hehehe....

elu dan jusfiq ketika ditanya tentang tulisan ini langsung oot dan ngacir 
terkencing kencing sambil pegangin kontolnya masing2, persis seperti murid2nya 
tuhan jesus.  kesian...


http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/message/314958




--- In [email protected], item abu <itemabu@...> wrote:
>
> Ga aneh kalo orang Islam ngebeli anak ingusan yg lalu dijadikan budak sex. 
> Soalnya, perbudakan dan pedophilia itu adalah bagian dr Islam.
> 
> Islam kan emang agama yg benar unt para bajingan keparat
> 
> 
> http://tundratabloids.com/2011/05/aftenposten-little-girls-ending-up-as-sex-slaves-for-the-saudis.html
> 
> 
> Little girls end up as sex slaves for Saudis
> Aftenposten:Girl Children between five and 12 years old are sold to wealthy 
> men 
> in  Saudi Arabia, where they are held as sex slaves. When they reach  
> maturity, 
> and many are thrown on the street and they end quickly as a  prostitute.
> TRON STRAND
> Save the Children appeal to the  Norwegian and Swedish ministers take up the 
> issue with their Saudi  counterparts, and asks private companies to take up 
> the 
> exploitation of  children when they hit their business.
> - I am not surprised by the information  about the existence of such traffic 
> to 
> Saudi Arabia and other countries  in the region, particularly in light of 
> that 
> marriage with children is  widespread and accepted, “said Sannah Johnson, 
> regional director of the  Middle East for the Swedish Save the Children.
> A well-organized network of traffickers  supplying the Arab market with child 
> brides from the North African  country of Mauritania, says U.S. diplomats. 
> Retrieved as sex slaves in  their thousands from Yemen, in addition to that 
> there is an extensive  sex industry in Yemen offering sex with minors to rich 
> men from the Gulf  states, the Wikileaks documents and Aftenposten Bergens 
> Tidende has  access to.
> 7. April 2009
> An engaged woman meets an American  diplomat in Mauritania’s capital 
> Nouakchott. 
> The day after the diplomat  writes a report back to Washington. To start it:
> “There is an increase in reports of  trafficking of child brides to Saudi 
> Arabia. The girls, usually between  five and 12 years old, married off to 
> wealthy Saudi men in exchange for  hefty price tags for brides. As soon as 
> they 
> arrive in Saudi Arabia,  they become sex slaves of their husbands. “
> The engaged woman named Aminetou Mint El  Moctar. Completely on their own, 
> she 
> has started a campaign to get the  authorities in Mauritania to take the 
> problem 
> seriously. She will not  even answer his letters and asks why the United 
> States 
> take up the issue  internationally. At the U.S. embassy, ​​she finds one 
> that 
> finally  listens.
> Large sums of money
> Aminetou Mint El Moctar says that  traffickers seek out poor families to get 
> them to marry off their  daughters to wealthy Saudis. The younger girls are, 
> the 
> higher the  price. A child bride can be paid with 5 â€" 6 million in the 
> local  
> currency ouguiya, equivalent to around 120 000. Local travel agencies,  which 
> in 
> reality is a network of traffickers, organized traffic. The  local agent 
> receives a bonus paid by the girls’ future husbands. Amount  of which 
> depends on 
> the girls’ age and beauty.
> The embassy memo further states that  “barnebrudene, as soon as they arrive 
> in 
> Saudi Arabia, the sex slaves of  their husbands.” Aminetou explained that 
> the 
> girls, as they reach  puberty and become pregnant, no longer of interest to 
> their husbands.  “They rolled on the street, and since they do not have any 
> network, they  have no other choice than to be prostitute.”
> Entrapment
> Officials from the U.S. embassy tells of  a girl who for three years was 
> locked 
> in a room where she met with  someone other than her Saudi husband and his 
> maid. 
> They also refer to an  article in the Radio France International with a 
> diploma 
> from  seven-year-old Mulheri exposed to traffickers and sold to Saudi Arabia.
> At the same time victims of trafficking  in danger of being prosecuted in 
> Saudi 
> Arabia. Mint El Moctar told  diplomats that around 30 Mauritanian women are 
> sentenced to imprisonment  in Saudi Arabia to be a prostitute, even though 
> they 
> are victims of  trafficking.
> Mauritania has long refused to recognize  the problem. Faced with U.S. 
> diplomats 
> have a representative of  Mauritania Justice Department argued that “the 
> trafficking of  Mauritanian women do not exist and that human trafficking to 
> Saudi  Arabia is not possible because the country’s laws require that a 
> woman  
> can only travel accompanied by male family members.”
> Death threats
> According to the embassy note has  Aminetou Mint El Moctar told she has 
> “received death threats and she is  called” liar, a crazy woman and a 
> traitor 
> who destroy Mauritania  reputation. “
> Aminetou Mint El Moctar was honored last  year by U.S. Secretary of State 
> Hillary Clinton just for his work  against human trafficking and to put the 
> problem of child brides on the  agenda of the African country.
> U.S. publishes reports on human trafficking in every country. About Saudi 
> Arabia 
> says the latest report from 2010:
> “Many Saudis, including some  representatives of government, continues to 
> deny 
> that some types of  human trafficking takes place, particularly in cases 
> involving sexual  exploitation.”
> Closed countries
> Sanna Johnson in Swedish Save the  Children lead the organization’s 
> activities 
> in the Middle East from his  office in Beirut. She says that independent 
> organizations can not escape  to Saudi Arabia and that the country is very 
> closed.
> - We know well that the child workers  and domestic workers are as good as 
> legal 
> rights in the country. They  have no rights. The Kingdom has suggested that 
> professionals employed in  hospitals where women who have been victims of 
> abuse, 
> be received. This  means that the government acknowledges that the problem 
> exists, “says  Johnson.
> - There are things that are not  acceptable as marriage of minors. It must be 
> highlighted. I think the  governments of Norway and Sweden should take it up 
> with their Saudi  counterparts, when the opportunity presents itself. But I 
> also 
> think  private companies should take it up with their business partners in 
> the  
> country, “said Johnson.
> - The large companies, such as in the arms industry, can have an extremely 
> large 
> impact, “she said.
> Gift for a while
> Johnson also refers to the widespread  practice of so-called temporary 
> marriages 
> in the Arab countries. To  circumvent the ban on sex outside marriage, 
> included 
> men in these  countries temporary marriages with girls and young women from 
> several  countries.
> There is also some evidence that the  practice of child brides is becoming a 
> controversial issue in Saudi  Arabia’s quasi-rooms. Many of its citizens 
> deplore 
> the practice. A few  examples are discussed in the country’s media:
> A local judge in the town of Nejd in  2008 refused to overturn a marriage 
> between an eight-year-old girl and  her husband for fifty years. The girl’s 
> father sold her to settle its  debt to the man. A higher court granted a 
> divorce 
> in April 2009.
> The government-affiliated Commission on  Human Rights in Saudi Arabia was 
> able 
> to void a marriage between a 10  year old girl and a 60-year-old man.
> A court in Bisha issued in October 2008,  a divorce document to end a 
> marriage 
> between a 14-year-old girl and her  70 year old man.
> In January 2009, won an 11-year-old girl  presented with a case to get a 
> marriage annulled by a 75-year-old man,  held by the girl’s 70 year old 
> father.
> Sex tourism
> In Saudi Arabia neighboring  Yemen is the problem of sex tourism, human 
> interest 
> and child brides  formidable. It attracted international attention when the 
> 12 
> year-old  Fawzia Abdullah Yousef died in childbirth 11 September 2009. She 
> was  
> married to a 24-year-old, only 11 years old.
> According to a note from the Embassy of  Yemen’s capital Sanaa, about 25 
> percent 
> of all girls in the country  married before the age of 15 years. Yemeni 
> authorities have, to the  United States, expressed frustration over how 
> little 
> Saudi Arabia is  doing to combat human trafficking from Yemen to Saudi Arabia.
> According to an embassy memo, thousands  of children each year in Saudi 
> Arabia, 
> “where they face abuse and harsh  living conditions.”
> Local human rights groups say it was  long common for Saudi Arabia imprisoned 
> minors, and minors must also  have been were decapitated. Since 2008, Saudi 
> Arabia, however, returned  several minors to Yemen, instead of taking them 
> into 
> custody.
> That rich tourists from the Gulf states  travel to Yemen to buy sex, is a 
> public 
> secret in Yemen. Underage  prostitute working out of many of the hotels in 
> the 
> country.
> The embassy memo states that “Saudi men  travel to Yemen to establish 
> relations 
> with underage prostitute,  sometimes in the form of temporary marriage.” 
> One 
> source says he knows  of “at least three instances where Saudi men have 
> married 
> Yemeni women  and then force them into prostitution in Saudi Arabia.”
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




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