talking 
about 
wanting to take Ms. Logan’s pants off. She  said: “Our local people with us 
said, ‘We’ve gotta get out of here.’  That was literally the moment the mob set 
on me.”
Mr. Butler, Ms. Logan’s producer, Max McClellan, and two  locally hired drivers 
were “helpless,” Mr. Fager said, “because the mob  was just so powerful.” A 
bodyguard who had been hired to accompany the  team was able to stay with Ms. 
Logan for a brief period of time. “For  Max to see the bodyguard come out of 
the 
pile without her, that was one  of the worst parts,” Mr. Fager said. He said 
Ms. 
Logan “described how  her hand was sore for days after — and the she realized 
it 
was from  holding on so tight” to the bodyguard’s hand.
They estimated that they were separated from her for about 25 minutes.
“My clothes were torn to pieces,” Ms. Logan said.
She declined to go into more detail about the assault but  said: “What really 
struck me was how merciless they were. They really  enjoyed my pain and 
suffering. It incited them to more violence.” 

After being rescued by a group of civilians and Egyptian  soldiers, she was 
swiftly flown back to the United States. “She was  quite traumatized, as you 
can 
imagine, for a period of time,” Mr. Fager  said. Ms. Logan said she decided 
almost immediately that she would speak  out about sexual violence both on 
behalf of other journalists and on  behalf of “millions of voiceless women who 
are subjected to attacks like  this and worse.” ...Posted by Marisol on April 
29, 2011  7:04 AM  | 56 Comments 

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



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