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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • Updated
    5
    days
    ago

    'Pink stinks': Protests greet Berlin's Barbie Dreamhouse

    Barbie's dream house in Berlin is pink and posh and stirring controversy. NBC's Andy Eckhardt reports.  

    By Andy Eckardt, Producer, NBC News

    BERLIN – It is possibly the German capital’s most visible new tourist attraction, but the opening of the bright pink Barbie Dreamhouse Experience was picketed Thursday by women’s groups protesting the “cliché of the female role in society.”

    Only a stone's throw from Berlin’s fashionable Alexanderplatz shopping district, a water fountain in the shape of a huge pink high-heeled shoe now welcomes Barbie fans into a whole world of glittery, cerise-colored fun.

    But while the city’s toy stores are filled with Barbie merchandise adorned with the slogan “Pink Rocks”, the protest includes a campaign called “Pinkstinks” that objects to “marketing strategies that allocate a limited gender role to young girls.”

    The epicenter of doll devotion - only the second of its kind worldwide, after a similar attraction opened earlier this month in Florida -- is an interactive experience for its (mostly) young customers.

    Organizers describe it as a “seemingly endless walk-in closet”, a life-size replica of Barbie's fictional Malibu home.

    “It provides a completely new insight into the living interior and lifestyle of the most famous doll in the world,” said Christoph Rahofer,  of marketing company EMS which obtained the rights to the attraction from US manufacturer Mattel.

    Slideshow: Barbie's Dreamhouse

    Jens Kalaene / EPA

    A life-sized house offers visitors a chance to tour the famous doll's home and even try on Barbie's clothes in her walk-in closet.

    Launch slideshow

    Visitors are greeted first by a large painting of Barbie smiling next to her love interest, Ken, then taken on a tour of her home that includes a bedroom and a stylish bathroom where a pink dolphin pops out of the toilet bowl.

    Equipped with an electronic bracelet, real-world princesses can bake virtual cupcakes in Barbie's kitchen and listen to "Barbie talk" at touchscreen monitors.

    The house is also equipped with a walk-in refrigerator and a huge pink piano playing happy tunes.

    Sean Gallup / Getty Images

    Protests said they were angry at materialist stereotypes of women.

    It’s too much for the taste of some Berliners.

    About a dozen activists - including a man in a pink dress and a wig and a sign around his neck that said "Do you like me now?" - gathered in front of the attraction Wednesday.

    Other placards read "Barbie is not my baby," "I will free you from the horror house" and "pink stinks."

    “This dream world suggests that women can’t be anything less than beautiful and slim,” said Franziska Sedlak from protest group Occupy Barbie Dreamhouse. “And life is not about being beautiful all the time.”

    The movement began in March when members of a youth group affiliated to Germany’s far-left party, die Linke, created an Occupy Barbie Dreamhouse Facebook page.

    “Our protest is not directed towards little girls and their dreams,” member Michael Koschitzki said. “But, for us, this so-called Dreamhouse symbolizes the beauty craze and the discrimination of women in modern day life. It presents a cliché of the female role in society.”

    Demonstrators included  a woman with bare breasts holding a burning cross with "life in plastic is not fantastic" written on her body.

    Despite the criticism, the Barbie Dreamhouse Experience is expected to attract up to 3,000 visitors a day.

    For her part, Barbie will pack up her enormous shoe and dress collection at the end of August, taking her pink paradise on a tour of other European cities.

    Related:

    • Photoblog: 'Life in plastic is not fantastic': Germans protest Barbie Dreamhouse
    • Barbie's Dreamhouse now life-size reality in Florida
    • Full Germany coverage from NBC News

    This story was originally published on Thu May 16, 2013 7:55 AM EDT

    116 comments

    Some people need to get a life....I loved playing with my Barbies when I was a kid, and my Easy Bake Oven, and I wore a little pair of plastic heels until the heels fell off. Did I grow up to believe that I had to be a perfect, thin, stepford wife that wears pink everyday? NO If anybody is guilty of …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: life, europe, featured, women, world, girls, germany, berlin, updated, occupy, barbie, andy-eckardt, dreamworld
  • 7
    May
    2013
    4:31am, EDT

    South Korea's 'Iron Lady' Park Geun-hye comes to Washington

    Yonhap News Agency via EPA

    South Korean President Park Geun-hye waves at Seoul Airport before departing for the United States on May 5.

     

    By Ian Williams, correspondent, NBC News

    SEOUL, South Korea – From her tough talk on North Korea to her penchant for large brooches on her power suits, South Korea’s President Park Geun-hye has done plenty to become known as South Korea’s “Iron Lady.”

    As South Korea’s first female president – inaugurated just in February – Park expressed admiration for Britain’s Margaret Thatcher during her successful run for president. And after Thatcher's recent death, Park praised how she “revived the British economy and led Britain to an era of hope in the 1980s.”

    While her critics see her as cold and aloof – the ice queen – others praise the far tougher line she has taken with Pyongyang than her predecessors.

     “I will not tolerate any action that threatens the lives of our people and the security of our nation,” she warned the North during her inauguration.

    She has vowed to hit back hard at any provocations, recently telling South Korean Army officers: “Any country that ignores its starving citizens to focus solely on nuclear weapons and military power will inevitably collapse.” 

    Kim Jae-Hwan / AFP – Getty Images

    South Korea's new president Park Geun-Hye arrives at the official dinner at the presidential Blue House in Seoul after her inauguration on Feb. 25, 2013.

     The 61-year-old president will meet President Barack Obama in Washington on Tuesday and addresses Congress Wednesday, but the message she’ll bring to Washington is likely to be more nuanced than her domestic rhetoric.

    “Whether she will be tougher or softer on North Korea will depend on North Korea,” said former South Korean Prime Minister Han Seung-soo, who remains close to the Blue House, South Korea’s presidential house. “She will try and engage North Korea if North Korea is willing and responsive.”

    And reports on Monday that the North has stood down two medium range missiles that had been primed for testing have set an intriguing tone for the summit. 

    South Korean political family
    She's certainly got the pedigree for a harder line. Park is the daughter of South Korea’s former military strongman Park Chung-hee. He was president for 18 years after seizing power in 1961. 

    When she was just 22 her mother was shot dead by a North Korean assassin’s bullet aimed at her father, and for five years she assumed the duties of first lady – until her father also was assassinated, by his own spy chief, in 1979.

    Saenuri Party via Reuters

    South Korea's Park Geun-hye, center, poses with her father and then-President Park Chung-hee and her mother Yuk Young-soo along with her younger brother and sister in Seoul.

    In 2006 Park Geun-hye herself was attacked, a convicted criminal slashing her face while she was meeting voters. She needed 60 stitches during surgery.

    Given her avowed admiration for Thatcher, she has often been compared to the former British leader. 

    “They are both women of principle, courage and experience as well as strong leadership,” said former Prime Minister Han.

    Her father still generates strong and polarized emotions in Korea, and last year she issued a public apology for human rights abuses committed under his rule, though she’s also described the 1961 coup as necessary.

    The election of Park, who has never married and has no children, has raised hopes among women in a country that was recently ranked 108th out of 135 countries in terms of gender equality.

    As South Korea's President Park Geun-hye visits President Barack Obama in Washington, former South Korean Prime Minister Han Seung-soo discusses why she's been labeled the "Iron Lady."

    “Gender is not a barrier to high office in Korea anymore,” said Han. He pointed out that Park has sacrificed her personal life for the good of the nation. “She’s a very kind, warm-hearted lady but on making important decisions she’s very firm.”

    Park was first elected to South Korea’s National Assembly in 1998, and when you take that together with her family experience in the Blue House, “she’s one of the most experienced presidents we could have,” Han says. 

    ‘Venomous swish of the skirt’
    Her challenges are daunting, with North Korean relations at rock-bottom after weeks of blood-curdling rhetoric from Pyongyang – especially some targeted right at Park.

    “The frenzy kicked up by the South Korean warmongers,” thundered the North’s Ministry of People’s Armed Forces, “is in no way irrelevant with the venomous swish of skirt made by the one who again occupies the Blue House.”

    CBS Nocutnews via AP

    Park Geun-Hye, chairwoman of the Grand National Party, is attacked by an assailant with a box cutter while campaigning ahead of local elections in Seoul on May 20, 2006. Park suffered a 10-centimeter (4-inch) cut on her face.

    All links were severed during the recent tensions, including at the jointly-run Kaesong industrial park. And on Friday the last seven South Korean workers remaining returned from Kaesong industrial park after the South sent in two vehicles loaded with $13 million in cash – described as “unpaid wages.”

    To many familiar with the ways of the North, that looked like good old tried-and-tested extortion, and was accompanied by warnings from Pyongyang that Seoul should end its “hostile acts and military provocations” if the zone is to re-open.

    Those “hostile acts” appear to be a reference to a joint South Korea-U.S. anti-submarine drill that began Monday in the Yellow Sea and lasts until Friday.

    For now, the South is describing the shutdown of the industrial zone as a “suspension” and has not cut the power supply, which originates in the South.

    “It’s a difficult time,” said Han, “but she’s well prepared.”

    Related:

    • North Korea removes missiles from launch site
    • North Korea rejects talks with South's 'puppet regime'
    • South Koreans evacuate Kaesong joint industrial complex with all they can carry

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    49 comments

    Hopefully a strong leader like Obama and not a wuss like our previous prez who ruined the US.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: asia-pacific, obama, featured, women, world, north-korea, south-korea, first-lady, ian-williams, park-geun-hye
  • 7
    Apr
    2013
    5:52am, EDT

    Giving voice to Pakistan's 'voiceless': Housewife becomes first female candidate in tribal region

    Anwarullah Khan / AP

    Badam Zari, (right) wearing a colorful headscarf, leaves the election office after filing her candidacy for parliament in Khar, capital of the Pakistani tribal area of Bajur, on Monday.

    By Mushtaq Yusufzai, Producer, NBC News

    PESHAWAR, Pakistan -- A housewife in Pakistan’s tribal belt has made history by becoming the first woman from the restive and conservative region to run for office. 

    “The women in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) have faced many challenges because of unnecessary restrictions on them and rigid tribal traditions,” Badam Zari, 38, said in a telephone interview from her native Bajaur, a district in Pakistan's semi-autonomous tribal region. “I want to give voice to our voiceless women.”

    Zari, who on Monday put her name on the ballot for the May 11 parliamentary elections, has her work cut out for her. Not only is she up against 44 other candidates, Bajaur is also home to militants who have waged war against state institutions, such as schools for girls and women. 

    In 2008, Pakistan’s army launched a massive operation to evict militants from the area, with soldiers flushing out many of the militants in 2011. But while Pakistani forces have managed to establish an uneasy peace in Bajaur, problems facing women have not disappeared – Pakistan is at the bottom of world maternal mortality and women’s literacy rankings. 

    Pakistani troops say they want to rebuild Waziristan, a corner of Pakistan that has become a hotbed of military activity, with financial help from the U.S. and others. But in order to do that, they insist U.S. drone strikes on the area must end. NBC's Amna Nawaz was granted exclusive access to the region that had previously been off-limits to foreigners.

    Zari said she is running for office to do something about these dismal conditions.  

    “Women in Pakistan in general, and those living in the remote tribal areas in particular, have been neglected,” said Zari, who is married to a school principal. The couple do not have children.

    The candidate added that past parliamentarians had served their own interests and not those of the tribal population as a whole. She vows to try to stamp out endemic corruption and boost services, such as health care and schools. While being a strong supporter of women’s education, Zari herself has only completed the fifth grade. 

    Fellow Bajaur resident Dil Faraz Khan welcomed Zari’s move, and said that existing lawmakers were corrupt and had done “nothing” for the community. 

    “I was so happy today when I heard on local FM radio that a woman would contest election,” he said. “This woman would be far better than those corrupt politicians.” 

    He worried, though, that Zari would have a difficult time competing against established politicians who bribed voters to get into office.

    Although some of her fellow tribesmen welcomed Zari’s move, Sahibzada Shah Jehan argued that to campaign for office ran counter to tribal traditions.

    "After Malala Yousafzai, most of the women are trying to do something that could help them get popularity across the world,” he said, referring to the Pakistani schoolgirl shot in the head by militants for promoting girls' education. “But they ignore that their action could jeopardize their lives."  

    Related:

    UN envoy condemns 'Malala-style' attack on Pakistani teacher

    Tough neighborhood: Can Waziristan militancy be dismantled, and society built?

    76 comments

    This story is going to have a sad ending. Islamists do not believe in women's rights.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, women, pakistan, election, fata, badam-zari
  • 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.

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    Explore related topics: featured, women, egypt, revolution, sexual-assault, arab-spring, tahrir-square
  • 16
    Mar
    2013
    2:05pm, EDT

    Analysis: Will U.N. declaration on violence against women change Egypt?

    Amr Abdallah Dalsh / Reuters

    Women shout slogans against Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi and members of the Muslim Brotherhood during a protest rally near Tahrir Square in Cairo on March 8, 2013.

    By Charlene Gubash, Producer, NBC News, News analysis

    After a decade of disagreement, 130 nations decided on Friday to adopt a historic, albeit non-binding, United Nations declaration on the elimination and prevention of all forms of violence against women and girls. Language on gay rights, abortion and marital rape had reportedly been watered down to secure the agreement of Muslim and Catholic conservative states.

    Mervat Tallawy, an Egyptian envoy and head of the National Council on Women, praised the accord. “International solidarity is needed for women’s empowerment and preventing this regressive mood, whether in the developing countries or developed, or in the Middle East in particular,” Tallawy told reporters after the successful vote. “It’s a global wave of conservatism, or repression against women, and this paper is a message that if we can get together, hold power together, we can be a strong wave against this conservatism.” 


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Tellawy might have been tailoring her comments to Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood. The group exerts tremendous influence on Egypt’s government after the election of a former leader and current member, President Mohamed Morsi. The Brotherhood had issued a statement on its English Ikhwanweb website describing how the declaration “would lead to complete disintegration of society, and would certainly be the final step in the intellectual and cultural invasion of Muslim countries.”

    The ten-point statement warned that the declaration would grant women equal rights to her husband, control over household finances, birth control, divorce, the ability to travel and would allow a woman to sue her husband in case of rape.


    The Muslim Brotherhood’s statement was not refuted by the presidency, which issued a clarification of its stance on the declaration on violence against women.  The Office of the Assistant to the President of Egypt on Foreign Relations affirmed official rejection of violence against women in all of its forms “for any reason under any name,” but within the context of Egypt’s commitment to upholding its new constitution. However, the constitution was agreed to only by Islamists and rejected by secularists and moderates who felt that it failed to protect or improve women’s rights and human rights.

    The passage of the declaration, a victory for women in general, may not change life in the short term for Egypt’s females. At present, 83% of Egyptian women face sexual harassment, over 90% have undergone female genital mutilation and almost 35% suffer domestic violence. Tallawy said in a statement issued by the National Council of Women that Egypt approved the charter on the condition that it be implemented according to each country’s laws and traditions and is accredited under the category of “moral obligation” to be implemented according to each country's local affairs. Soraya Bahgat, anti- sexual harassment activist, said there is still a lot of work to be done. 

    "The fact that Egypt is one of the few countries that had opposed [the declaration] sheds light on where we stand on women's rights. Its not a surprise because our current practices do not espouse things in the declaration," Bahgat said. "For example, a Muslim woman is not allowed to marry a Christian man. There idea that a woman is a man's property is deeply rooted in Egytian society …. I am not sure how [the passage of the declaration] will change things today. These are things that need to be tackled in the long term. We need to focus on what obstacles we have inside the country."

    Related:

    • 'Men don't have to worry about being caught:' Sex mobs target Egypt's women
    • Egyptian women march on frontlines of country's revolution

    49 comments

    When has a UN declaration amounted to anything? Other than the evenings punchline to some bad joke. A Toothless organization that should be shipped out on the next Space X capsule.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: women, violence, egypt, abuse, united-nations
  • 13
    Mar
    2013
    8:35am, EDT

    Pakistani soldier stoned to death over romance; girlfriend may be shot

    By Saud Mehsud, Reuters

    DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan — A Pakistani soldier was publicly stoned to death on the order of a tribal court in the country's northwestern Kurram region for having a relationship with a local woman, government officials and tribesmen said Wednesday.

    Such tribal justice is a stark reminder of the difficulty in establishing a credible civilian administration in Pakistan's semi-autonomous region bordering Afghanistan, despite a series of military operations in the area and Western nations pouring in millions of dollars to help build infrastructure.


    Punjab native Anwar Din, 27, was posted last year to the Parachinar area of Kurram agency where he met Intizar Bibi, 19, while manning a checkpost near her home.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The two embarked on a romantic relationship, tribal sources said, and he tried to elope with her when he was later posted to the disputed Kashmir region. It was not immediately clear what evidence there was, if any, of a romance.

    "The girl left her home on Monday and met Anwar Din when villagers saw them," said Munir Hussain, the head of the local jirga, or tribal court, that sentenced Din to death. "We took the girl into custody and took the boy to the local graveyard where he was stoned to death and buried."

    Din was killed on Monday, he added. A government official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the jirga had ruled the woman must be shot to death. It was not immediately clear if this had already taken place.

    The army was not immediately available for comment.

    Kurram, the only part of Pakistan's largely lawless border region that has a significant Shiite population, is racked by sectarian violence between Sunni and Shiite tribes. Anti-Shiite ideology from the Taliban and al Qaeda has meant years of bloody fighting.

    Bibi is Shiite while Din was Sunni, Hussain added.

    Tribal justice
    The Federally Administered Tribal Areas have never been fully integrated into Pakistan's administrative, economic or judicial system.

    Instead, families and tribes often take justice into their own hands, presiding over "jirgas" or "panchayats," gatherings of elders who hand down punishments including rape, killing and the bartering of women to settle scores and restore honor.

    In such tribal justice, women often fare far worse than men.

    Hussain said that the jirga had also requested that another Pakistani soldier, Saif Ullah, be handed over for helping the couple meet and coordinate the planned elopement.

    "The army is here for our security but if they engage in such activities we will not let them stay here," Hussain said. "This is an insult to tribal customs. We will revolt against this."

    Related: 

    A rare glimpse inside Pakistan's ground zero for terrorists

    Pakistan reeling from anti-Christian attack

    An A to Z guide to the Islamic Republic of 'Banistan'

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    739 comments

    Wow, she was shot instead of stoned. That is the height of compassion and enlightenment, where those savages are concerned. (Sarcasm).

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    Explore related topics: featured, women, pakistan, romance, execution, sharia, stoning, tribal-areas, kurram
  • 5
    Feb
    2013
    1:44pm, EST

    Ireland sent girls, women to Catholic workhouses until 1996, report finds

    Cathal Mcnaughton / Reuters

    A ledger from the Hyde Park Magdalene Laundry showing payments for services is seen on display during a "Magdalene Survivors Together" news conference in Dublin Tuesday.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Ireland’s government was directly involved in sending girls and women to work for nothing in laundries run by Catholic orders, a landmark report published Tuesday concluded.

    The report by Irish Senator Martin McAleese found that orphans and abused, neglected or unruly children were among more than 10,000 sent to the Magdalen Laundries from 1922 to 1996.


    Some had committed minor crimes, others were simply homeless or poor. Women with mental or physical disabilities and some people with psychiatric illness also found themselves in the laundries.

    Their average age, the report found, was 23, but the youngest child was just nine and the oldest known entrant was 89.

    Activists called on the government to issue a formal apology and pay compensation, with one group saying those affected had been "treated like slaves."

    Their plight came to greater public attention when it was the subject of a 2002 film called The Magdalene Sisters, which used a different spelling.

    And in June 2011, the United Nations’ Committee on Torture highlighted allegations of "physical, emotional abuses and other ill-treatment" and said it was "gravely concerned" at Ireland’s failure to "protect girls and women who were involuntarily confined."

    'Traumatic and lasting'
    That prompted the Irish government to set up an inquiry chaired by McAleese and its report was published Tuesday afternoon.

    "None of us can begin to imagine the confusion and fear experienced by these young girls, in many cases little more than children, on entering the Laundries — not knowing why they were there, feeling abandoned, wondering whether they had done something wrong, and not knowing when — if ever — they would  get out and see their families again,” he wrote in his introduction to the report.

    "It must have been particularly distressing for those girls who may have been the victims of abuse in the family, wondering why they were the ones who were excluded or penalized by being consigned to an institution," he said.

    "To add to this confusion, most found themselves quite alone in what was, by today’s standards, a harsh and physically demanding work environment. The psychological impact on these girls was undoubtedly traumatic and lasting," he added.

    The report found that more than a quarter of referrals were "made or facilitated" by the government. Some 61 percent spent less than a year at the facilities, but 7.7 percent were there for 10 years or more.

    Some of the women were brought to the laundries by Ireland’s police, the Gardai, "on a more ad hoc or informal basis, for instance where a woman was temporarily homeless; or where, in the years prior to out-of-hours health services, a juvenile girl needed overnight accommodation," the report said.

    The report said that "it cannot be excluded that … a desire to protect rate-payers [tax-payers] from the costs of repeated pregnancies outside marriage may have played a part in some referrals of women to the Magdalen Laundries."

    In some cases, the women and children were washing clothes for Ireland’s military, health service and department of education.

    The report cited testimony from a number of women about the conditions they experienced:

    • One woman who was in three laundries told the inquiry there were "no beatings, only working. Hardest work ever."
    • Another woman said "They were very, very cruel verbally — 'your mother doesn’t want you, why do you think you’re here' and things like that."
    • One said she was put in "a padded cell" three times and told "if I didn’t work there’d be no food and the infirmary."
    • Another woman said that when she wet the bed "they pinned the sheet to me back and I was walking on the veranda with it."
    • "You learned not to ask questions or complain. You couldn’t be forward in any way. Talking was a thing that was seen as sinful," another said.

    State 'turned a blind eye'
    In a statement, campaign group Justice for Magdalenes called on Enda Kenny, Ireland’s prime minister, to issue an apology to the survivors of the laundries and set up a “non-adversarial compensation process.”

    "Magdalene survivors have waited too long for justice and this should not be now burdened with either a complicated legal process or a closed-door policy of compensation," the statement said.

    Children’s charity Barnardos said in a statement that the report showed the Irish government had "turned a blind eye to the appalling conditions in which Irish citizens lived, while supporting the religious orders who enslaved them in financial and other ways."

    "The women who were imprisoned in these Laundries suffered appalling and shaming injustices, often for the whole of their lives, and deserve a full unambiguous apology from the Government," Barnardos' Chief Executive Fergus Finlay said. "These women were treated like slaves and deserve adequate compensation for the work they did."

    Responding to the report, Kenny said he was "sorry for those people that they lived in that kind of environment," but stopped short of making a formal apology on behalf of the state, the Irish Times reported.

    Related:

    UN panel urges Ireland to probe Catholic torture

    421 comments

    Between stuff like this and the Pedophile Protection program that they run, is it any wonder that people don't like the Catholic Church??

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    Explore related topics: featured, women, girls, labor, ireland, laundries, magdalen, magdalene
  • 2
    Feb
    2013
    4:43am, EST

    How the US military can become a 'band of brothers and sisters'

    IDF

    Arielle Werner, 21, originally of Minnetonka, Minn., is a combat soldier with Israel's co-ed Caracal Battalion. "Women in combat can only bring good things," she said. "Two halves of a whole together can only be good."

    By F. Brinley Bruton, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Even before she moved to Israel, Minnesota-born Cpl. Arrielle Werner was certain she possessed what it took to fight on the front lines. 

    "I realized that I couldn't be the passive Minnesotan," said the 21-year-old member of Israel's majority female Caracal Battalion, a combat unit which patrols the volatile border with Egypt's Sinai Peninsula. "I knew this was the place for me. My friends back in the States are shocked … now I’m the wild combat soldier."

    The self-described "peace keeper of the family" said she is prepared to "give everything" on the battlefield. 

    That's the sort of gung-ho attitude that military brass appreciate in any soldier -- but it isn't an attitude many expect from a woman.

    There have long been barriers to women at war, never mind those assigned to fight at the tip of the spear. But the U.S. government's announcement on Jan. 24 that it was dropping its ban on women in combat units changed everything. (While not officially in combat units, American women have long served side-by-side with male service-members -- in fact, 152 women died while being deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan.)

    Despite living in a country "where some still think women should stay in the kitchen," Werner feels accepted by male colleagues.

    Defense Secretary Leon Panetta's decision to lift the 20-year ban on women serving in combat will open some 237,000 combat-related positions to women. Initially, women will be assigned to combat communications, logistics and drivers. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    "There is a little bit of a glass ceiling (but) ... you see women every day getting higher and higher," said Werner, who is originally from Minnetonka, Minn. "As long as you want to succeed and want to get stronger … you’re able to handle everything."

    While many worry whether society has the stomach to accept women being killed, and being killers, Werner is in no doubt about her place on the battlefield.  And she doesn't mince words about her fellow females in the co-ed Caracal Battalion.

    "These girls are tough," she said.

    Werner, who has been on stationed on the border since October, admitted that she has noticed differences between the sexes.

    "Guys are able to really to put a tough face on things (while) girls really take time to put emotion into something," she added. "Women in combat can only bring good things. Two halves of a whole together can only be good."

    Not practical or not relevant?
    As the U.S. military implements its new and controversial policy ahead of a January 2016 deadline, it will be seeking lessons from Israel and the handful of other countries that currently do not bar women from front-line combat. They include all of Scandinavia, Australia, Eritrea, France, Germany, Lithuania, Netherlands, New Zealand, North Korea, Poland and Romania.

    Despite examples set by these countries, one of the biggest worries remains that integration will undermine the essential cohesion of the so-called band of brothers that has long defined the camaraderie among fighting men.

    "(In the British military) the argument always comes down to the pure practicalities of the effectiveness of the unit rather than if a woman can't do it," said Amyas Godfrey, a former infantry officer and associate fellow at British security think tank the Royal United Services Institution (RUSI).

    Atef Safadi / EPA, file

    Israeli female soldiers take positions during clashes with Palestinian protesters from the West Bank village of Nabi Salah on Dec. 28.

    The United Kingdom is almost alone among Western European countries in not allowing women into front-line combat roles.

    "It comes down to 18-to-22-year-old boys not being able to ignore the fact that there is a woman in their midst," he said. Integrating combat units and concentrating on making space for women also "doesn't fit with the practicality of closing with and killing the enemy," he said.

    Norwegian Brigadier Odin Johannessen, who served in Bosnia and Afghanistan and commanded military units for 12 years, disagreed with the idea that men and women could not be trained to serve together.

    "In mixed units, what is most important is to become a soldier," said the 51-year-old who formerly ran the Norwegian Army Academy in Oslo. "That you are a good soldier tends to be the most prized factor of all, if you are a male or female doesn’t matter."

    "It's called a band of brothers. I would rather rephrase it to a band of brothers and sisters," he added. 

    Johannessen's exposure to military women colored the rest of his career.

    "My first day in the military I met Sgt. Bente Karlsen and she has been present in my mind for my entire service for the professional way she led us," he said.  

    Karlsen had the essential ability to convey instructions and orders, but also clearly cared about the young men under her command, Johannessen said. 

    "She was a brilliant sergeant and showed me that it matters not if you are male of female," he said. 

    Norway has no official restrictions on women joining any of its operational units, although no women are members of its special forces. Nine percent of combat roles in Norway are made up of women, and the armed forces' aim to increase that the proportion of females in military positions to 15 percent.

    'Masculine warrior culture'
    With its "no-exclusion policy," Canada is also recognized internationally as one of the few militaries to have officially removed all barriers to women. Canadian women have served and died on the front line in Afghanistan, and make up four percent of the roles in Canada's so-called combat arms divisions, and 14.8 percent of military roles overall. 

    Getty Images, file

    Canadian Master Corporal Tera Avey of Edmonton, Alberta, a mother of two and one of three female combat soldiers, wakes up on March, 2002 in the rocky Shahi Kot mountains in Afghanistan. Hundreds of American and Canadian troops were lifted into the mountainous region at high altitude to search and destroy Taliban and al-Qaida fighters.

    Karen Davis, a gender integration expert for Canada's armed forces, acknowledges that women have to adapt to the "masculine warrior culture" of combat units.

    But when Canadian men and women were sent to fight on the front lines in Afghanistan, fears that women's presence would hurt all-important unity did not bear out, she said.

    "What we learned when we went into Afghanistan is that Canadian soldiers are trained to do a job, no matter if they were men or women," Davis said, adding that proper and rigorous training before deployment helped make this happen.

    Whether women can or should be treated and tested differently from their male counterparts is at the heart of any discussion on how to integrate military operations, especially front-line combat troops.

    In Israel, where women have formed part of the military since before the founding of the state and face conscription, the training process "accepts differences between men and women and just deals with them," according to Capt. Eytan Buchman, a spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces.

    "Everybody comes in with their own baggage and physiological differences," he added.

    Johannessen, for his part, advises trainers and commanders to not give women under their command special treatment. 

    "Say there are two females in the unit. If you want to do it wrong, pay special attention to them," he said.  

    To this end, gender-neutral physical standards are also essential, he said.

    According to Davis, Canada's success at integrating women also came about as a result of a rigorously enforced non-fraternization policy. And the onus for making sure relationships don't happen lies not just on the women, but also the men throughout the chain of command, she says.

    But beyond policies and rules, Norway's Johannessen says that more women make militaries better and smarter.

    Slideshow: All-female U.S. Marine team in Afghanistan

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    View images of the women deployed as the second Female Engagement team in Afghanistan

    Launch slideshow

    "Men and women are looking at a problem from different positions," he said. "Having the possibility for a different view is many times better."

    While integrating women into combat can be down to well-thought-out polices, effective leadership and rigorous training -- natural attributes for any well-run military organization -- an important lesson is that change will most likely not come quickly or implemented uniformly.

    Gender integration expert Davis admits that even her own thinking changed radically from the time she joined an all-female land-bound unit in the Canadian Navy in 1978. At the time, she agreed that women did not belong in many roles in the military. But in 1985 that changed: Davis was asked to be one of two women to go to sea for 12 days on a formerly all-male ship.

    "I came back questioning everything," Davis said. "I had joined and completely accepted everything I had been told, but in fact none of it was rational, it could all be dismantled." 

    Related:

    Female veterans cheer new era: 'It's about time!'

    Women in the infantry? Forget about it, says female Marine officer

     

     

    1039 comments

    This whole women in combat thing is really starting to get stupid. What is wrong with our country? They are making combat into a joke.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us, canada, israel, norway, women, military, combat, featured, idf, front-lines, women-in-combat
  • 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.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    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.

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    Explore related topics: women, india, rape, delhi, sexual-assault
  • 25
    Jan
    2013
    9:37am, EST

    India political party hands out 21,000 knives to defend women from rapists

    Divyakant Solanki / EPA

    Indian women hold up knives that were distributed by the Shiv Sena party in Mumbai, India, on Wednesday.

    By Kaustubh Kulkarni, Reuters

    MUMBAI, India — A radical Hindu nationalist party in India has handed out kitchen knives and chili powder to women in the city of Mumbai following the gang rape that ignited a national debate on the best way to tackle sex crimes.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The Shiv Sena party, an ally of the main opposition BJP, said it had handed out 21,000 knives with three-inch blades to women in the city and surrounding areas and plans to distribute 100,000.


    Mumbai police said they were examining the knives and considering legal action.

    "This is a symbolic gesture," said Shiv Sena spokesman Rahul Narvekar, adding that a knife shorter than six inches in length does not fit the definition of a weapon. The party also handed out small bags of chili powder -- apparently to throw into an attacker's eyes.

    "It's only to pass a signal to eve-teasers [men who molest women], anti-social elements and perpetrators of crime against women that women are empowered and they can take care of themselves," Narvekar said.

    'Don't be afraid'
    Ajay Chaudhari, running the knife campaign, was quoted by the party newspaper Saamana as saying, "Don't be afraid of using this knife if someone attacks you."

    "We have set up a team of nine advocates to protect you from any potential court cases that may arise," he added.

    A 23-year-old physiotherapy student was raped and beaten on a moving bus on Dec. 16 before being thrown bleeding on to a busy road in New Delhi, dubbed India's "rape capital."

    Mumbai is generally considered a safer city for women.

    The attack and the student's death two weeks later caused public outrage at the failure of the government and police to protect women from rising sexual offenses in a country where one rape is reported on average every 20 minutes.

    In response, more women are taking up self-defense classes and carrying pepper spray. A government commission set up to recommend revisions to India's sex crime laws this week said women who kill an attacker during an attempted rape should be able to plead self-defense.

    Related:

    PhotoBlog: Women in India's 'rape capital' speak out

    Report: Six suspects held over another India bus gang rape

    Defense attorney blames victim in India gang rape, murder case



    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    109 comments

    Knives? Chili powder? No, they need guns. Dead rapists will never rape again. God did not create man, and woman equal........ Colonel Colt did.

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    Explore related topics: featured, women, india, police, rape, mumbai, new-delhi, chili, knives
  • 19
    Dec
    2012
    7:41am, EST

    Female Afghan cops say they are raped, molested by fellow officers

    Omar Sobhani / Reuters

    Afghan policewomen prepare to fire during a shooting exercise at a range at the Afghan National Police Academy in Kabul Dec. 9.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld
    By Amie Ferris-Rotman, Reuters

    KABUL - Shortly after Friba joined the Afghan National Police, she gave herself the nickname "dragon" and vowed to bring law and order to her tormented homeland.

    Five years later, she is tired of rebuffing the sexual advances of male colleagues, worries the budget for the female force will shrink and fears the government will abandon them.


    Women in the police force were held up as a showcase for Afghan-Western efforts to promote rights in the new Afghanistan, born from the optimism that swept the country after the ouster of the Taliban in 2001.

    Images of gun-wielding Afghan policewomen have been broadcast across the globe, even inspiring a television program popular with young Afghan women.

    But going from the burqa to the olive green uniform has not been easy.

    In Reuters interviews with 12 policewomen in districts across the Afghan capital, complaints of sexual harassment, discrimination and bitter frustration were prevalent.

    President Hamid Karzai's goal is for 5,000 women to join the Afghan National Police (ANP) by the end of 2014, when most foreign troops will leave the country.

    Watch Atia Abawi's full, exclusive interview with Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai in which he discusses the "growing perception" that insecurity in the region is caused by the United States and some of its allies who "promoted lawlessness" and "corruption" in Afghanistan.

    UN calls for Afghanistan to protect women from rape, forced marriage

    But government neglect, poor recruitment and a lack of interest on the part of authorities and the male-dominated society mean there are only 1,850 female police officers on the beat, or about 1.25 percent of the entire force.

    And it looks to get worse.

    Friba, who asked that her second name not be used, says it all when she runs a manicured finger across her throat: "Once foreigners leave we won't even be able to go to the market. We'll be back in burqas. The Taliban are coming back and we all know it."

    Conditions for women in Afghanistan have improved significantly since the Taliban were ousted. Women have won back basic rights in voting, education and work since Taliban rule, when they were not allowed out of their homes without a male escort and could be publicly stoned to death for adultery.

    Omar Sobhani / Reuters

    Afghan policewomen eat after a training session at the Afghan National Police Academy in Kabul Dec. 9.

    Newlywed beheaded for her refusal to become a prostitute

    But problems persist in the deeply conservative Muslim society scarred by decades of conflict. The United Nations said this month that despite progress, there was a dramatic under-reporting of cases of violence against women.

    Some female lawmakers and rights groups blame Karzai's government for a waning interest in women's rights as it seeks peace talks with the Taliban, accusations his administration deny.

    Almost a third of the members of the female force work in Kabul, performing duties such as conducting security checks on women at the airport and checking biometric data.

    Friba sat in a city police station room decorated with posters of policemen clutching weapons to talk to Reuters.

    "I am the dragon and I can defend myself, but most of the girls are constantly harassed," she said. "Just yesterday my colleague put his hands on one of the girl's breasts. She was embarrassed and giggled while he squeezed them. Then she turned to us and burst into tears."

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    More than ten years after the beginning of the war, Afghanistan faces external pressure to reform as well as ongoing internal conflicts.

    Launch slideshow

    Afghan woman police director gunned down

    On the other side of Kabul, detective Lailoma, who also asked that her family name not be used, said several policewomen under her command had been raped by their male colleagues.

    She complained about male colleagues: "They want it to be like the time of the Taliban. They tell us every day we are bad women and should not be allowed to work here."

    Male colleagues also taunt the women, she added, often preventing them from entering the kitchen, meaning they miss out on lunch.

    US, Afghan officials condemn public execution of Afghan woman

    On several occasions, male colleagues interrupted Reuters interviews in what the policewomen said were attempts to intimidate them into silence.

    One male officer entered the room without knocking three times to retrieve pencils; another spent 20 minutes dusting off his hat, only to put it back on a shelf. The women switched subjects when the men came in.

    Rana, a 31-year-old, heavy-set policewoman with curly hair, said policewomen were expected to perform sexual favors: "We're expected to do them to just stay in the force."

    The raping of policewomen by their male counterparts "definitely takes place," said Colonel Sayed Omar Saboor, deputy director for gender and human rights at the Interior Ministry, which oversees the police. "These men are largely illiterate and see the women as immoral." 

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    105 comments

    Where are these STRICT Muslim laws against crimes like this ?

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, featured, women, police, taliban, gender, equality, hamid-karzai
  • 11
    Dec
    2012
    8:16am, EST

    UN calls for Afghanistan to protect women from rape, forced marriage

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    KABUL -- The United Nations on Tuesday joined mounting criticism of Afghan President Hamid Karzai's government over women's rights, urging it to enforce a law designed to prevent violence against women.

    The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan said in a report that the country still had a long way to go in implementing a law enacted to eliminate violence against women.

    The legislation made child marriage, forced marriage, forced self-immolation and other violent acts, including rape, a criminal offense.

    The 2009 law came law came after years of lobbying by Afghans and Westerners alike, and was held up as a beacon of progress.

    EXCLUSIVE: US, NATO behind 'insecurity' in Afghanistan, Karzai says


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "Progress in addressing violence against women will be limited until the … law is applied more widely," Georgette Gagnon, director of UNAMA's human rights unit, told a news conference after the release of the report. 

    "So we are calling on the Afghan authorities to take much greater steps to both facilitate reporting of incidents of violence against women and actually open investigations and take on prosecutions," she added.

    Afghan women are increasingly concerned for their future as the deadline looms for most NATO-led combat troops to leave by the end of 2014.

    They have won back basic rights in voting, education and work since the fall of the Taliban in 2001. But some female lawmakers and rights groups say abuse against women is on the rise as Karzai's government tries to advance the reconciliation process with the Taliban, an allegation it denies.

    Newlywed beheaded for her refusal to become a prostitute

    On Monday, unknown gunmen shot dead Nadia Sediqqi, acting head of the women's affairs department in eastern Laghman province as she was going to work, in an attack widely condemned by the international community.

    Watch Atia Abawi's full, exclusive interview with Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai in which he discusses the "growing perception" that insecurity in the region is caused by the United States and some of its allies who "promoted lawlessness" and "corruption" in Afghanistan.

    She had replaced Hanifa Safi, who was killed in a bomb attack five months earlier.

    "We have educated women who are being locked inside houses," teacher Masooda Jan, 35, said. "I wish that those women who are locked in their homes by their families and are tortured and beaten would be rescued."

    After 10 years of Karzai's rule, has life improved in Afghanistan?

    Shukria Barakzai, an Afghan politician, told NBC News that Afghan women's suffering is twofold. At home, their husbands keep the women away from education and don't give them permission to go out for work.

    Internationally, laws to protect women do exist, but she argues that they are mostly symbolic and never implemented.

    Afghan women's groups had expressed concern that without international backing, it would be difficult to press for their rights.

    UNAMA spokeswoman Nilab Mobarez told NBC News that there are more cases going through the courts and judiciary systems than in the past but violence against women remains under reported.

    "We have a long way to go to for full implementation of the law," Mobarez said.

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    /

    More than ten years after the beginning of the war, Afghanistan faces external pressure to reform as well as ongoing internal conflicts.

    Launch slideshow

    Reuters and NBC's Atia Abawi contributed to this report.

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    8 comments

    Karzai is a drug peddler. He is so willing to blame the infidel for everything. He is too afraid to stand up to the injustices being done to the women in his country. The only way to change this horrible place is to separate the men from the women and since that is not going to happen the women will …

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    Explore related topics: women, law, un, rape, afghan, karzai, self-immolation, forced-marriage, child-marriage
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