Category: Women

  • Activist’s treatment at Evin prison has become even more severe since she was awarded prize last year

    The jailed Nobel peace prize laureate Narges Mohammadi has marked the first anniversary of her award with a call for peace in the Middle East from Tehran’s notorious Evin prison.

    The Iranian human rights activist said in comments to Italy’s Corriere della Sera: “Today, the dark shadow of war once again hangs over our beloved country. I hate war.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Pen used in assault on Manahel al-Otaibi, who has been imprisoned for 11 years for ‘terrorist’ tweets after secret trial

    A Saudi Arabian fitness instructor and influencer has been stabbed in the face in prison after being jailed in January for promoting women’s rights on social media.

    Manahel al-Otaibi, 30, was sentenced to 11 years in prison for “terrorist offences” in a secret trial that generated widespread criticism, with activists saying it showed the “hollowness” of Saudi progress in human rights.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Israel’s war on the Gaza Strip has been the deadliest year of conflict for women and children anywhere in the world over the past two decades, according to an analysis released Tuesday as Israeli forces continued to bombard the Palestinian enclave and launched a ground invasion of Lebanon. The global humanitarian group Oxfam noted in its new report that Israel’s U.S.-backed assault on Gaza…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • Note: This blog follows on from a previous piece (Letter to my future daughter).


    To my future son,

    My beautiful baby boy. I hope you know how truly special you are. How loved and long-awaited you are.

    You’ve not even been conceived yet! But you’re with me.

    For since that night I dreamt of you, I’ve hoped and felt that you’ll enter my life.

    You were there, in my dreams: a beautiful curly haired little baby boy.

    This dream was over a year ago, and I’ve been thinking of it even since. For this dream has changed my perceptions of motherhood forever.

    As many people will know, I’ve always wanted to be a mother. But I wasn’t ready until now. Yet that dream still took me by surprise.

    That night that I dreamt of you, I was feeding you with my right breast (something I’d never dreamt of before). It was peaceful, so very peaceful.

    I saw your beautiful curly hair, your soft skin and I learn about your possible features. And, who I was too.

    Surrounded by cheerful singing women in veils, it was different to any other dream I’d had before. With good reason I believe.

    From feeding you as a baby, to holding your hand on Eid, there you were dressed in a white kufi and thoub. We received an Eid gift from a group of women and you looked so beautiful.

    You were beautiful. The dream was beautiful. And quite possibly life changing.

    It revealed our journey together – with no real detail about your father.

    I don’t know your father’s name, face, faith, age or ethnicity. I know nothing (only Allah knows).

    But what I do believe is that I’ll be your mother and that I’ll still be Muslim. And your path: it’ll be yours to pave, to navigate, to merge.

    And so, in the days and months after, I shared this dream with men and women alike. I was met with both positive hopes and and varying interpretations.

    Some welcomed the “news” (idea). Others declared that this dream was merely an expression of myself, my faith and my identity and my longing to belong (true and very real wants).

    But, I believe it’s more than that. Much more.

    You see, before you appeared that night, a very special lady had told me that you’d be my first.

    A boy! I was surprised, yet relieved that she believed I’d have a family of my own at last – but when the time was right. For I had to be patient and focus on myself first.

    Why was I surprised, yet relieved? Well, this was during a difficult period of my life. A time in which I needed hope.

    She spoke. And there you appeared in my future slumber. My sign. My hope, my patience, my blessing.

    Dreams… I’ve had many of them.

    My mind is full, bursting with dreams. Some repressed trauma, calls from my brain of cries to be heard. Some, garbage from the day being processed in the grand processing centre that is our brains.

    And some… have been gifts. Signs from beyond the grave, comforts, hellos and premonitions.

    At least I believe so. Allah alim (Allah knows) after all. For I believe they are all with His blessing, His power and an His knowledge.

    Dreams. Lots of them. In fact, another particular dream I remember was when I dreamt of Aunty S with a girl.

    I told her. And the next time we met, I discovered that not only was she married but pregnant!

    Alhamdulillah, after years of waiting to meet her King – it’d happened. Just as I’d told her she would, with patience and never giving up who she was or what she believed in.

    She later she gave birth to a beautiful little girl – whom we’re waiting for you to meet, insha’Allah.

    You see, there are signs, beautiful peaceful signs everywhere. Just as Allah (SWT) tells us.

    And it’s through these signs, that I came to Islam. Through these signs (and others) that I believe my mother is at peace.

    And through these signs that I’ve come to believe that I’ll become a mother, insha’Allah. And, that my first child, may very well be a boy.

    This is where the surprise comes in.

    It’s significant, because having a boy wouldn’t be any less significant as having a girl. It shouldn’t be.

    But, it wasn’t always what I’d have preferred, I’m ashamed to say.

    As a woman, the strong idealistic woman that I hope you’ll find hope, comfort, strength and openness with, I’d always hoped my first child would be a girl.

    Why? Because I’m a woman and I can relate to a girl.

    I grew up in quite a gender segregated environment. Yes, I had two brothers but as you’ll later find out, it wasn’t that simple.

    Overall, I didn’t have much (significant) interaction with boys or men at all.

    I was a mummy’s girl. I went to a girl’s school till I was 12. And, most of my closest friends have been women.

    What’s more, and quite significantly, as a lifelong feminist, I wanted to be a role model, support and encouragement for any daughter I’d have, in what is still very much a man’s world.

    But that’s not all…

    As you’ll come to know, Nanny Emilia isn’t here. We said goodbye when I was much younger (in my early 20s).

    Yes, I believe we’ll all see her again, but it’s often been a lonely journey here. And with my little girl, I wanted to share everything that I never got a chance to do with her.

    Weddings, shopping, new jobs. Future pregnancies, births and so much more.

    I’d missed out on so many shared moments. Milestones that I’d had to live and will continue to have to share without her. At least in person.

    That’s why I hoped my first would be a girl. Of course, a happy healthy baby (whatever the gender) is all a parent should want. And I did.

    But, I also wanted to dress her up, to share so much, to inspire her, teach her, empower her. I wanted it all.

    So, hopefully a girl first, then a boy I thought. God willing. Insha’Allah.

    But, we plan, and Allah plans. And Allah is the Best of Planners.  

    And so, whilst only Allah knows what is in my future – our future – I do believe that it’s quite possible that you’ll be my first. My first encounter with motherhood.

    Yes, my first could very well be you: my beautiful little baby boy.

    But whether you’re my first, second, third – it doesn’t matter. What matters is cherishing the blessing of every child and the blessing that you are as my son (and any daughter I may have).

    It’s early days. And as I write this letter, I’m 36 and the clock is ticking (a pressure that many women feel but that you’ll never experience!).

    You’ve not been conceived and I don’t even know who your father will be! But, what I truly hope is that you’ll be a part of my life.

    Seeing my older and wiser female friends nurturing such beautiful relationships with their sons, I’ve been inspired.

    It’s a blessing – for the person they are (not a gender).

    Yes, I’ve learnt that I can relate to you my beautiful boy and that we can share so much together.

    As you’ll sadly learn, in patriarchal societies, having a boy (especially first) is a sexist gift to match patriarchal expectations. On the other hand, having a girl is often seen as a “burden” and “disappointment”.

    As a feminist, I knew that I’d want to empower any girl I had to be strong, unique and supported each and every step of the way. That they’d be an equal blessing to a boy.

    But if I dig deep, I did have a preference.

    Yet as a feminist in the truest sense – a real egalitarian (not a misandrist) – here’s what underpins this lesson: you equally must not be defined by your gender.

    I don’t want to raise you just to simply “not be sexist”. I don’t want you to be “the antithesis to sexism” and a “working model of feminism in progress”.

    No, you don’t deserve that. I don’t want you to be defined by biases, bigotry and gendered expectations. You’re you – not simply “not a girl”.

    The burden of our struggle is not one you should inherit. Instead, I’d hope you’d join as an individual who chooses justice for all – out of free will, passion and real conviction.

    Everyone deserves to be treated with dignity and respect and to be able to follow their own path. And that’s why I want you to live to be you.

    This is vitally important my son. For as time has passed on the journey that is life, I’ve also come to realise just how much sexism affects men too.

    It’s pervasive and clear in not just how men treat women, but in how they treat themselves and other men and boys too. In the expectations and how they raise their sons, not just their daughters.

    And crucially: how women also raise their sons, as well as daughters.

    Misogyny perpetuates misogyny. And narcissism, repressed emotions, trauma and depression follow.

    No, it must end, everywhere. You’re a unique beautiful individual and this is your unique path.

    Your journey from baby boy to man is yours to carve for yourself. You are the master of this journey and you are free dear son to be who you want to be.

    Please, embrace life and all its nuances. It’s ups and downs. Its colours and its greys.

    Do not be scared to cry, to talk, to love, to share your emotions. It’s healthy – and powerful. It’s what makes you truly you!

    Please, do not be shamed into hating your gender. A real “man” loves himself and loves women, especially when they’re free, empowered and strong.

    Strength my dear son, is not defined by the size of one’s muscles, the number of our BMI or our ability to “put on a brave face”.

    No, strength – strength of person, strength of character, real resilience and emotional maturity – genuine character – is built on honesty, openness, transparency, respect and love.

    It’s built on respecting yourself and others, on admitting when we are wrong, on wanting to learn and grow from others and for standing our ground in the face of injustice – whoever the survivors and perpetrators may be.

    My dear son, I am so proud of you. And I love you.

    Know who you are (don’t worry it’s a life-long journey of discovery and reflection!).

    Embrace who you are – always, honestly and openly.

    Treat others the way you wish to be treated (whatever their gender) and stand up against bullying, bigotry and injustice, wherever and whenever you see it.

    That is strength my son. This is what makes us human.

    As your mother, I will not let you be defined by the patriarchal norms that have plagued women across the generations – including myself.

    Yes, I hope you will be a true fierce feminist. And that you’ll love yourself, you’ll love women, men, and each and every human being.

    My promise to you is this: there will be no room for toxic masculinity in our house – for the sake of every single person and the future I want to build with your father, yourself and any siblings you may have (boy, girl or non-binary).

    Yes, you will be a “real man” – by being you! Not a walking embodiment of toxic rigid gender norms.

    As your mother, I promise to you that I will strive with all my love and energy to help you (if you identify as a male – or as whoever and however you chose to live your life), to be a strong, confident individual.

    To be kind, loyal, affectionate, communicative and not intimidated by women – or men (or women!) that falsely teach that toxic masculinity is the answer to what being a “real man” is.

    I will teach you, guide you and watch you carve your own path.

    And I will not let you be burdened with expectations.

    You will have my support on the good days, and the bad days. On the confident days, on the “I need a pick-me-up days” and the duvet days.

    I will be there. Without judgment and with an empathic listening ear, and life-long advice when you need it.

    For I will be your mother, your friend, your teacher, your ally. This is my promise to you.

    I will support you. I will encourage you when I believe you’re right, and I will equally call you out without shame when I think you deserve better for yourself and for others.

    I will listen to you, I will advise when you need me, and I will also step back when you need me to so you can carve your own path, write your own story and walk your own individual path.

    At the forefront, by your side, or at the sidelines, I will be there, whenever and wherever you need me.

    I hope that you will grow to not see women and girls through the lens of “mother, daughter, sister” but instead as human beings equal to you.

    And I hope that you will feel proud of who you are, free to express your emotions, free to choose your own path and free to be your authentic self, dear son.

    Laugh, cry, talk, hug, share – it’s all normal, healthy, human.

    You are beautiful. Embrace that beauty with humility, humanity and love for all.

    I love you son. Whoever you are, wherever and whenever we shall meet.

    Yours always,

    Your dear mother

    xxxxx

    This post was originally published on Voice of Salam.

  • Leadership rivals Jenrick, Cleverly and Tugendhat reject her comments, as row over her ‘excessive’ claim escalates

    Q: Do you agree with Kemi Badenoch that some cultures are less valid than others?

    Jenrick says culture matters. But he says he disagres with Badenoch on immigration numbers. He says he thinks you have to have a cap on numbers. And he also says he believes the UK has to leave the European convention on human rights. He says Badenoch is just talking about developing a plan in a few years time, and that’s “a recipe for infighting and for losing the public’s trust”.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Seg2 amberadncandifamilies

    At least two women in Georgia have died since the state’s six-week abortion ban went into effect after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Candi Miller and Amber Thurman, both Black women and mothers to young children, died after they were unable to access care for rare but typically treatable complications caused by medication abortion. We hear more from ProPublica editor Ziva Branstetter, whose publication reported on the preventable deaths of Miller and Thurman, and from reproductive justice advocate Monica Simpson. “We are in a maternal healthcare crisis in our state,” says Simpson, the executive director of SisterSong, an organization that works throughout the southern United States on behalf of communities of color, which disproportionately suffer the impacts of restrictions on abortion care.


    This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Read RFA coverage of this story in Burmese.

    Rebel forces in central Myanmar ambushed a vehicle near a junta stronghold killing 12 women on their way to work in nearby fields, military-controlled media reported on Wednesday. 

    No group claimed responsibility for the Tuesday attack in the Sagaing region but anti-junta activists there have set up groups, known as People’s Defense Forces, or PDFs, that launch ambushes and raids on military posts in their campaign against the junta that seized power in 2021.

    The women were on their way to work near Kywei Pon village when attackers opened fire with guns and a rocket launcher, the Myanmar Alin newspaper reported. Three wounded women were being treated in hospital.

    Armed people in the women’s vehicle returned fire before soldiers arrived, said one Kywei Pon resident, who declined to be identified for safety reasons.

    “Not long after the junta army arrived and took the injured away with emergency vehicles,” said the resident.

    There was no information about any casualties among the attackers.

    Many supporters of the junta, including members of militias that help the military, live in Kywei Pon so PDFs attack it often, the resident added.

    One PDF member in Sagaing, who also declined to be identified for saety reasons, told Radio Free Asia that anti-junta forces were not involved in the attack although he acknowledged he did not know details of the incident.

    The military was mounting security operations in response, the Myanmar Alin reported. Residents said the military fired artillery into Taung Kyar village nearby in the belief that PDF members were stationed there. There were no reports of casualties. 

    Residents of other villages in the vicinity fled from their homes late on Tuesday in fear of more attacks by junta forces, residents said.

    Sagaing has seen some of Myanmar’s worst violence since the military took power three years ago, with clashes and airstrikes killing hundreds. Thousands of people have been displaced by the fighting.

    Seven of Sagaing’s PDFs, which are loosely organized under a civilian shadow National Unity Government, or NUG, are under investigation by the NUG for alleged human rights violations.


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    Myanmar’s civil war has displaced 3 million people:  UN


    Translated by RFA Burmese. Edited by Kiana Duncan and Mike Firn. 


    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by By RFA Burmese.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Read a version of this story in Korean

    North Korea has executed two women who had been forcibly repatriated from China for helping other North Koreans in China escape to South Korea, a human rights organization told Radio Free Asia.  

    Charged with human trafficking, a 39-year-old woman surnamed Ri and a 43-year-old surnamed Kang were executed Aug. 31 after a public trial in the northeastern port city of Chongjin, according to Jang Se-yul, head of Gyeore’eol Unification Solidarity, based in Seoul.

    Nine other women were sentenced to life in prison on the same charges.

    All 11 women were among a group of around 500 North Koreans which China forcibly repatriated in October 2023.

    “These two women were executed because they had sent North Korean escapees from China to their enemy country, South Korea,” Jang told RFA Korean. 

    “When they first escaped, they were sold to a Chinese adult entertainment business,” he said. “When other North Korean women working there said they wanted to go to South Korea, they made arrangements to send them there.”

    This is the first report of executions since the resumption of forced repatriation of North Korean escapees in China in October. 

    Escapees in South Korea and elsewhere have urged China not to send North Koreans back, saying they would face severe punishments. China says it has an obligation to repatriate them under bilateral agreements it has with Pyongyang.

    Women at risk

    Women make up the majority of North Korean escapees in China. While there, they are often at the mercy of Chinese handlers who can sell them into servitude, either to work in prostitution, or to be the “wives” of Chinese men. 

    Since the end of the Korean War in 1953, more than 34,000 North Koreans have escaped to South Korea. Of these, around 72% were women.  

    Jang said that he learned of the trial and execution through Freedom Chosun an online media outlet run by North Korean escapees. 


    RELATED STORIES

    China repatriates N Korean escapees after Asian Games: source

    North Korean Women “Uniquely Vulnerable” to Sex Trafficking in China: Report

    Interview: They Said My Face Looked Pretty But Also Old, So $1,100 Was All I Was Worth

    ‘Some of them will be sent to … camps,’ some ‘may be executed’ 


    Residents in North Korea confirmed that the trial and execution occurred.

    A resident of the Chinese border city of Hoeryong told RFA that he witnessed the trial while visiting Chongjin, about 44 miles (70 kilometers) away. He said it started at 11 a.m. Aug. 31 and lasted an hour, and hundreds of residents and merchants at the marketplace were in attendance.

    The trial concluded when the Social Security Bureau of North Hamgyong Province decided to execute the women on the same day, and put the 11 women in a convoy to send them away, he said.

    The family of a North Korean escapee in South Korea, also confirmed (to him/her) that two people were executed in Chongjin. 

    Suzanne Scholte, chairwoman of the Virginia-based North Korea Freedom Coalition, confirmed to RFA Sept 11, that the trial and executions were discussed at a recent meeting of the organization.

    Helping escapees

    Jang said he had spoken with the younger sister of one of the executed women, who told him that she was able to escape to South Korea with her sister’s help.

    She said that her sister was caught by a Chinese broker while she was trying to escape to the South herself, Jang explained. She had been helping North Korean women escape by running a business with her Chinese husband in Longjing, Jilin province, China.

    “She cried a lot,” said Jang. “It seems like her sister had rescued a lot of North Korean escapees and sent them to South Korea.”

    Translated by Claire S. Lee. Edited by Eugene Whong and Malcolm Foster.


    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by By Jamin Anderson for RFA Korean.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Organisers of international summit hope to create pressure to reverse laws including a ban on women speaking in public

    More than 130 Afghan women have gathered in Albania at an All Afghan Women summit, in an attempt to develop a united voice representing the women and girls of Afghanistan in the fight against the ongoing assault on human rights by the Taliban.

    Some women who attempted to reach the summit from inside Afghanistan were prevented from travelling, pulled off flights in Pakistan or stopped at borders. Other women have travelled from countries including Iran, Canada, the UK and the US where they are living as refugees.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.


  • This content originally appeared on The Real News Network and was authored by The Real News Network.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • ‘Dismal’ lack of progress leaves women and girls facing litany of abuses – with no country on track to achieve equality

    More than 850 million women and girls are living in countries rated as “very poor” for gender equality, says a new report, subjecting them to a litany of potential restrictions and abuses, including forced pregnancies, childhood marriage and bans from secondary education.

    The SDG Gender Index, published today by a coalition of NGOs, found that no country has, so far, achieved the promise of gender equality envisioned by the UN’s 2030 sustainable development goals (SDGs).

    Between 2019 and 2022, nearly 40% of countries – home to more than 1 billion women and girls – stagnated or declined on gender equality.

    Continue reading…

  • This brave journalist and young women like her are bearing the brunt of the failed democratisation project: ‘Hope is fading’

    In the final days of the Afghan republic – in defiance of a looming takeover by the Taliban – the Hazara journalist Mani sang revolutionary poems in public in Kabul about women, freedom and justice. Now she is on the run, waiting for the Australian government to grant her a humanitarian visa.

    It’s three years since Australia pulled its final troops out of Afghanistan. Their presence over two decades saw the country emerge from the ashes of civil war, embrace a relative peace and a fragile democracy before falling back into the darkness of fundamentalism under the Taliban.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


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    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

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  • Seg3 afghan women public

    The Taliban government in Afghanistan is drawing renewed outrage over a new law banning women’s voices in public, forcing them to completely cover their bodies and faces out of the home, and more. This comes after the Taliban banned women from working in most fields and ended girls’ education past primary school following their takeover of the country in 2021. We speak with Sima Samar, an Afghan human rights advocate and doctor who chaired the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission from 2002 until 2019; she also briefly served as minister of women’s affairs in the interim Afghan government in 2002, after a U.S.-led coalition toppled the first Taliban government for its support of al-Qaeda. “You cannot see such a law in any other regime on this planet,” she says. “This is a crime against humanity. It is gender apartheid.”


    This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


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  • This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by Radio Free Asia.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by Radio Free Asia.

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  • This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by Radio Free Asia.

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  • This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by Radio Free Asia.

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  • Instead of inquiries and apologies, a bill of rights could give people access to justice and ensure governments are held to account

    I was first taught about human rights at primary school, in the public education system of New South Wales. I had a very good fifth year teacher, Mr Gorringe. He gave his students something valuable that had come from the United Nations in New York. It was printed on lightweight aerogram paper, which I had never seen before.

    The year was 1949, and the world was reeling from the horrors of the second world war. An Australian, Dr HV Evatt, was president of the United Nations general assembly. He had just helped create an important document, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It was a copy of this document that my teacher gave me.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • On 25 june 2024, when adopting a resolution today based on the report by Petra Bayr (Austria, SOC), PACE strongly condemned the frequent attacks perpetrated against women human rights defenders, and called for an end to impunity for perpetrators of violence.

    The resolution emphasises that women human rights defenders – which include activists, NGO members, health workers, private sector actors, researchers, lawyers, students, teachers, artists, trade unionists, bloggers and journalists – act “in a peaceful and legal way to promote and protect human rights”. The Assembly deplores that they face attacks and specific threats, both on and offline, and are often victims of intersecting forms of discrimination

    In this context, PACE called on member States to “repeal laws, policies and practices that affect women human rights defenders, in all their diversity, and unduly restrict their activities”. It also recommended guaranteeing their protection, by ensuring a secure and enabling environment in which to carry out their activities, and prosecuting the perpetrators of attacks and threats, including members of police forces.

    Finally, PACE called on national parliaments to support women human rights defenders through practical actions and the introduction of new policies.

    https://pace.coe.int/en/news/9529/ensuring-protection-of-women-human-rights-defenders

    This post was originally published on Hans Thoolen on Human Rights Defenders and their awards.

  • Myanmar’s junta has begun conscripting women into the military to help shore up troop losses despite claims to the contrary, residents said Wednesday.

    Under the People’s Military Service Law, enacted by the junta in February after junta forces have suffered battlefield defeats to rebel forces, men between the ages of 18 and 35 and women between 18 and 27 can be drafted to serve in the armed forces for two years. Married women and women with children are exempt from service.

    The announcement triggered a wave of assassinations of administrators enforcing the law and drove thousands of draft-dodgers into rebel-controlled territory and abroad.

    The military carried out two rounds of conscriptions in April and May, training about 9,000 new recruits in total. A third round of conscription began in late May, with draftees sent to their respective training depots by June 22, but the junta has said it will not begin drafting women until the fifth round.

    However, residents of Myanmar’s southwestern Ayeyarwady region told RFA Burmese that authorities in the wards and villages of Maubin, Hinthada and Pathein townships have been enlisting women for service since late last month, conducting raffles and sending legal summons to households.


    Related stories

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    “Women have been enlisted for military training since May 29, as not enough males were recruited for the No. 6 training depot in Pathein,” said one resident who, like others interviewed for this report, spoke on condition of anonymity due to security concerns. 

    “Women dormitories are urgently being constructed at the depot. In Maubin, women are being enlisted by a raffle system for the third batch of training.”

    A resident of Hinthata cited sources close to the township’s administrative officials as saying that female military personnel will be enlisted “starting this week” in some neighborhoods. 

    Reports of the new eligibility has prompted many young women to join the exodus of draft-dodgers to rebel safe zones and out of the country, sources said.

    Summons sent to households

    Meanwhile, ward and village authorities in southern Myanmar’s Tanintharyi region are also preparing to recruit women, residents told RFA, with administrative authorities in Myeik township instructing the heads of 100 households to enlist those eligible for the draft.

    In Tanintharyi’s Dawei township, legal notices were recently issued to the houses of two women, summoning them for military service, said a resident, who also declined to be named.

    “Authorities sent the letters to two women in Kyet Sar Pyin village,” he said. “However, one of the women had already left once the conscription law was announced [in February]. Many young people have already migrated to Thailand. There are no youths to be seen.”

    Recruits are marched to training as the Myanmar junta presses forward with conscription in an undated video still. (MRTV via AFP)
    Recruits are marched to training as the Myanmar junta presses forward with conscription in an undated video still. (MRTV via AFP)

    Repeated phone calls to the chairman’s office of the Central Body for Summoning People’s Military Servants and similar offices in Tanintharyi and Ayeyarwady regions, seeking clarification on whether women are being enlisted for military service, went unanswered Wednesday.

    Captain Kaung Thu Win, a former military officer who joined the Civil Disobedience Movement of civil servants boycotting the junta, told RFA that drafted women will likely be assigned office work or stationed with auxiliary units.

    “They’re unlikely to be dispatched to the frontline immediately,” he said. “There is a possibility they would have to take on security duties in the towns, but there is very little chance of that happening.”

    According to the People’s Military Service Law, the term for military service period is set at two years, but experts are required to serve for three years, and five years during a state of emergency.

    Those who have been summoned to military service and refuse face up to three years in prison and fines, while those who encourage violations of the law are subject to one year in prison and fines.

    Translated by Aung Naing. Edited by Joshua Lipes and Malcolm Foster.


    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by By RFA Burmese.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Police discovered that 19 teenage girls and women were selling surreptitious sex at a restaurant during a raid in central Laos that resulted in the arrest of the restaurant’s two owners, a police officer told Radio Free Asia.

    Some of the girls were as young as 13, according to a village official in Khammouane province’s Hinboun district, who like many other sources in this report requested anonymity for security reasons.

    “The restaurant has been shut down,” the police officer said. “For the girls and women, we just told them to go back home to their parents. We didn’t fine or punish them.”

    The restaurant owners will be charged with human trafficking, he said.

    Authorities went to the restaurant on June 7 because of its loud noise, the village official said. There are three other restaurants in the village that are also suspected of offering prostitution, he said.

    Before they were sent home to their families, the girls and women underwent a re-education session in which they were told that providing sex service is against Lao tradition and law. 

    “The purpose of today’s session is to make sure that the participants understand the guidelines and policy of the government and Party,” Soukkhaseum Sitthideth, president of the Lao Women’s Union of Khammouane province said in a video of the session seen by RFA.

    “Lao women are traditionally conservative but nowadays in a digital era, our girls and women have changed,” she said. “Our tradition and culture have been affected by the changes. A great number of our girls and women have adopted a new lifestyle.”

    Laos faces many challenges when it comes to fighting human trafficking, including not having the resources to properly fund enforcement against those who trick or force young people into illicit work.

    Additionally, the COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath have left many Laotians in desperate financial situations amid a faltering economy and rampant unemployment.

    In February, police near Vientiane raided nightclubs, restaurants and karaoke bars along a busy highway and found 47 sex workers, including four girls under 18 years old.

    In that case, police also determined that most of the girls and women were from poor, rural families, an officer said at the time.

    Translated by Max Avary. Edited by Matt Reed and Malcolm Foster.


    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by By RFA Lao.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Complaints abound of a toxic culture rife with sexual harassment and unlawful discrimination. Women shouldn’t have to fight this battle on their own

    It’s now almost seven years since the US actor Alyssa Milano tweeted: “If you’ve been sexually harassed or assaulted write ‘me too’ as a reply to this tweet.” The New York activist Tarana Burke had coined the “me too” phrase in 2006 but Milano’s tweet popularised the movement and triggered a volcanic reaction, as women across the world shared their experiences of sexual harassment and assault.

    #Metoo had a profound impact. Businesses made worthy announcements of new policies and initiatives. Politicians clamoured to establish inquiries then introduce policies and laws that would render women safer at work. Major changes were made to workplace laws in response to the Australian Human Rights Commission’s Respect at Work report. A movement to ban non disclosure agreements emerged.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • The federal government’s ambassador for gender equity in STEM is being wound up, with existing functions to be slotted into other programs. The Pathway to Diversity in STEM review, published in February, said the Women in STEM Ambassador should be replaced by a new advisory council with diverse representation across industries and social groups that…

    The post Women in STEM ambassador program phased out appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.