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  • 23
    Mar
    2013
    5:42am, EDT

    Women violated in the cradle of Egypt's revolution, activists say

    Hania Moheeb, an Egyptian journalist assaulted in Cairo's iconic Tahrir Square, says attacks aimed at shaming women into silence will not succeed. By NBC News' Susan Kroll and Tracy Jarrett.

    By Susan Kroll and Marian Smith, NBC News

    Cairo's Tahrir Square, once the staging ground for the massive uprising that ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, is quickly becoming notorious for something very different: an organized campaign of sexual assaults, activists say.

    The past year has seen an increase in attacks against women at demonstrations, but recently they have been particularly rampant – and, according to witnesses and activists, they have been following similar patterns.

    On the two-year anniversary of the revolution on Jan. 25, at least 19 women were sexually assaulted in and around Tahrir Square in one night, some with knives, activists said. Dozens more cases have been reported in the two months since.

    “The message to women is, ‘You should stay at home, you should stop protesting, you should feel stigmatized,’” said Hania Moheeb, an Egyptian journalist who was herself assaulted in the square that night.

    Moheeb, who writes for two English-language magazines and for a documentary program on Nile TV International, recently met female activists from around the Middle East at a conference in New York on women’s rights since the Arab Spring uprising. She described that at one point that night, she was certain she would die.

    Moheeb, 42, was trying to pass through the square when two men grabbed her from a group of women who had formed a circle around her, apparently to protect her.

    “In a few seconds, tens of hands were all over my body, under my clothes, ripping … off my clothes and violating each inch of my body,” she said.

    The men were “continuously giving the impression that they were helping out while they were the same perpetrators and attackers,” she added.

    They dragged her to the outer edges of the square where another group of men came forward, saying they would help and take her to an ambulance, Moheeb said. But they stopped her as she tried to pull her clothes back on, carrying her half-naked to the ambulance.

    “What I know for a fact is that my body was being violated up until the last second before I was put in the ambulance,” she said.

    Over the days following her attack, Moheeb heard from other women who were also assaulted on the same night, at the same place and in the same way – using the same techniques down to the very last detail.

    Some activists believe it is an organized tactic aimed at silencing opponents of the Egyptian government, but there has been no evidence to prove that is the case, Moheeb said. No single group has been charged in connection with the assaults as of yet.

    Nonetheless, Moheeb fears there will be retribution for her telling her story and worries for her husband and parents. Although she is pursuing justice through the courts, she says she holds out very little hope that anything will be done.

    “The justice I need,” Moheeb said, “is the justice [for] the Egyptian people. The success of the revolution will be success for them.”

    Related:

    Violence, protesters return to Tahrir Square

    Egypt branded more dangerous for tourists than Yemen

    Sex mobs target Egypt's women

    141 comments

    Every place where Obama supported freedom is now under Sharia Law.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: egypt, women, revolution, featured, sexual-assault, tahrir-square, arab-spring
  • 1
    Feb
    2013
    4:43pm, EST

    Indian cabinet moves to toughen laws on rape, crimes against women

    Anindito Mukherjee / EPA

    Indian activists holding banners denouncing rape participate in a protest in New Delhi, Tuesday. Five men suspected of beating and raping a 23-year-old woman in a moving bus in the Indian capital, who later died in a hospital in Singapore, face the death penalty if convicted. A sixth suspect will be tried as a juvenile.

    By The Associated Press

    India's Cabinet accepted most of the recommendations of a commission for toughening laws for crimes against women, including increasing the penalty for rape.

    The panel was set up in response to the fatal gang rape in December of a young woman on a moving bus in New Delhi. The Cabinet recommended Friday that the president issue an ordinance to turn the proposals into law, Law Minister Ashwini Kumar said.



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    The commission recommended an increase in the penalty for rape to 20 years and suggested life terms for gang rape.

    Kumar did not give details. However, the Press Trust of India news agency said the Cabinet went beyond the panel's recommendations by providing for death sentences in cases where a rape leads to death of the victim or leaves her in a "persistent vegetative state."

    The Cabinet also recommended including crimes like stalking, cyber stalking and voyeurism and imposing stiff punishments for such crimes.

    "We believe that this is a progressive piece of legislation and is consistent with felt sensitivities of the nation in the aftermath of an outrageous gang-rape in New Delhi," Kumar said.

    Police say the young woman and a male friend were attacked after boarding the bus on Dec. 16. The attackers beat the man and raped the woman, inflicting massive internal injuries with a metal bar, police said. The victims were dumped on the roadside, and the woman died two weeks later in a Singapore hospital.

    The brutal attack set off nationwide protests, sparking a debate about the treatment of women and highlighting the inability of law enforcement agencies to protect them.

    Related:

    Cops on alert as gang rape trial gets under way

    Attorney in gang rape case blames victim

    Video: Father of rape victim speaks about her dreams, final days

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    6 comments

    Oh how magnanimous of India's Cabinet. Guess none of their daughters ever suffered that ordeal. Another third world country that refuses to grow up. Tradition you say. Keep it.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: india, women, rape, delhi, sexual-assault
  • 11
    Jan
    2013
    1:11am, EST

    Defense attorney blames victim in India gang-rape, murder case

    Adnan Abidi / Reuters

    Manohar Lal Sharma, center, lawyer for defendants accused in a gang rape, speaks outside a district court in New Delhi on Thursday.

    By Kari Huus, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The attorney representing three men charged with gang rape and murder in India told an interviewer that the woman who died and her male companion were to blame for the attack, which took place on a moving bus in New Delhi, according to a report published Thursday.

    "Until today I have not seen a single incident or example of rape with a respected lady," Manohar Lal Sharma said, according to the Bloomberg report. "Even an underworld don would not like to touch a girl with respect."

    The Dec. 16 attack left the 23-year-old physiotherapy student and her companion, who was also beaten, bleeding on a highway. The woman died from her injuries two weeks later in a Singapore hospital.


    Sharma, who is representing three of the five individuals charged in the attack, said Wednesday that his clients would plead not guilty to all charges in the case. Two other men have been charged in the attack, and a third was implicated but will be tried separately because he is a minor.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The lawyer's comments, which echoed those by some conservative religious and political figures, were likely to meet with more outrage from India’s urban middle class, which has spearheaded fierce protests against the government and police for their perceived failure to protect women from violence.

    But they reflected a traditional chauvinism that is still held by many in the populous country.

    "Guilt is not one-sided," Indian spiritual leader Asaram Bapu, told followers earlier in the week, adding that if the woman had pleaded with her six attackers in God's name, and told them she was of the "weaker sex," they would have relented, Reuters reported.

    Mohan Bhagwat, a conservative pro-Hindu politician, weighed in with his view that rape occurs only in Indian cities, because women there adopt western lifestyles, but not in rural India.

    But that view is contradicted by data, Reuters reported, citing the National Commission for Women, which has documented a pattern of gang rape and sexual humiliation of lower caste women in rural India.

    Bhaskara Rao, who heads the New Delhi-based policy think tank said Bhagwat's comments reflected a traditional, rural society amid a country in transition.

    "The people who are there in the police, judiciary, politics — they are old minds trying to deal with new problems," she said.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related reports:

    • Lawyer: Trio in India gang rape case will plead not guilty
    • India gang rape case: Accused duo offer to testify against the others
    • Father of rape victim: Hang the monsters who did this
    • PhotoBlog: Amid outrage over gang rape, murder, calls for tougher punishment for sex crimes

     

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    471 comments

    So... is this the "she wouldn't have been raped if she didn't have a vagina" defense?

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    Explore related topics: india, featured, sexual-assault, gang-rape, kari-huus
  • 5
    Jan
    2013
    12:00am, EST

    Saudi Air Force sergeant accused of Vegas child rape

    Las Vegas PD via AP

    Mazen Alotaibi, 23, faces charges including kidnapping, sexual assault with a minor and felony coercion.

    By The Associated Press

    A sergeant in Saudi Arabia's air force was jailed in Las Vegas on charges that he pulled a boy into a hotel room and sexually assaulted him the morning of New Year's Eve.

    Mazen Alotaibi, 23, faces charges including kidnapping, sexual assault with a minor and felony coercion that could get him decades in state prison, according to police and charging documents obtained Friday.



    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The boy, who is younger than 14, told police the man forced him into a room at the Circus Circus hotel on the Las Vegas Strip and raped him. Police arrested Alotaibi after being called to the hotel before 9:30 a.m. Dec. 31.

    "There was a kidnapping and sexual assault with force," Las Vegas police Lt. Dan McGrath said. "The victim said he was forced into the room and sexually assaulted. We have a strong case based on the evidence."

    The boy, who lives out of state, was staying at the hotel with his family, McGrath said. He was taken to a hospital for medical treatment and evidence collection and released later to family members. His name was not made public.

    McGrath said Alotaibi produced a Saudi Arabian military identification and said he was stationed at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland near San Antonio, Texas. U.S. federal authorities and Saudi military officials were notified, the police lieutenant said.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland spokesman Brent Boller told The Associated Press that records showed Alotaibi is currently stationed at Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi, Miss. Boller said he could not immediately verify if Alotaibi had been at Lackland, but noted that international military students attend a Defense Language Institute English Language Center on the base to improve their English-language skills.

    Alotaibi's lawyer, Don Chairez of Newport Beach, Calif., said Friday he had been in contact with U.S. military authorities at both air force bases and with the Saudi government. He said Alotaibi had come to Las Vegas for the New Year's celebration and will plead not guilty.

    Alotaibi also is charged with burglary, which in Nevada can stem from a person entering a building with intent to commit a felony.

    The alleged attack took place on the sixth floor of a 15-story hotel tower. Circus Circus has a total of 3,767 guest rooms in three towers and five three-story motor lodge-style buildings dubbed Circus Circus Manor.

    The arrest was first reported by the Las Vegas Review-Journal. It cited a police report saying the boy was 13.

    Alotaibi was being held without bail at the Clark County jail pending an evidence hearing Jan. 17.

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    228 comments

    Cut his head off and post it on YouTube. What's good for the goose.

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    Explore related topics: las-vegas, child-abuse, featured, sexual-assault
  • 10
    Dec
    2012
    2:55pm, EST

    Strauss-Kahn, New York hotel worker settle lawsuit claiming sexual assault

    Gonzalo Fuentes / Reuters

    Former IMF head Dominique Strauss-Kahn leaves his apartment in Paris, Monday. He was not required to appear at the hearing in New York.

    By Reuters

    A New York City hotel worker has settled a civil lawsuit she filed against Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the former head of the International Monetary Fund, whom she accused of sexual assault, a New York judge said on Monday.

    The agreement ends a legal saga that began when Nafissatou Diallo, 33, told police that Strauss-Kahn attacked her in his suite at the Sofitel Hotel in Manhattan on May 14, 2011. Her suit alleged that a naked Strauss-Kahn emerged from the bathroom in his $3,000-a-night suite and forced her to perform oral sex.

    Bronx Supreme Court Justice Douglas McKeon announced the two sides had reached a deal to end the litigation, but said details of the settlement, including the amount of any damages to be paid to Diallo, will not be made public.


    The scandal forced Strauss-Kahn to resign his post as head of one of the world's most influential international finance organizations and wrecked his hopes of running for president in his native France. Prosecutors initially expressed confidence in the evidence, including DNA that showed a sexual encounter. But they dropped the criminal case in August 2011 after developing concerns about Diallo's credibility, including what they said were inconsistencies in her account of what happened immediately following the incident.

     


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Accusers in such cases often hide from the media glare, and many media outlets protect their identities by not revealing their names.

    But Diallo, the daughter of an imam from Guinea, broke her silence in July 2011, while the criminal investigation was still active, revealing her identity in interviews to Newsweek and ABC News.

    She filed her civil lawsuit just weeks before the charges were dismissed, claiming he forced her to perform oral sex and caused her physical and emotional damage.

    Strauss-Kahn, 63, filed a countersuit earlier this year against Diallo for defamation. He has said the sexual encounter was consensual but has admitted it was a "moral error."

    The resolution of the civil case brings Strauss-Kahn closer to ending his legal troubles, which have persisted since his return to France after the initial incident.

    Strauss-Kahn is awaiting a decision by a French court on his request to halt an inquiry to determine whether he should stand trial on pimping charges related to sex parties attended by him and by prostitutes.

    He has quietly begun to resume his career in recent months, delivering speeches at private conferences and setting up a consulting firm in Paris.

    Strauss-Kahn was not required to appear personally in court in New York, but the judge ordered Diallo to be present.

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    54 comments

    If he was not guilty, why did he settle?

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    Explore related topics: imf, featured, sexual-assault, strauss-kahn, nafissatou-diallo
  • 5
    Dec
    2011
    4:17am, EST

    Judges: WikiLeaks' Assange can appeal against extradition

    By msnbc.com wire services

    Updated at 5:45 a.m. ET: Judges decide WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange can appeal  to the U.K.'s Supreme Court against lower court rulings that he should be extradited to Sweden over allegations of rape and molestation, The Associated Press reports.

    Published at 4:20 a.m. ET: WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is to ask British judges Monday to let him continue his legal battle to avoid extradition to Sweden over sex crimes allegations.

    Assange will ask high court judges to let him take his case to Britain's Supreme Court. If they refuse the request, he could be extradited to Stockholm within 10 days.


    The 40-year-old Australian behind the anti-secrecy website has spent almost a year on bail in Britain fighting extradition for questioning over claims of rape and molestation made by two Swedish women. Assange, who has been living in Britain since his arrest here in December last year, denies wrongdoing.

    Two courts have ruled against him so far.

    For his case to be considered by Britain's Supreme Court, Assange's lawyers must persuade two High Court judges that it raises a question of "general public importance."

    Assange spent nine days in London's Wandsworth prison after his arrest last year. He was freed a week before Christmas on bail and has since been living at the country house of a wealthy supporter in eastern England.

    His arrest came shortly after WikiLeaks published thousands of secret U.S. diplomatic cables that included unflattering views of world leaders and candid assessments of security threats.

    Assange says the allegations are politically motivated.

    The application to take the case to the Supreme Court rests on two legal questions: Is the warrant for Assange's arrest valid, and can he be considered an "accused" person as required under extradition laws when no decision has been taken over whether he will be prosecuted.

    If his appeal fails, Assange could still take his case to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, further prolonging his stay in Britain.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    41 comments

    Both "girls" are way over 20 years of age. One of them is about 25, the other about 35.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sweden, extradition, rape, uk, sexual-assault, sex-crimes, wikileaks, assange, cablegate, european-court-of-human-righats

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