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Islam, Women and Feminism ( 12 Jan 2024, NewAgeIslam.Com)

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Adila Hassim, the South African Lawyer Fighting ‘Genocide’ Case against Israel at ICJ

New Age Islam News Bureau

12 January 2024

·         Adila Hassim, The South African Lawyer Fighting ‘Genocide’ Case Against Israel at ICJ?

·         Rina Amiri, U.S. Representative for Afghan Women’s Affairs: The US Should Not Normalize the Relations with Taliban

·         UN Concerned Over Taliban Arrests Of Afghan Women And Girls For Alleged Islamic Headscarf

·         Violations

·         Islamic Emirate Reacts to UNAMA’s Statement on Arrest of Women

·         Muslim Woman, Assaulted By 7 Men In Karnataka Hotel, Alleges Gangrape

·         Millions of US Women, Children Risk Hunger Without More Aid Funding, White House Says

·         Women religious gear up for battle against human trafficking with prayer, education

Compiled by New Age Islam News Bureau

URL:    https://newageislam.com/islam-women-feminism/adila-hassim-genocide-icj/d/131505

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Adila Hassim, the South African Lawyer Fighting ‘Genocide’ Case Against Israel at ICJ?

 

Adila Hassim, The South African Lawyer

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January 12, 2024

Adila Hassim, a prominent lawyer representing South Africa in the Gaza genocide case at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), delivered a compelling speech on January 10, offering a scathing indictment of Israel’s actions in the besieged city. The impassioned address, made before a 15-judge panel in a packed courtroom, garnered widespread applause online.

Adila Hassim’s legal career has spanned decades, primarily focusing on socio-economic rights matters. She specializes in constitutional, administrative, health, and competition law. Hassim has served as an acting judge and has contributed to various legal and health journals. Additionally, she is a co-founder of Corruption Watch, an anti-corruption organization.

The South African legal team accused Israel of committing genocide against Palestinians and urgently appealed to the United Nations’ top court to halt Israel’s military operations in Gaza. Israel vehemently denied the allegations, while South African lawyers argued that the conflict is part of a long-standing oppression of Palestinians.

During the opening arguments, Adila Hassim emphasized the severity of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, describing it as one of the heaviest conventional bombing campaigns in modern warfare history. She highlighted the destruction of Palestinian towns and the inadequate aid reaching the population, rendering essentials for life unobtainable.

Another South African lawyer, TembekaNgcukaitobi, accused Israel of having “genocidal intent” against Palestinians in Gaza, pointing to a clear pattern of conduct targeting civilian infrastructure. The death toll in Gaza exceeded 23,200, according to the Health Ministry in the Hamas-run enclave.

The legal dispute not only addresses the ongoing conflict but also touches on fundamental issues related to Israel’s national identity as a Jewish state established after the Holocaust. It draws parallels with South Africa’s own history under apartheid, with the African National Congress comparing Israel’s policies to its past experiences with racial segregation.

The case unfolds against a backdrop where geopolitical, historical, and humanitarian considerations intersect, contributing to a complex and highly charged legal argument at the ICJ.

Source: muslimmirror.com

https://muslimmirror.com/eng/who-is-adila-hassim-the-lawyer-fighting-genocide-case-against-israel-at-icj/

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Rina Amiri, U.S. Representative for Afghan Women’s Affairs: The US Should Not Normalize the Relations with Taliban

 

Rina Amiri, U.S. Representative for Afghan Women’s Affairs

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Fidel Rahmati

January 12, 2024

At a meeting of the Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee, Rina Amiri, the U.S. representative for Afghan women’s affairs, emphasized that the United States should not support the normalization of relations with the Taliban.

Rina Amiri emphasized that the Taliban’s policies against women should be made clear, adding, “We must make it clear to the Taliban that human rights and women’s rights are paramount for the United States.”

The U.S. representative for Afghan women’s affairs stressed that despite the Taliban’s promises, the struggle to preserve human rights in Afghanistan has become challenging. She mentioned that minorities, especially the Hazaras, are at risk, and the Taliban’s restrictions against women have increased.

During the meeting held on Thursday, she stated that the Taliban has attempted to remove women from the public sphere and has detained women activists.

Recently, the Taliban has sparked controversy and faced significant condemnation and criticism for detaining dozens of women in various parts of Kabul for dress code violations.

Ms. Amiri further added that considering the Taliban’s track record, the path forward is difficult. She stated, “Let us stand by Afghan women and not victimize them.”

Amiri emphasized that support for women is a global endeavour, calling for collaboration between Islamic countries and Western nations. She highlighted the importance of amplifying and reflecting the voices of Afghan women, asserting that the most effective support for Afghanistan lies in upholding human rights.

Source: khaama.com

https://www.khaama.com/the-us-should-not-normalize-the-relations-with-taliban-rina-amiri/

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UN concerned over Taliban arrests of Afghan women and girls for alleged Islamic headscarf violations

January 11, 2024

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The United Nations mission in Afghanistan said Thursday it was deeply concerned by recent arbitrary arrests and detentions by the Taliban government of women and girls for allegedly violating dress codes regarding the Islamic headscarf, or hijab.

The mission said it was looking into claims of ill treatment of women and extortion in exchange for their release, and warned that physical violence and detentions were demeaning and dangerous.

The Taliban said last week that female police officers have been taking women into custody for wearing “bad hijab.”

It was the first official confirmation of a crackdown on women who don’t follow the dress code imposed by the Taliban since they returned to power in 2021 — a crackdown that has echoed events in neighboring Iran, which saw months of protests in 2022 and has long enforced the mandatory hijab.

The U.N. statement said hijab-enforcing campaigns in the capital, Kabul, and the province of Daykundi have been ongoing since Jan. 1, with large numbers of women and girls warned and detained. The mission also said women from religious and ethnic minorities appear to be disproportionately impacted.

“Enforcement measures involving physical violence are especially demeaning and dangerous for Afghan women and girls,” said Roza Otunbayeva, U.N. special envoy and head of the mission.

“Detentions carry an enormous stigma that put Afghan women at even greater risk,” she said. “They also destroy public trust.”

The Taliban chief spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, said the U.N. preoccupation with Afghan women was unwarranted, and dismissed its concerns.

“Afghan women wear hijab of their own accord,” he said on X, formerly known as Twitter. “They don’t need to be forced. The Vice and Virtue Ministry hasn’t forced anyone (to wear hijab) either.”

In May 2022, the Taliban issued a decree calling for women to only show their eyes and recommending they wear the head-to-toe burqa, similar to restrictions during their previous rule of the country between 1996 and 2001.

A spokesman for the Vice and Virtue Ministry, Abdul Ghafar Farooq, earlier Thursday rejected reports that women and girls were being arrested or beaten for wearing “bad hijab” and called it propaganda from the foreign media.

Source: apnews.com

https://apnews.com/article/afghanistan-taliban-arrest-women-girls-hijab-20275d94a4ee42d8b5f3ab62ff1f801e

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Islamic Emirate Reacts to UNAMA’s Statement on Arrest of Women

Jan 11, 2024

The Islamic Emirate’s spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid reacted to the UN Assistant Mission in Afghanistan’s (UNAMA) statement regarding the arrest of women in Kabul and Daikundi.

On Thursday, UNAMA said in a statement that it “is deeply concerned over recent arbitrary arrests and detentions of women and girls by Afghanistan’s de facto authorities because of alleged non-compliance with the Islamic dress code.”

According to the statement, since 1 January, in Kabul and Daykundi provinces, UNAMA has documented a series of hijab decree enforcement campaigns by the de facto Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice and the de facto police.

“In the capital Kabul, large numbers of women and girls have been warned and detained. In Nili City of Daykundi province, women and girls have also been detained,” the statement said.

Mujahid said that UNAMA’s concerns regarding the mistreatment of women because of not observing hijab are not correct.

“The Afghan women are observing the hijab themselves. There is no need for forceful actions. The [Ministry of Vice and Virtue] has also not used force against anyone. The propaganda in this regard is not true,” he said.

Meanwhile, UANAMA said that it is looking into allegations of “ill-treatment and incommunicado detention, and that religious and ethnic minority communities appear to be disproportionately impacted by the enforcement operations.”

According to UNAMA, to secure release, “a mahram, or male guardian, has been required to sign a letter guaranteeing future compliance or else face punishment.

The statement quoted head of the UNAMA Roza Otunbayeva:“Enforcement measures involving physical violence are especially demeaning and dangerous for Afghan women and girls.”

“Detentions carry an enormous stigma that put Afghan women at even greater risk. They also destroy public trust,” she said.

The statement said that UNAMA has discussed these issues with the de facto authorities, including the de facto Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, and calls for the immediate release of those detained.

Source: tolonews.com

https://tolonews.com/afghanistan-186925

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Muslim Woman, Assaulted By 7 Men InKarnataka Hotel, Alleges Gangrape

Jan 11, 2024

Sagay Raj

The woman who was abused by a group of seven Muslim men inside a hotel in Karnataka's Haveri district has alleged that she was gang raped by the accused. She and her partner were thrashed by the group of men over their interfaith relationship.

The incident took place on January 7 but only came to light after the victims narrated their ordeal to the police, and registered a case against the accused.

Further, an undated video of the same men abusing another woman inside a car has also surfaced.

The woman who was abused inside the hotel room said the men dragged her from the room and took her near a river where they thrashed her. She alleged that the men took turns raping her and afterwards they took her to the city in a car and the driver also raped her.

"Then they left me on the road to catch a bus," she added.

She said she didn't know the name of all the men who assaulted her but one of them was called Aftab.

"I can identify them if they are produced in front of me. The video footage would show all of them clearly. It includes all of them who raped me. I beg that they should all be punished," said the woman.

The men had filmed the entire incident where they barged into the hotel room and attacked the couple.

The Supertindent of Haveri Police, Anshu Kumar told India Today TV that the woman's statement alleging gang rape has been recorded under Section 164 (Recording of confessions and statements) of the Code of Criminal Procedure after she was produced before a magistrate.

Kumar said the woman had not mentioned the rape charges in her earlier statement but Section 376(D) (gang rape) has been added into the charges against the accused. “She has accused seven people in her statement. Three have already been arrested. Another three are in the hospital. They will be arrested after they are discharged. We will arrest the rest as well," added the SP.

Karnataka BJP chief BY Vijayendra commented on the incident and said it was "extremely horrifying". In a post on X, he wrote, "Increasing incidents of crime on women in the state is very distressing."

He also slammed the state government under Chief Minister Siddaramaiah and said the incident highlights the "collapsing law and order" situation.

BJP IT cell's convenor Amit Malviya also slammed the Opposition over the incident and said, "Deafening silence in the secular cabal."

VIDEO ABUSING ANOTHER WOMAN

After the incident in the hotel room in Haveri came to light, an undated video of the same men abusing another Muslim woman inside a car has surfaced.

The woman in the video seems to have been kidnapped by the men who slapped and taunted her. They also repeatedly tried to remove the covering from her face as she pleads with the men.

SP Anshu Kumar said they have not received any complaints over the video, but the police will file an FIR. "We will take this up suo moto and register an FIR on the other video doing the rounds," he added.

Kumar added that strict action will be taken against the accused, and they will serve as a deterrent to anyone who tries to take the law into their own hands.

Source: indiatoday.in

https://www.indiatoday.in/india/karnataka/story/interfaith-couple-attacked-karnataka-hotel-gang-rape-charges-old-video-same-men-harassing-another-woman-2487598-2024-01-11

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Millions of US Women, Children Risk Hunger Without More Aid Funding, White House Says

Jan. 11, 2024

 Leah Douglas

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Congress must raise spending on a food assistance program for low-income women and children or 2 million could be turned away this year, Biden administration officials said on Thursday.

A bitterly divided Congress has for months failed to reach agreement on 2024 government spending levels and is racing to avert a partial shutdown on Jan. 19.

An eventual deal should include $1 billion more for the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack and White House Domestic Policy Council Director Neera Tanden on a call with reporters.

The program, which had a budget of $6 billion last year, is facing a shortfall due to rising food costs and higher participation.

The funding gap could result in as many as 2 million people being turned away from the program this year, according to a December analysis by the nonpartisan Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

"The longer Congress puts off fully funding WIC, the greater the risk grows to moms, babies and children who need and are seeking nutrition and health support from the program," Vilsack said.

WIC provides food, nutrition education and healthcare referrals to about 6.7 million low-income people each year including about half of all infants born in the U.S., according to the Department of Agriculture, which administers the program.

A stopgap federal funding bill in November that narrowly averted a government shutdown extended some nutrition programs until Sept. 30, but not WIC.

If Congress does not raise spending levels, states would have to put applicants on wait lists, said Paul Throne, WIC director for Washington State, on the call.

"We’re struggling to understand how we’re going to continue to serve the people who need us," Throne said. "We have not had waiting lists in Washington State for at least 30 years."

Source: usnews.com

https://www.usnews.com/news/top-news/articles/2024-01-11/millions-of-us-women-children-risk-hunger-without-more-aid-funding-white-house-says

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Women religious gear up for battle against human trafficking with prayer, education

January 11, 2024

As the nation marks National Human Trafficking Awareness Day Jan. 11, women religious in the U.S. are combating modern slavery with prayer and education.

The Alliance to End Human Trafficking — whose members include more than 100 congregations of Catholic women religious — has created a dedicated webpage featuring a prayer service and tool kit for the national observance, which was established by Congress in 2007.

On the same day, the organization launches a daily prayer series on social media leading up to the Feb. 8 International Day of Prayer and Awareness Against Human Trafficking, designated as such by the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace and the International Union of Superiors General.

The international day coincides with the feast of St. Josephine Bakhita. Born under slavery in Sudan, St. Bakhita eventually became a Canossian sister in Italy. Since her canonization by St. John Paul II in 2000, she has become the patron saint of human trafficking survivors.

The Jan. 11 national observance features a "Wear Blue Day" initiative that invites participants to share social media images of themselves wearing blue clothing to signal support for ending human trafficking. The Alliance to End Human Trafficking's staff and members have posted videos to its social media platforms for the campaign, and it is also highlighting an array of resources for countering trafficking.

In 2021 alone, the most recent year reported on, some 50 million individuals worldwide were in a form of modern slavery, according to the United Nations' International Labor Organization.

The two most common types of human trafficking are forced labor (including sex trafficking) and forced marriage.

In 2021, the Washington-based nonprofit Polaris, which operates the U.S. National Human Trafficking Hotline, received more than 10,350 reports involving over 16,550 individual victims — numbers representing "likely only a fraction of the actual problem," according to the organization's website.

During fiscal year 2022, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security opened 1,373 human trafficking investigations, an increase of more than 260 cases over the previous fiscal year.

The State Department's 2023 Trafficking in Persons Report highlighted three key trends in trafficking — an increase in forced labor, a rise in the use of online scams to target victims and growing numbers of boys and men among those trafficked.

At the same time, "in the last year or so, there's more of a conversation around sex trafficking" and human trafficking in general, said Sister of St. Joseph Meaghan Patterson, a social worker and executive director of Dawn's Place, which is part of the alliance and Philadelphia's first residential recovery program for women who have been sex trafficked.

Patterson told OSV News the 2023 film "Sound of Freedom," which dramatizes the independent work of former Homeland Security agent Tim Ballard in rescuing trafficked children, "really sparked a lot of those discussions."

However, she cautioned, "it's critical that people like us — who are doing the work every day — present the reality and facts of sex trafficking, and not the Hollywood glorified version of it."

Patterson said that trafficking often takes place undetected, but in plain sight.

"A lot of our women are trafficked or exploited by someone they know," such as "a boyfriend, parent, uncle or cousin — someone they have a connection with," she said, adding that "traffickers tend to prey on vulnerabilities" in their victims.

From a national perspective, "we need to do a better job" at both preventing trafficking and supporting survivors, she said.

With sex trafficking, "there's so much stigma that is still attached to particularly prostitution," she said. "We (say), 'They're prostitutes,' instead of saying, 'They're being prostituted.' "

Legalized prostitution, which exists in certain parts of Nevada, and the exponential growth of the multibillion-dollar pornography industry, have "absolutely" worsened the problem of trafficking, she said.

Despite the scope of the problem, Catholic faithful can make a positive impact, said Patterson.

"The number one thing you can do is pray," she said. "There is a huge power in prayer. ... Our retired sisters (are) a powerhouse of prayer.

"Not everyone is going to be able to volunteer or work at Dawn's Place, or have direct contact with survivors of sex trafficking, but they can pray for survivors," she added. "They can pray for those inflicting the pain, and they can pray for those of us working with survivors."

Source: globalsistersreport.org

https://www.globalsistersreport.org/news/women-religious-gear-battle-against-human-trafficking-prayer-education

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URL:    https://newageislam.com/islam-women-feminism/adila-hassim-genocide-icj/d/131505

 

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