Saturday, 4 January 2014

Pakistan:Stepfather booked for throwing acid on daughters


04/01/2014

KASUR: The police on Saturday registering a case against a stepfather, who threw acid on daughters at Patoki, started investigation from different angles, Geo News reported.

Accused Qari Aslam was also booked under sections of terrorism, police said.

The victim daughters’ mother has alleged that the accused wanted to get his invalid son married to his stepdaughter, 15 and on her refusal he threw acid on the daughters.

Both the injured sisters are under treatment in Lahore Jinnah Hospital.

 



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Two Jordanian sentenced to death over 'honour killing'

30/12/2013


The two men, aged 23 and 20, strangled their divorced sister to death in June 2013.

AMMAN (AFP) - The criminal court in Amman on Sunday sentenced two Jordanian men to death for killing their sister in June "to cleanse the family s honour," a court official said.
"The two men, aged 23 and 20, took their divorced sister, also in her twenties, to the garden of their house and strangled her in June 2013," in Zarqa, a city northeast of Amman, the official told AFP.
"They confessed to killing their sister, who worked in a kindergarten after suspecting that she had behaved badly," the official said without elaborating.
"They said that they wanted to cleanse the family s honour," the official added.
Murder is punishable by death in Jordan, but in "honour killings" courts usually commute or reduce sentences if the victim s family requests leniency.
"For the first time in several years, the family of the victim refused to ask the court for leniency, demanding the maximum punishment," another court official told AFP without giving further details.
Between 15 and 20 women die in so-called "honour" murders each year in the kingdom, despite government efforts to curb such crimes.
A study by Cambridge University s Institute of Criminology in June said many Jordanian teenagers believe killing a daughter, sister or wife who has "dishonoured" or shamed the family is justified.

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Women kills her 10-year old maid in Lahore:Pakistan

03/01/2013

SLAMABAD: Police in Lahore have arrested a woman for beating to death her 10-year-old maid after accusing the girl of stealing a few rupees, less than a dollar's worth.
The girl died on Thursday, after her employer had brought her to hospital.
Police official Mohammed Yousaf says the doctors alerted the police after seeing signs of abuse and torture on the girl's body. Later, the woman confessed to killing her maid with a steel pipe.
Child labor is common in Pakistan, which has no legislation setting a minimum age for work.
Children — mostly from extremely poor and illiterate families — are commonly employed in households for domestic work and often exposed to verbal, physical and sexual abuse.

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Monday, 23 December 2013

NCSW hopes for better environment for working women



23/12/2013
National Commission on the Status of Women (NCSW) Chairperson Khawar Mumtaz said lack of awareness about Protection against Harassment of Women at the Workplace Act 2010 was the biggest hurdle in its effective implementation.

Sharing her views on the eve of National Working Women Day to be observed every year on December 22, she eulogised the services of working women rendered for the country.

The day is observed to acknowledge the struggle of working women in securing a dignified and respectful working environment.

It is also celebrated to acknowledge the economic contributions made by women to the country as women are increasingly joining the ranks of doctors, engineers, lawyers, judges, journalists, armed forces, scientists and business administrators.

In a statement issued on Saturday Khawar said, NCSW collaborated with the Pakistan government and other civil society organisations to facilitate the women who have entered the mainstream society and are practically contributing in national economy. She said successive federal and provincial governments in Pakistan showed commitment to the cause of women and promulgation of the `Protection against Harassment of Women at Workplace Act 2010' was manifestation of government resolve to address the concerns and issues of working women. She said it was a landmark move to help Pakistani women work without fear of being harassed or discriminated.

The government has recently introduced the online facility for victims of harassment at workplace through Federal Ombudsman Secretariat (FOS) for the implementation of the act.

Khawar said most of the private and public sector organisations are not implementing the law in letter and spirit like the mandatory requirement to display the copies of code of conduct in English.

"The organisations may be fined up to Rs 100,000 if an employee lodges a complaint of harassment," she added.

NCSW chief stressed the need of acknowledging the rights and contributions of home-based workers and introducing policies and laws for them. The country now has a legal obligation to comply with international laws and is monitored by the International Labour Organisation's Committee on Application of Standards, she said.

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Monday, 16 December 2013

Acid attacks a serious concern in Pakistan

(Edited text of a statement issued by the Asian Human Rights Commission: AHRC-STM-018-2010)
The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has received photographs from Mr Javed Kapoor showing the extent of the gender-based violence in Pakistan and the concrete consequences of the misogynist mindset spreading within the Pakistani middle-class. The AHRC is working on those acid throwing cases as part of its involvement in denouncing human rights violations across Asia.
On 26 January 2010, a bill regarding acid violence—which would specifically target acid related crimes by providing graver punishments for the attackers and by regulating the sale and purchase of acid—will be submitted to the National Assembly of Pakistan. But this only marks the beginning of a long legislative process and it will require some time before the law is successfully adopted and effectively enforced. It will also require a strong political will, which until now, has proven inadequate, if not nonexistent. Indeed, in most of those cases, the judicial institutions have not taken stern sanctions against the perpetrators, which have often been able to walk away in total impunity. Nor has adequate compensation and support been granted to the victims.
Irum Saeed, 30, poses for a photograph at her office at the Urdu University of Islamabad, Pakistan, Thursday, July 24, 2008.
Irum was burned on her face, back and shoulders twelve years ago when a boy whom she rejected for marriage threw acid on her in the middle of the street.
She has undergone plastic surgery 25 times to try to recover from her scars.
Shameem Akhter, 18, poses for a photograph at her home in Jhang, Pakistan, Wednesday, July 10, 2008.
Shameem was raped by three boys who then threw acid on her three years ago.
Shameem has undergone plastic surgery 10 times to try to recover from her scars.
Shehnaz Usman, 36, poses for a photograph in Lahore, Pakistan, Sunday, Oct. 26, 2008.
Shehnaz was burned with acid by a relative due to a familial dispute five years ago.
Shehnaz has undergone plastic surgery 10 times to try to recover from her scars.
Najaf Sultana, 16, poses for a photograph at her home in Lahore, Pakistan on Wednesday, July 9, 2008.
At the age of five Najaf was burned by her father while she was sleeping, apparently because he didn't want to have another girl in the family.
As a result of the burning Najaf became blind and after being abandoned by both her parents she now lives with relatives. She has undergone plastic surgery around 15 times to try to recover from her scars.
Shahnaz Bibi, 35, poses for a photograph in Lahore, Pakistan, Sunday, ct. 26, 2008.
Ten years ago Shahnaz was burned with acid by a relative due to a familial dispute.
She has never undergone plastic surgery.
Kanwal Kayum, 26, adjusts her veil as she poses for a photograph in Lahore, Pakistan, Sunday, Oct. 26, 2008.
Kanwal was burned with acid one year ago by a boy whom she rejected for marriage.
She has never undergone plastic surgery.
Munira Asef, 23, poses for a photograph in Lahore, Pakistan, Sunday, Oct. 26, 2008.
Munira was burned with acid five years ago by a boy whom she rejected for marriage.
She has undergone plastic surgery 7 times to try to recover from her scars.
Memuna Khan, 21, poses for a photograph in Karachi, Pakistan, Friday, Dec. 19, 2008.
Menuna was burned by a group of boys who threw acid on her to settle a dispute between their family and Menuna's.
She has undergone plastic surgery 21 times to try to recover from her scars.
Zainab Bibi, 17, adjusts her veil as she poses for a photograph in Islamabad, Pakistan, Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2008.
Zainab was burned on her face with acid thrown by a boy whom she rejected for marriage five years ago.
She has undergone plastic surgery several times to try to recover from her scars.
Naila Farhat, 19, poses for a photograph in Islamabad, Pakistan, Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2008.
Naila was burned on her face with acid thrown by a boy whom she rejected for marriage five years ago.
She has undergone plastic surgery several times to try to recover from her scars.
Saira Liaqat, 26, poses for the camera at her home in Lahore, Pakistan, Wednesday, July 9, 2008.
When she was fifteen, Saira was married to a relative who would later attack her with acid after insistently demanding her to live with him, although the families had agreed she wouldn't join him until she finished school.
Saira has undergone plastic surgery 9 times to try to recover from her scars.
The case of Naila Farhat (see picture above) was brought to the Supreme Court of Pakistan in November 2008 and received enormous publicity. In this specific case, the perpetrator was sentenced to 12 years imprisonment and ordered to pay 1.2 million rupees in damages. This represents a landmark decision in dealing with gender-related violence, but the judgment could not stop the menace of acid-throwing. It is important to recognize that this decision was an exception in the landscape of acid attacks in Pakistan; in most cases the measures taken—if any—are not proportionate to the sufferings inflicted by the attacks.
Most acid-attacks are punishing measures towards women who have refused to accede to commands from men or have stood against abuses from them. The effects of these acid attacks upon their lives have been destructive: apart from the physical trauma undergone (some are scarred and maimed for life, despite numerous surgical interventions), they also have to face psychological trauma as well as social isolation and ostracism from their community. A law against acid crimes will hardly act as a deterrent when perpetrators know that if they have enough resources and leverage they can shrug off any charge held against them, no matter the atrocity.
From the victims’ point of view, there is a high risk of denial of justice, and the numerous obstacles they can face in their pursuit of justice may act as a strong disincentive preventing them from reporting the attacks. Indeed, the status of women in Pakistan, subject on the one hand to pressures not to disgrace their families by filing a case, and on the other hand, to disdain from the police officers themselves, will add to the obstacles faced by any average Pakistani seeking justice within a corrupted policing system and administration.

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16 killed in clash in China's restive Xinjiang region



16/12/2013
Beijing  -- Sixteen people have been killed in violence in China's volatile western region of Xinjiang, state media reported Monday.
Two police officers chasing suspects came under attack late Sunday from people with machetes and explosive devices in Shufu county, near the city of Kashgar, said Tianshan, a news website run by the Xinjiang government.
In the clash that ensued, two police officers died and 14 "gang members" were shot and killed, Tianshan reported. It described what happened as a "terrorist attack."
Police detained two suspects, the report said, and the violence is under further investigation.
Deadly unrest frequently breaks out in Xinjiang, a large, resource-rich region that is home to the Uyghurs, a Turkic-speaking, predominantly Muslim ethnic group.
The arrival of waves of Han Chinese people over the decades has fueled tensions with the Uyghurs. Chinese authorities have cracked down heavily on violence involving Uyghurs, deepening resentment.
The Tianshan report Monday didn't specify the ethnicity of the people involved in the clash with police.
The details of violent clashes in Xinjiang often remain murky. Uyghur diaspora groups, like the World Uyghur Congress, have criticized the Chinese government for the lack of transparency over such events.
Xinjiang government officials didn't immediately return calls from CNN seeking further information on Sunday's violence.
Chinese authorities have blamed Uyghurs for a vehicle attack in Beijing's Tiananmen Square in October that killed five people -- including the three in the vehicle -- and wounded 40 others.
Xinjiang's worst violence in decades took place in July 2009, when rioting in the capital, Urumqi, between Uyghurs and Han Chinese killed some 200 people and injured 1,700. That unrest was followed by a crackdown by security forces.
Xinjiang is now home to more than 8 million Han Chinese, up from 220,000 in 1949, and 10 million Uyghurs. The newcomers take most of the new jobs, and unemployment among Uyghurs is high.
They complain of discrimination and harsh treatment by security forces, despite official promises of equal rights and ethnic harmony.
Beijing accuses some Uyghur groups of trying to establish an independent state.

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Saturday, 14 December 2013

Lahore woman throws three daughters into canal

November 07, 2013


LAHORE: A mentally challenged woman threw her three daughters into a canal on Thursday, rescue sources said.

The sources said that body of an ill-fated child was recovered while search for two others was still underway.

Police said that the woman identified as Razia threw her three daughters into BRB canal and was taken into custody. Names and ages of the girls were yet to be known.
 

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Kabaddi World Cup: England women's team demands gender test on Pakistan players


12/12/2013
England contingent alleges that some of the Pakistan women players played the game like male participants.
Controversy struck the ongoing fourth edition of the Kabaddi World Cup in India when England women's team officials demanded a gender test on three players from the Pakistan team on Wednesday. Pakistan women's team, who took part in the tournament for the first time, have been knocked out of the event by India.

England Kabaddi Federation alleged that Pakistan players have masculine physique and are playing the sport like male athletes. The English body also alleged that the entire issue was being swept under the carpet despite their raised grievances. The English federation voiced their complaints in a letter to Punjab's director of sports Shiv Dular Singh Dhillon.

"Prior to our match against Pakistan at Jalalabad on December 7, I submitted a letter raising serious doubts about three players who we suspect are of male gender. All the women teams are put up at the same hotel and we have had sufficient time to observe the behavior of these players," Kawal Das, England Kabaddi Federation general secretary, was quoted as saying in the Times of India.

Das says that a team of doctors were to look into the matter but the plan was cancelled after Pakistani officials made requests. England kabaddi coach Ashok Das, who is also the president of the England Kabaddi Federation, said they had made the complaint on December 7 and 8 however, no action was taken by the concerned authorities.

"How can they think of including kabaddi in the Olympics and Commonwealth Games if you ignore such a serious issue?," said one of the officials.

On the other hand, tournament direction Shiv Dev Singh admitted that complaints were made by the England team management but said the players under doubt may have male hormones being from an athletic background.

"There is no question of male or transgenders playing in the team. The players in question were professional throwers and might be having male hormones. This can be checked by dope tests," Dev Singh said.

Dev Singh said that only an expert can take a call on an issue of alleged doping as such issues do not fall under his domain.

India will take New Zealand in the final of the tournament in Jalandhar on Thursday after beating Pakistan 46-12 in the semis on Wednesday.

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India win women's Kabaddi World Cup2013

12/12/2013
Jalandhar:  India clinched the women's Kabaddi World Cup championship for the third time in a row, defeating debutant New Zealand 49-21 in the summit clash played at Guru Gobind Singh sports complex here on Thursday.

The Indian eves led their New Zealand counterparts for most part of the match and held out a strong challenge by the visitors in the second half, on course to a resounding win.

The Indian team took home a first-place prize of Rs one crore.

Anu Rani was adjudged the best stopper while Ram Bateri was declared the best raider. Both received a Maruti Alto car each

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Monday, 20 June 2011

Work Day for Women

ISLAMABAD: Women carrying dry bushes for cooking purpose in the capital. 

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Women at Work

 LAHORE: A lady vendor roasting the grains for customers at her roadside setup for earn money. 

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Saudi Arabia's Prince Abdulaziz and Princess Fadwa in wedding ceremony

Saudi Arabia's Prince Mohamed bin Nawaf bin Abdulaziz and Princess Fadwa bint Khalid bin Abdullah bin Abdulrahman leave after the wedding ceremony in Westminster Abbey, in central London April 29, 2011.

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lady worker busy in preparing clay made traditional oven (tandoor) at her workplace.

HYDERABAD: A lady worker busy in preparing clay made traditional oven (tandoor) at her workplace.  

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HYDERABAD: Villager ladies on their way to fill their pots with clean drinking water.



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Most tattooed woman wins Guinness World Record


Julia Gnuse, who will be featured in the 2011 Guinness World Records, has spent more than £40,000 covering almost every inch of her 5ft 2 body with an array of brightly coloured tattoos.
From pictures of punk band the Sex Pistols to Disney characters, there’s hardly a slither of flesh that hasn’t been inked. Only her ears and feet remain their natural colour.
With 95 per cent of her skin covered and 400 tattoos in total, Julia has even earned a place in the Guinness Book of Records as the world’s most tattooed woman and the nickname The Illustrated Lady. But she also admits her passion has turned into something of an addiction.
Bizarrely, Julia, 53, started having tattoos in an attempt to hide a rare skin condition, which left her with ugly blisters. Doctors suggested flesh-coloured tattoos would cover the red scars. But when they failed to fully disguise the marks, she opted for traditional-coloured body art instead.
While the tattoos have detracted attention from Julia’s scars, her skin still erupts in painful blisters. But she says her mission has been worth every penny.“My skin still blisters, but I feel happier and my tattoos have made me more confident,” she says. “They cover the scars and enable me to have a better life.
“Now people stare at me because I am a walking canvas, and not because of some ugly blister. I feel more confident. People want to get to know me. They are fascinated by the tattoos.”
The former singer’s love affair with tattoos began when she was 35 and diagnosed with a rare and incurable skin condition known as porphyria. It causes her to blister when exposed to direct sunlight, and makes her very sensitive to certain fabrics as well as chemicals found in washing detergents. 
“I developed it overnight,” says Julia. “It wasn’t just sunlight that affected me. My skin became so sensitive I couldn’t wear a bra as the chafing from the strap caused blisters. They were the size of a 50p piece and I’d sometimes have up to 50 at a time. And they were excruciating. If I knocked a part of my body they’d burst.
“The blisters made me feel unclean and ugly, and living in California, where every other woman is stunning, just made me feel worse. I felt very depressed and unattractive, and stayed indoors all the time. I could have moved somewhere less sunny but I hate cold, dark weather.”A dermatologist suggested to Julia that flesh-coloured tattoos would cover up the scars left by the blisters. Julia followed his advice and, while the needle didn’t irritate her skin or worsen the condition, the tattoos failed to hide the scars. It was then that Julia decided to try colourful designs instead.
She recalls: “I’d always thought tattoos looked tarty, but I was prepared to try it because I hated my scars so much. When I had the first tattoo, a five-inch octopus on my right calf in 1988, I was so scared my hands were shaking. It was painful, but I soon got used to it. And I loved the result so much I decided to have more.”
It was the start of an addiction for Julia, and she began paying almost weekly visits to a tattoo parlour in Los Angeles, California, with each tattoo taking a couple  of hours at a time. 
“I grew to love the feeling of the needle on my body,” she admits. “I was in the tattoo parlour once a week, looking at Julia’s favorite TV actress and comedian Lucille Ball features prominently on her back, while Elizabeth Perkins from the ’60s TV series Bewitched appears on her bottom.Peeking out from Julia’s breast is Bart Simpson, along with US comic Rodney Dangerfield. “Dangerfield can be rude and dirty, so being on my breast was quite appropriate,” she laughs.
“The only places I’ve kept bare are my feet and my eyes because I wanted to keep some places free of tattoos.”
Julia doesn’t work, so has funded her addiction using a generous family trust fund. But she says at first her family were shocked by her decision to get her body covered with tattoos.
“My parents and sister were pretty shocked, but they saw the tattoos as a creative outlet for me,” she says. “They have no worries about me spending the trust fund money on them. It is paid as an allowance and I can do what I want with it.” 
And she insists she’s never encountered any prejudice because of how she looks. “Of course people stare and ask about the tattoos, that’s to be expected,” says Julia. “It’s something I’ve got used to. I don’t consider myself a freak, but a body of art.”
Julia’s currently dating, and says her boyfriend thinks her tattoos are great. “I’ve been with a guy called David for over a year, and we’re very happy. He doesn’t have any tattoos, but he does love the way I look.
“I like men who are interested in me as a person, and not what I look like. Some people will not go out with me because of what I look like, and it does take a strong man to be with me because I do attract attention. They have to be secure in themselves.”
Now Julia’s running out of space for tattoos, but if she does want to get a new design, she just has it over the top of an old one.  But although Julia’s tattoos have helped her deal with the effect of her skin condition, they haven’t cured it. Sunlight still makes her blister, so when she ventures out she wears long-sleeved shirts and jeans and shields her face from the sun with a hat.
Bizarrely, having devoted so much time and money to her body art, Julia has now decided to have the bright blue tattoos on her face toned down.
Using a process known as dermabrasion, a specialist has removed the top layers of skin with a laser and in doing so has lightened the look.
“I just suddenly thought I might look a bit strange when I’m much older with a full face tattoo,” she says. “But I intend to keep the rest. They are my trademark after all – I’ll always be remembered for them.”
designs and deciding what I wanted on my body. I loved being stared at for my tattoos rather than my scars.”

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Local Press: Saudi women and smoking


A recent report revealed that the number of smokers in Saudi Arabia has reached more than 6 million.

I find this number very strange, especially in an educated society that realizes the dangers of smoking, whether they are health, social or financial hazards.

What caught my attention in this high number is that out of these 6 million smokers, 1 million are women. This number is big and scary.

Besides the dangers, what is the woman smoker going to tell her children at home when they see her smoking as she is supposed to be a role model for them?

What is the smoking woman teacher going to tell her students at school when they find out that she smokes?

The gentle and beautiful women should not sully their lips with cigarettes. The gentle and beautiful women should not replace the smell of perfume on their bodies with the smell of smoke.

One million women smokers is indeed a dangerous number. The majority of them are young women.

This raises many questions. What are the reasons behind 1 million women smoking in a conservative Saudi society? Is it because of the lack of family supervision? Is it because of unemployment and plenty of free time? Is it because women are working outside home and not paying attention to the kids any more? Is it because women are searching for gender equality? Is it because they would like to imitate actors on TV? Or is it because of the Internet?

There are many questions that need to be answered by experts. This is a dangerous subject and we need a national project to fight smoking. We do not need useless seminars or distribution of brochures. We need to use modern ways to fight smoking.

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Woman resumes testimony on Iraq rape allegations


 A woman is set to continue her testimony on the sexual assault she says she suffered in Iraq at the hands of co-workers for Houston-based military contractor KBR Inc.
Monday will be the second day on the witness stand for Jamie Leigh Jones, who began her testimony Thursday in a federal court in Houston.
Jones says she was raped while working for KBR at Camp Hope in Baghdad in 2005. She's asking for unspecified damages from the Houston-based companies, which split in 2007.
She sued KBR, Houston-based former parent Halliburton Co. and a former KBR worker she alleges raped her. All deny Jones' allegations.
The Associated Press usually doesn't identify people alleging sexual assault, but Jones' face and name have been in media reports and on her own website.

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Third-World woman with cow in India



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