Showing posts with label War on Women. Show all posts
Showing posts with label War on Women. Show all posts

Sunday, August 30, 2020

That he is a martyr to the left shows how shallow is their commitment to women's rights and safety


Details of a a highly disturbing criminal complaint against Jacob Blake have emerged.


A Kenosha, Wisconsin, police officer shot Blake in the back at least seven times on Sunday following a call for a domestic dispute. His father told the Chicago Sun-Times that Blake is paralyzed from the waist down.

Blake's shooting only added fuel to the already out-of-control fire lit by the police killing of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and others involved in instances of apparent police brutality.

What are the details? 

Blake's ex-girlfriend, identified in the criminal complaint as "LNB," says Blake sexually assaulted her in May.

The criminal complaint states that Blake unlawfully entered her home in the early hours of the morning on May 3. The woman said she awoke from her sleep to find Blake standing in her room, looming over her.

Blake, the 29-year-old father of the woman's three children, reportedly demanded she return his possessions.

"I want my s***," Blake reportedly told the woman, and proceeded to assault her according to the complaint.

"As LNB lay there, on her back, the defendant, suddenly and without warning, reached his hand between her legs, penetrated her vaginally with a finger, pulled it out and sniffed it, and said, 'Smells like you've been with other men,'" the at-times graphic complaint reads.

Following the assault, Blake reportedly stole her vehicle and left the premises.

In the complaint, the woman reports that Blake is unemployed and without a vehicle of his own. Over the eight-year period that the two spent together, Blake reportedly sexually assaulted her at least twice per year during drunken episodes.

Caused 'pain and humiliation'

The officer who took the woman's statement said she had a "very difficult time telling him this and cried as she told how the defendant assaulted her."

The woman said that Blake's assault "caused her pain and humiliation and was done without her consent." 

Blake's ex-girlfriend told authorities that she was able to maintain her composure despite the incident, and attempted to follow Blake. When she realized her keys and her vehicle were missing and immediately phoned 911 to report the incident. 

Authorities charged Blake in July with felony third-degree sexual assault, misdemeanor trespassing, and disorderly conduct connected to domestic abuse.

Allegedly armed with a knife during latest dispute

Fast-forward to August, Blake's ex-girlfriend — purportedly the same one from the criminal complaint — reportedly phoned police and reported the latest domestic incident, which purportedly took place because he showed up at her home and had taken her keys. 

The Kenosha Police Department has not, at the time of this reporting, released any further details or background on the incident, which was captured on video by a bystander's cell phone. 

The bystander, Raysean White, said that Blake showed up at his ex-girlfriend's home where two women had been arguing. He allegedly told one of his sons, who was at the residence, to get into his vehicle, and then walked into a home. 

White said he briefly left the scene, but when he returned, he saw Blake wrestling with police officers and began recording the incident once more. 

At one point, another witness said that officers were attempting to take Blake into custody, and were punching him and tasing him while he was on the ground. Blake, however, can be seen wrestling out of the officers' grip and begins walking to his vehicle's front driver's side door. Officers follow him, guns drawn, and as Blake reaches into the vehicle, at least one Kenosha officer shoots Blake in the back at close range. 

Several of Blake's children were reportedly inside the vehicle at the time of the incident. 

The witness also said he overheard officers saying that Blake had a knife. 

On Friday, Kenosha cops said that Blake was, indeed, armed with a knife at the time of the shooting. 

Blake also reportedly placed one cop in a headlock despite being tased twice while resisting arrest. 

Despite threat of lethal force, Blake 'continued to ignore the officers' commands'

Brendan Matthews, the attorney for the Kenosha Professional Police Association, said on Friday that all officers involved in the incident were placed on leave pending an investigation. 

"Based on the inability to gain compliance and control after using verbal, physical and less-lethal means, the officers drew their firearms [on Blake]," Matthews said in a statement. 

Matthews added, "Mr. Blake continued to ignore the officers' commands, even with the threat of lethal force now present."


Thursday, August 27, 2020

Texas father, one of FBI's 10 most wanted fugitives, arrested for daughters' 2008 "honor killing"

Texas father, one of FBI's 10 most wanted fugitives, arrested for daughters' 2008 "honor killing"

A Dallas-area taxicab driver wanted for the 2008 slayings of his two teenage daughters was arrested Wednesday in a small North Texas town, the FBI said. Agents arrested Yaser Abdel Said, 63, in Justin, 36 miles northwest of Dallas.

Daughters Slain-Father Arrested
This undated photo provided by the Irving (Texas) Police Department shows Yaser Abdel Said.AP

The Egyptian-born suspect had been sought on a capital murder warrant since the New Year's Day 2008 fatal shootings  of the two Lewisville High School students, Sarah Yaser Said, 17, and Amina Yaser Said, 18. Court documents list no attorney for the suspect.

A police report at the time said a family member told investigators that the suspect threatened "bodily harm″ against Sarah for going on a date with a non-Muslim. The mother, Patricia Said, fled with her daughters in the week before their deaths because she was in "great fear for her life." Gail Gattrell, the sisters' great-aunt, has called the deaths an "honor killing,"  in which a woman is murdered by a relative to protect her family's honor.

The teenage sisters were found shot multiple times in a cab outside a motel in Irving, a Dallas suburb. Police found them after one of the girls called 911 from a cellphone and said she was dying.

"Help," said a crying voice on the 911 recording, later determined by police to be that of Sarah Said. "I'm dying. Oh my God. Stop it."

Police could not immediately find the teens after the 7:33 p.m. call. Much of what Sarah said in the recording was unintelligible, and the dispatcher's repeated requests for her to provide an address went unanswered.

An emergency dispatcher received another call about an hour later from an Irving motel. The sisters' bodies were in a cab, one in the front passenger seat and the other in the back. The caller said he could see blood.

"They don't look alive," said the caller, whose name was deleted from the recording.

amina-sarah.jpg
Amina and Sarah SaidJUSTICE FOR SARAH AND AMINA FACEBOOK PAGE

The FBI also announced Wednesday evening that two more arrests were made, CBS DFW reported. Islam Said, the suspect's son, and Yassim Said, the suspect's brother, both face charges for harboring a fugitive.

"Even after 12 years of frustration and dead-ends, the pursuit for their killer never ceased," Irving Police Chief Jeff Spivey said in a statement Wednesday. "Today's arrest of their father, Yaser Said brings us closer to ensuring justice is served on their behalf."

Said had been place on the FBI's "Ten Most Wanted Fugitives" list on 2014 "for the heinous act he committed against his daughters," said FBI Dallas Special Agent in Charge Matthew DeSarno. 

"His capture and arrest bring us one step closer to justice for Amina and Sarah," he said.

Saturday, June 20, 2020

Syrian prisons and the war on women...has it anything to do with Islam's view of women?

Can Syrian sexual assault survivors get justice in Germany?

Sexualized violence in Syria's prisons is brutal and widespread. Why do its perpetrators apparently act with impunity? Legal activists are seeking justice in Germany for thousands of victims.

Saturday, May 2, 2020

What the intellectual class can get away with



A report of the ties between Harvard University and deceased billionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein has led to a math professor being placed on administrative leave.


The report was ordered by Harvard's president and found troubling access given to Epstein at the behest of Martin Nowak, a director of the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics. Epstein gave $6.5 million to help establish the research center in 2003.
According to the Associated Press, the report found that Epstein was allowed to have an office at the office of the program by Nowak, who bent the security rules to give Epstein unfettered access.
Nowak said that the office belonged to Epstein "in name only," but the report found differing accounts from others in the program.
Officials put Nowak on leave on Friday while their investigation into his behavior continued.
"We do not take this step lightly, but the seriousness of the matter leads us to believe it is not appropriate for Professor Nowak to continue in his role," said Claudine Gay, a Harvard dean.



The report found that other faculty members travelled with Epstein and even visited in jail.
The accusations against Epstein gained new life in 2019 as more women went to the press and told their stories of sexual assault by the politically connected billionaire.
He was found dead in a Manhattan jail cell in August 2019 after what appeared to be a suicide. The highly charged circumstances of his death led to many conspiracy theories relating to the powerful people that he might have been able to implicate in his crimes had he continued to live.



Of course he has and the media will accept it...move on there's nothing to see.


He has apologized

Joe Biden is wrong again,

National Archives Admin Refutes Joe Biden: Tara Reade’s Alleged Complaint Wouldn’t Go to Our Records

Sunday, February 16, 2020

War on women

  • 16 February 2020

A wall painting about menstruation in Guwahati on May 28, 2019Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionA mural raises awareness about menstruation, which has long been a taboo in India

India's uncomfortable relationship with periods is back in the headlines.
College students living in a hostel in the western Indian state of Gujarat have complained that they were made to strip and show their underwear to female teachers to prove that they were not menstruating.
The 68 young women were pulled out of classrooms and taken to the toilet, where they were asked to individually remove their knickers for inspection. 
The incident took place in the city of Bhuj on Tuesday. The young women are undergraduate students at Shree Sahajanand Girls Institute (SSGI), which is run by Swaminarayan sect, a wealthy and conservative Hindu religious group.
They said a hostel official had complained to the college principal on Monday that some of the students were breaking rules menstruating women are supposed to follow. 
According to these rules, women are barred from entering the temple and the kitchen and are not allowed to touch other students during their periods. 
At meal times, they have to sit away from others, they have to clean their own dishes, and in the classroom, they are expected to sit on the last bench.

Female students of SSGI college protested on the campusImage copyrightBBC GUJARATI
Image captionFemale students gather outside the Shree Sahajanand Girls Institute (SSGI)

One of the students told BBC Gujarati's Prashant Gupta that the hostel maintains a register where they are expected to enter their names when they get their periods, which helps the authorities to identify them. 
But for the past two months, not one student had entered her name in the register - perhaps not surprising considering the restrictions they have to put up with if they do.
So on Monday, the hostel official complained to the principal that menstruating students were entering the kitchen, going near the temple, and mingling with other hostellers. 
The students allege that, the next day, they were abused by the hostel official and the principal before they were forced to strip.
They described what happened to them as a "very painful experience" that had left them "traumatised" and amounted to "mental torture".
Presentational grey line

One student's father said that when he arrived at the college, his daughter and several other students came to him and started crying. "They are in shock," he said.
On Thursday, a group of students held a protest on the campus, demanding action against the college officials who had "humiliated" them.
The college trustee Pravin Pindoria said the incident was "unfortunate", adding that an investigation had been ordered and action would be taken against anyone found guilty of wrongdoing.
But Darshana Dholakia, the vice-chancellor of the university which the college is affiliated with, put the blame on the students. She said that they had broken rules and added that some of them had apologised.
However, some of the students told BBC Gujarati that they are now under pressure from the school authorities to play down the incident and not to speak of their ordeal.
On Friday, the Gujarat State Women's Commission ordered an investigation into this "shameful exercise" and asked the students to "come forward and speak without fear about their grievances". The police have lodged a complaint.



Media captionUsing comics to combat India's menstruation taboos

This is not the first time that female students have been humiliated on account of periods. 
In a very similar case, 70 students were stripped naked three years ago at a residential school in northern India by the female warden after she found blood on a bathroom door. 
Discrimination against women on account of menstruation is widespread in India, where periods have long been a taboo and menstruating women are considered impure. They are often excluded from social and religious events, denied entry into temples and shrines and kept out of kitchens.
Increasingly, urban educated women have been challenging these regressive ideas. In the past few years, attempts have been made to see periods for just what they are - a natural biological function. 
But success has been patchy.
In 2018, the top court in a landmark order threw open the doors of the Sabarimala shrine to women of all ages, saying that keeping women out of the temple in the southern state of Kerala was discriminatory. 
But a year later, the judges agreed to review the order after massive protests in the state.
Surprisingly, the protesters included a large number of women - an indication of how deeply rooted the stigma over menstruation is.

Saturday, February 15, 2020

Mexico

Ingrid Escamilla: Hundreds protest against woman's brutal murder

Women march in Mexico City to protest gender violenceImage copyrightAFP
Image captionProtesters called for tougher government action on gender violence
Hundreds of people gathered in Mexico City on Friday to protest against the murder of a young woman.
Ingrid Escamilla, 25, was stabbed to death allegedly by a man she lived with, who then mutilated her body in an attempt to hide the evidence.
Forensic workers leaked images of her corpse, and a local newspaper has been criticised for published one of these pictures on its front page. 
Femicide, the gender-based killing of women, is on the rise in Mexico.
More than 700 cases are currently being investigated, but activists say the number of women killed because of their gender is much higher.
The protesters, most of them women, moved through the Mexican capital holding placards calling for "responsible journalism," and chanting slogans like "not one more murder".
Protester clash with policeImage copyrightAFP
Image captionProtesters clashed with police during the demonstration
The group initially gathered outside of the city's National Palace, where President Andrés Manuel López Obrador lives with his family. 
"It seems to me the president has evaded the issue constantly," one protester, Alejandro Castillo, told Reuters news agency. 
"It is not a personal issue against him. We believe he has the possibility of raising several things on the agenda and has not done so."
Demonstrators vandalize a press vehicleImage copyrightAFP
Image captionSeveral vehicles belonging to La Prensa were vandalised by demonstrators
Demonstrators later marched through heavy rain to the offices of La Prensa, the newspaper that published grisly images of Ms Escamilla body with the headline 'It was cupid's fault". 
At least one vehicle belonging to the newspaper was set on fire, and several protesters clashed with security forces who tried to stop them from entering the newspaper's offices.
La Prensa, in response to public criticism, has stood by its decision but said it was open to discussions about adjusting its editorial standards beyond legal requirements.
Earlier this month, many Mexicans flooded social media with photos of wildlife and natural landscapes, using the hashtag #IngridEscamilla to drown out the photos of her body circulating online.
A demonstrator holds up a placardImage copyrightREUTERS
Image captionMore than 3,825 women were killed in Mexico last year - a record high
Her murder has shocked the country, but is only the latest in a string of slayings that have brought the issue of femicide into public debate.
Last year a record high of 3,825 women were killed in Mexico, according to official figures - up 7% from 2018.
Activists are critical of the fact that the vast majority of cases are never solved and only a tiny percentage of perpetrators are brought to justice.
President López Obrador - when asked about the classification of femicides - has previously accused media outlets of "manipulating" the issue.
But as protesters gathered outside the National Palace on Friday, he told reporters he was "not burying [his] head in the sand.
"The government I represent will always take care of ensuring the safety of women," the president added.