My students taught me that everything was personal - history, politics, foreign relations - but this approach creates boundaries as well as connections
My students taught me that everything was personal - history, politics, foreign relations - but this approach creates boundaries as well as connections
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5050The attention of the international media to the Tibetan issue is set to continue for some time. But a part of the Chinese media and internet community has been sidetracked by a 21-year-old philosophy student in Hong Kong whom they have christened “Tibet Independence Girl”. Tibet Independence Girl (aka Christina Han Chau-man) was one of nine protestors arrested in China for wrapping a Tibetan flag around herself during the Olympic torch relay and has now sprung to internet fame – for all the wrong reasons.
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Like many forms of modern technology, mobile phones can be both
a useful tool and an unwieldy new weapon.
The recording feature on mobile phones is a novelty which has yet to wear
off. Just last summer, an Australian
man was arrested for piracy after he recorded a whole film at the cinema with
his. On the positive side, it has led to a crackdown on police violence and
other crimes which can now be recorded at the push of a button. The threat of
being so easily and imperceptibly caught on film can act as a deterrent.
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As Afghan and foreign troops continue to battle the Taliban in the plains and hills of Afghanistan, another battle is being waged – and lost – in the country's legislature. The Taliban don't need to recapture Kabul for their puritan and parochial values to recapture the public stage. Afghan lawmakers – part and parcel of the new, democratic government installed since the toppling of the Taliban in 2001 – are edging towards reintroducing strict bans on supposedly un-Islamic cultural forms. After six years of uncertainty, corruption, carnage and waning confidence, Afghanistan may be sliding right back to where it didn't want to be.
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Mine
action is seen as a predominantly male profession, and indeed it is. But there
are a significant number of women working in, and benefiting from, demining and
they give the usual macho world of explosives a different dimension. Flora,
Joice and Joice, three women I've been working with in southern Sudan, are some
of those who put the usual gender stereotypes to the test.
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A Human Rights Watch report released yesterday delivered a
stark reminder of the ongoing crisis of sexual violence in Darfur,
and of the need to step-up pressure on the Sudanese government and
international forces to address the problem effectively.
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A new report produced by the Karama network ‘Refugee
and Stateless Women across the Arab Region: stories of the dream of return, the
fear of trafficking and the discriminatory laws' (pdf) is a ground breaking work written collaboratively by women from Syria, Palestine, Sudan, Egypt,
Lebanon, Jordan, Somalia and Morocco. It combines original research and
personal testimony with historical and political analysis, to call for a
response to refugees that moves beyond relief services to the promotion of
rights. The authors address in detail the particular problems faced by Iraqi
women living in Syria, Egypt and Jordan, Palestinian women living in Lebanon,
Jordan and Syria, Sudanese women living in Egypt and Somalian women living in
‘a nation without a state'.
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by Afaf Jabiri
Afaf Jabiri is a member of Karama and one of the
authors of a new report on refugee and stateless women in the Arab region. She writes here about the group's decision to produce
it.
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In the roll-call of the world's bloodiest and most intractable conflicts, the decade-long war fought in the Democratic Republic of Congo will surely rank depressingly high. Despite an official ceasefire declaration in 2002 and a further peace deal with rebel factions in the east at the start of this year, a cycle of deadly violence continues.
Shortly after the downfall of the Taliban regime, the media relayed many stories illustrating the great liberties given to Afghan women by democracy: their newfound ability to drive and go to school, their right to not wear the burqa and bizzarely, the establishment of beauty parlours.
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A ten year old Bruce Lee fanatic attached to her Adidas
trainers and determined to become a future prophet is not your
average leading lady. Meet Marjane, of Marjane Satrapi's Oscar-nominated film Persepolis,
adapted from her autobiographical graphic novel of the same name. At a packed ICA screening in London
this week, part of the Bird's
Eye View festival, much of the audience fell in love.
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by Houzan Mahmoud
Women's
freedom means freedom for all. It is time to stand together, writes Houzan
Mahmoud as part of our ongoing coverage of international women's week
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Speakers rightly fear misleading
introductions, and so too should films. As an audience of scruffy aesthetes
sucked on their complimentary ActionAid rock candy, a staffer of the Birds Eye
View Film Festival rose to introduce Sabiha Sumar's "Dinner with the
President". This was, she promised, a timely and relevant film,
delving into Pakistan's
abiding political crisis as the country remains in the glow of the global
spotlight. But for any observer of Pakistan, the subsequent film was
less timely than it was out of touch. Such is the speed of events in Pakistan that a
documentary released in late 2007 can already feel sepia-toned and out-dated by
early 2008.
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Muslim women in
Britain, are sluicing away restrictive cultural practices and reclaiming
their fundamental Islamic rights, says Samia Rahman, part of our coverage of
International Women's Day, 2008.
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Rebecca Barlow is inspired by the Iranian women she met on a trip to Tehran. Please note, all names have been changed in order to protect privacies.
This International Women's Day I would like
to express my support and deepest respects to the amazing members of the
Iranian Women's Movement, some of whom I met whilst on a trip to Tehran in July
2007. During my short stay in that fascinating city, one particular traveller's
cliché came true: so many women implored me to tell people in my own community
what Iranian women ‘are really like' - beyond the popular western imagination
and the images of submission and servitude conjured up in the speeches of western
leaders such as President Bush. Perhaps here I can make a brief contribution to
that end.
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As part of our coverage of International Women's Day 2008, Abigail Fielding-Smith meets the women fighting for citizenship rights in Lebanon.
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Now in its fourth year, Bird's Eye View is
a London-based international film festival celebrating women filmmakers from
around the world. Ten days of documentaries, new features, workshops,
retrospectives and short films showcase the best new work by female directors. And
in an overwhelmingly male-dominated industry, it is much needed. With a few
notable exceptions such as Sofia Coppola and Mira Nair, the female director is -
or is thought to be - a rarity. The packed programme of this year's festival gloriously
proves otherwise.
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The theme of this year's CSW is Financing for Women's
Empowerment and Gender Equality. There are dozens and dozens of NGO's here with
ideas about how to demand the resources and there are daily sessions sponsored by
the UN missions, but with only two days to go I haven't found anyone who is optimistic that this
year's CSW will have the slightest impact on women's empowerment.
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I attended the session on The Impact of Guns on Women's
Lives, hosted by the UN Office for Disarmament Affairs and IANSA the
International Action Network on Small Arms. The panel of women
speakers came from Argentina,
the DRC, Iraq, Canada and India. Binalakshmi Nepram is
a young woman from India and
founder of Control Arms Foundation of India. She
opened her speech by saying " This is my first address to the United
Nations, a place where everyone comes for final justice." She dedicated her
speech to the 5000 women who have died by gun violence in her
region by state and non-state actors, and went on to say "My very
presence here is proof that women are taking action to stop
gun violence". She spoke of her pain as a young woman born in the country that
gave birth to non violence and is today the largest democracy in the world, knowing
that India
is "arming itself to the teeth" and
has 40 million fire arms, the majority of which are in private hands. She'd
recently attended an arms bazaar in New Delhi
where one of the 450 arms dealers had told her that in India "gun shops are mushrooming
like phone booths".
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Last month, this blog along with many others celebrated the award of the prestigious Olof Palme prize to Iranian women's rights activist Parvin Ardalan. Now, just a few weeks on, Ms Ardalan has been denied a right to travel abroad. On her way to Sweden yesterday to accept the internationally recognised award, she was detained by security officials before the plane could leave. Ardalan explains: "(Officials said) I was banned from travel and that I could not exit Iran. They also seized my passport."
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The permanent Mission of Norway to the United Nations sponsored the session on ‘Dignity and the Politics of Financing of Women’s Rights’, and Karama organised the panel. It took place in the Dag Haamarskjold Library Auditorium of the UN (which they had fought ‘tooth and nail’ to get). Earlier in the week they’d been worried that the room was too big, but after four days of raising Arab women’s voices at every and any opportunity during the CSW, they attracted a large audience. Afaf Jabiri opened the session by saying “we want to talk about violence in relation to the reality we live in, which in our region is one of conflict war and occupation, so one of our priorities is to work with refugee women and statelessness”. The panel was made up of Sabah al_Hallaq from Syria, Afaf Marei from Egypt, Joumana Merhy from Lebanon, Saadia Wadah from Morocco, Rugaia Abdelgader from Sudan, Teraza al-Ryyan and Afaf Jabiri from Jordan. Read the rest of this post...
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