The day I saw 248 girls suffering genital mutilation


It’s 9.30am on a Sunday, and the mood inside the school building in Bandung, Indonesia, is festive. Mothers in headscarves and bright lipstick chat and eat coconut cakes. Javanese music thumps from an assembly hall. There are 400 people crammed into the primary school’s ground floor. It’s hot, noisy and chaotic, and almost everyone is smiling.

Twelve-year-old Suminah is not. She looks like she wants to punch somebody. Under her white hijab, which she has yanked down over her brow like a hoodie, her eyes have the livid, bewildered expression of a child who has been wronged by people she trusted. She sits on a plastic chair, swatting away her mother’s efforts to placate her with a party cup of milk and a biscuit. Suminah is in severe pain. An hour earlier, her genitals were mutilated with scissors as she lay on a school desk.

I’m not posting the whole thing, because fuck.

Warning for graphic details about FGM and what is basically Child Abuse. 

It may not have originated as an Islamic practice, and it may not be something from the Koran - but the Islamic government in power in Indonesia is legitimising FGM and allowing it to continue, it’s just tied in too deeply now. 

~Mooglets

Scandal in Ireland as woman dies in Galway 'after being denied abortion'


Further details on the Galway death.

Savita Halappanavar, who was 17 weeks pregnant, died of septicaemia a week after presenting with back pain on 21 October at University hospital in Galway, where she was found to be miscarrying.

After the 31-year-old dentist was told that she was miscarrying, her husband reportedly said that she had asked for a medical termination a number of times over a three day period, during which she was in severe pain.

But he said these requests were denied because a foetal heartbeat was still present and they were told at one point: “This is a Catholic country.”

Calls for X Case legislation after woman denied an abortion dies in Galway hospital


Alternative title: FUCKING CATHOLICS

Savita Halappanavar had originally presented to the hospital on 21 October complaining of severe back pain. She was found to be undergoing a miscarriage; however, the foetus remained inside her body and a foetal heartbeat was detected.  As Savita became ill and her condition deteriorated over the following days, she reportedly repeatedly asked for the foetus to be removed.

However, the foetus was not removed until 24 October – almost three days from when Savita was first admitted to the hospital – after the foetal heartbeat had stopped.

Immediately afterwards Savita was brought to a high dependency unit in the hospital suffering from septicaemia. She died four days later on Sunday 28 October.

[My bolding]

The woman herself wasn’t Catholic, so in a move so hypocritical I’m getting whiplash just thinking about it, HELLO forcing your beliefs on other’s!

~Mooglets

Prominent Saudi preacher tortures five-year-old daughter to death


A five-year old Saudi girl has died after she was tortured by her father, described as a “prominent” religious scholar who often preaches on numerous satellite television channels.

Lamaa breathed her last breath in an intensive care unit of a hospital in the Saudi capital Riyadh a few days ago, after weeks of suffering from broken arms, a skull fracture and head bruises, her mother told Al Arabiya.

“He used all sorts of torture and abuse against Lamaa,” the girl’s mother said, now divorced from her brutal husband.

Jesus FUCKING christ

Is this guys name going to be released ever? And his fucked up ‘reasons/excuses’? 

What was she - possessed perhaps? SHE WAS FUCKING FIVE. 

~Mooglets

Religiosity Plummets In Ireland And Declines Worldwide; Atheism On The Rise


Rocked in recent years by sex-abuse scandals and crises in leadership, the Catholic Church in the Republic of Ireland has been struggling to keep its members close.

But this week,a new global survey on faith and atheism has revealed that the crisis of faith in Ireland may be much worse than previously thought.

According to the poll released by WIN-Gallup International, the traditionally Catholic country has seen one of the steepest drops worldwide in religiosity.

Girl killed in Pakistani-administered Kashmir acid attack


A mother and father in Pakistani-administered Kashmir have been arrested for murdering their 15-year-old daughter by dousing her with acid “in the name of an honour”, police say.

They say it is one of the first such cases of its kind in the region.

Honour killings happen when mostly male family members believe the victim has brought dishonour to their community.

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan reported 943 women were killed in honour killings last year.

That represented an increase of more than 100 from 2010.

But such happenings are rare in parts of Kashmir under the control of Pakistan.

Police say that the incident took place in a remote village in the southern district of Kotli. They say that the case was brought to their attention by the couple’s eldest daughter.

It will not be clear until Friday - when the parents are due in court - if they admit or deny murder charges.

‘Suspicious’

Local police officer Raja Tahir Ayub told the BBC that the girl’s father became enraged when he saw his daughter “looking at two boys” riding on a motorcycle outside their home on Monday.

Police say that the parents suspected she was having illicit relations with one of the pair.

“He took his daughter inside, beat her up and then poured acid over her with the help of his wife,” Mr Ayub said.

Police say that that the couple did not take their daughter to hospital until the next morning, and she succumbed to her injuries on Tuesday evening.

The head of the state-run district hospital in Kotli - Muhammad Jahangir - confirmed the death.

He said that the girl was brought to hospital in a serious condition with more than 35% burns.

“There was no way she could survive,” he said.

Police say that the dead girl’s married elder sister informed them of the alleged incident on Wednesday morning.

They say that she became suspicious when her parents did not allow mourners to see the face of the dead girl before she was buried - otherwise a normal practise in Kashmiri Muslim society.

In March the government of Pakistani-administered Kashmir made acid attacks a criminal offence punishable with life imprisonment.

BBCNews

OMG, fuck you, fuck you, fuck you

~Mooglets

Paul Ryan promises Focus on the Family that he will fight gay equality


’ During an interview with Focus on the Family president Jim Daly, Paul Ryan reassured the anti-gay group that a Romney-Ryan administration will fiercely oppose gay rights. Focus on the Family and its founder James Dobson have a long history of promoting anti-gay policies and ex-gay therapy, and earned a shout-out from Romney earlier this week while campaigning in Colorado, where it is headquartered.’

Continue article at above link.

~Mooglets

Kissing Hank’s Ass

Faith in schools: The dismantling of Australia's secular public education system


The Separation of Church and State Schools was the theme of a conference hosted in Brisbane by the Humanist Society of Queensland on the weekend of 13-14 October 2012.

With conference speakers including academics and representatives of teacher and parent groups, the conference focused on four key areas of concern:

  1. Religious instruction classes conducted during school hours
  2. Chaplains in state schools
  3. State funding for religious schools
  4. The teaching of creationism and/or intelligent design as “science” in the science classroom

Even With Catholic Charities Out of the Picture, Illinois Foster Children Are Doing Just Fine


After Illinois began allowing civil unions last year, the Catholic Charities groups in the state (which handled foster children) were worried that they would have to put kdis in the homes of gay or lesbian couples (oh, the horror!). But since they received taxpayer money for their work, they had no right to discriminate. So instead of doing the right thing for the children, they opted to shut down altogether.

Taliban Demands Unbiased Coverage of Its Attempted Murder of a 14-Year-Old Girl


’ You wouldn’t believe the lamestream media’s bias. You shoot one 14-year-old girl in the head and you’ll never hear the end of it. So goes the lament of Pakistan’s Taliban insurgency following a spate of bad press in mainstream Pakistani outlets related to the jihadists’ failed assassination attempt of Malala Yousafzai, a young blogger who dared protest the Taliban’s ban on educating girls. Now the Taliban are plotting terror strikes on TV stations and other media organizations, but local newspapers refuse to stay silent.’

Excuse the formatting, on my phone again.

~Mooglets

Lord Carey draws parallels between gay marriage reform and Nazism


Another day, another nominee for our 2012 Bad Faith Award. The former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Carey has actually spent most of the year talking himself into contention through his opposition to gay marriage and his warnings of anti-Christian persecution in Britain, but it would appear he has decided to up his game following the opening of the Bad Faith nominations process.

Because, surely, that’s the only logical explanation for why he would choose to say the following at an anti-gay marriage fringe event at the Conservative Party conference yesterday, with reference to Nick Clegg’s recent suggestion that opponents of the marriage reform are “bigots”:

“Let us remember the Jews in Nazi Germany. What started against them was when they started to be called names. And that was the first stage towards that totalitarian state. We have to resist them. We treasure democracy. We treasure our Christian inheritance and we want to debate this in a fair way.”

For analysis of quite why this statement is at best deeply ignorant and at worst staggeringly offensive, read this post by Guardian blogger and occasional New Humanist contributor Martin Robbins. And look out for the opportunity to vote for Carey in the Bad Faith poll later this month – the only question surrounding his place on the shortlist concerns whether we should include all the individuals who have made irrational statements in opposition to the equal marriage reforms, or simply put forward the Coalition for Marriage as a collective nomination. Let us know what you think in the comments.

Update: The Telegraph’s Tom Chivers (himself no fan of the former Archbishop) has looked at Carey’s comments in their fuller context, and suggested that critics have been wrong to attack him on this occasion. Take a look at his post and see what you think.

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NewHumanist

Attack on Pakistani schoolgirl galvanizes anti-Taliban feeling


A week ago today, a Pakistani schoolgirl who dared to speak out against the Taliban took a bullet to the head for her act of defiance.

Now, as Malala Yousufzai lies in a hospital bed in Birmingham, England, the shock and outrage among her countrymen have given way to a new sentiment: What will the government do about this?

While the Pakistani news media debate how the country should respond to the attack, thousands of people nationwide have joined in rallies in support of the wounded 14-year-old.

Malala: Global symbol, but still just a kid

The shooting has prompted an unusually strong and united reaction of disgust and anger among many Pakistanis, analysts say.

“There is a groundswell of sympathy for her and also a very strong demand for the Pakistani state to do something about this issue,” said Raza Rumi, director of policy and programs at the Jinnah Institute, a Pakistani research organization.

Standing with Malala: Teen inspires others to fight for education

Much of the discontent is directed toward the Pakistani Taliban, the extremist group that has claimed responsibility for the shooting and said it will seek to kill Malala if she recovers from her injuries.

“This has created a very bad feeling for the Taliban,” said Saleem Khan, an executive with a paper manufacturing company in the city of Lahore.

Khan said he was “crying and weeping” after hearing of the attack on Malala, who had defied extremists in the northwestern Swat Valley by insisting on the right of girls to go to school.

Meanwhile, police in Birmingham said “two well-wishers” were stopped when they came to the hospital overnight wanting to see the girl. No arrests were made, contrary to earlier reports from the hospital.

Hospital director Dave Rosser said the intruders were “probably people being over-curious,” but he added that the hospital is taking no chances and that tight security is in place.

At a rally organized by the powerful MQM political party in Karachi, thousands of people gathered, some waving flags and banners with messages of support for Malala. “Our prayers are with you,” read one. Another said, “Malala — (an) attack on you is an attack on education and progress.”

Social activist Saman Jafery told CNN: “If Taliban is a mindset, then Malala is a mindset too. It’s a mindset of educated and empowered women.”

Another of those at the rally, Haider Rizvi, said people “don’t want the Taliban anymore in Pakistan, and after the Malala incident, it is time for people to stand up.”

“The message is right here … all these people. They are condemning the act of the Taliban,” added student Ashwar Waqi.

The Taliban, who operate in northwestern Pakistan along the border with Afghanistan, have fallen foul of Pakistani public opinion in the past, notably in 2009, when a video emerged of the flogging of a teenage girl in the Swat Valley.

The video provoked appalled reactions in Pakistan at the time, but “the scale of protests for Malala are bigger,” Rumi said. “Even the right-wing mainstream media have expressed outrage.”

The Taliban became increasingly unpopular among Pakistanis in 2009 as the military carried out an offensive against members of the group in northwestern areas.

But the military operations failed to root them out altogether, and their continued influence in the region was demonstrated last week by the gun attack on Malala and two other girls as they were being driven home from school. The two other girls were less severely wounded than Malala.

Opinion: One girl’s courage in the face of Taliban cowardice

One of them, Kainat Riaz, is being treated locally. She said she was so scared after the attack on the bus in which they traveled that she couldn’t sleep for two days.

The moment she heard gunfire, she fell onto the lap of a teacher who was also on the bus, she said. But despite her injuries and the terror of the attack, she told CNN she did not regret studying.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik, visiting the three girls’ school in the Swat Valley on Tuesday, said the name would be changed from “Khushal Public School” to “Malala Public High School.”

A task force will be established to protect all girls’ schools in the region that are under threat of militants, he told reporters.

Politicians and commentators in Pakistan have slammed the attack. But the condemnation of the Taliban has not been as universal.

“Everybody was angry that it happened, but not everybody was angry with the Taliban,” said Tazeen Javed, an Islamabad-based communications consultant who writes for The Express Tribune newspaper.

The cricket star-turned-politician Imran Khan, who visited Malala in a hospital in Peshawar last week, has drawn criticism for not condemning the Taliban outright for the attack.

Khan “showed a lot of concern but couldn’t resist bringing in the issue of the drone strikes as a cause for this attack, which was a bit of a deflection,” said Rumi, referring to the drone attacks carried out by the United States in northwestern Pakistan that have generated resentment in the country.

Certain commentators have also begun to question the official version of events, suggesting that the attack on Malala may be used as a pretext by the government for military action against the Taliban in the restive tribal region of North Waziristan.

Gordon Brown: Millions face Malala’s fight

“The Malala incident is the CIA’s latest attempt to divide public opinion and incite conflict in Pakistani society,” Haider Mehdi, a contributor to the Pakistani daily The Nation, wrote in a column Tuesday.

As the controversy about the attack rages in Pakistan, the doctors treating Malala thousands of miles away say they are “very pleased” with her progress and optimistic that she will make a good recovery.

However, she faces reconstructive surgery and there is “still a long way to go,” said Rosser, of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham.

Her family is not yet in England to be by her bedside, but the Pakistani high commissioner is making arrangements on that front, he said.

In the meantime, the 14-year-old appears to be “every bit as strong as we had been led to believe,” Rosser said, adding that the consultant leading her care “is impressed by her resilience and her strength.”

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CNN