Friday 10 October 2008

Anyone can be a rapist,from a soldier to a begger

Besides communism,here is another cruelest protocol carried out in Russian Federation!

More Evidence of Rape by Russian Forces in Chechnya.

(Nazran, March 30, 2000) -- The arrest of a colonel who may have committed rape in Chechnya does not address a pattern of sexual assault by Russian forces in the Chechen conflict, Human Rights Watch said today. On March 29, the chief of the general staff of the Russian armed forces, Col. Gen. Anatoly Kvashnin, announced that a Russian tank commander had been arrested for killing a woman who had evidently been raped before she died.

Human Rights Watch today released fresh evidence of two additional cases of rape that it has documented through witness testimony. Human Rights Watch has previously documented rape in other Chechen towns and villages, including Shali and Alkhan-Yurt. (See, Rape Allegations Surface in Chechnya, HRW Release January 20, 2000.)

"It would certainly be a step in the right direction if the Russian government actually prosecuted a serviceman for rape. But a single prosecution wouldn't begin to address the problem. There have been hundreds of war crimes, including summary executions and rapes, committed by Russian soldiers in Chechnya." Holly Cartner, executive director of the Europe and Central Asia division of Human Rights Watch.

The Geneva Conventions define rape as a war crime. "It would certainly be a step in the right direction if the Russian government actually prosecuted a serviceman for rape," said Holly Cartner, executive director of the Europe and Central Asia division of Human Rights Watch.

"But a single prosecution wouldn't begin to address the problem. There have been hundreds of war crimes, including summary executions and rapes, committed by Russian soldiers in Chechnya."

According to two eyewitnesses interviewed by Human Rights Watch, Heda Kungayeva, 18, was raped and murdered by Russian forces sometime between midnight on March 26-27 and the evening of March 28, in the village of Tangi Chu south of Grozny.

According to "A.B." (not the witness's real initials), Kungayeva was at home with her father and three siblings on the night of March 26. Her siblings told A.B.'s relatives that when soldiers came near their home, Kungayeva called out to her father, warning him of the arrival of the Russian forces and telling him to leave the house to avoid arbitrary detention. Her father departed, leaving Kungayeva in the house with her siblings.

A.B. reported that when her father returned, the other children informed him that the Russian soldiers had come to the house, looked at all the children, and said, "We'd better take the pretty woman."

The Russian soldiers then took Kungayeva away. "B.D." (not the witness's true initials) told Human Rights Watch that on the night of March 26-27, B.D. heard screaming and shooting from the Kungayevs' house. B.D. ran to the Kungayevs' house just after midnight.

Mr. Kungayev told B.D. that his 18-year-old daughter had just been taken away by Russian contract soldiers in an armored personnel carrier (APC). B.D. reported to Human Rights Watch that the sound of the APC pulling away from the village was still audible.

Villagers followed the APC to the edge of Tangi Chu, and watched it return to the Russian military positions in the mountains surrounding the village. On March 27, a group of villagers obtained permission from local Russian forces to travel to Urus-Martan, seven kilometers from Tangi Chu, to search for Kungayeva.

They believed that she might have been taken to one of two detention facilities run by Russian forces in that town. A.B. and B.D. both reported to Human Rights Watch that on March 28, a Russian commander in Urus Martan told the group of villagers that Kungayeva was dead, and had been raped by drunken men.

He promised to find and punish the perpetrators, and to return the corpse. The witnesses told Human Rights Watch that Kungayeva's body was returned on the evening of March 28. They said that her body was badly disfigured.

Human Rights Watch has collected evidence of another rape, earlier this year, at the Kavkaz military checkpoint near the border with Ingushetia.

Alisa (not her real name) reported to Human Rights Watch that in the last week of January, while traveling by bus with Maya (not her real name) from Chechnya to Ingushetia, the bus was stopped at the Kavkaz Russian military checkpoint, manned by Russian contract soldiers.

Ostensibly because the photograph of Alisa in her passport no longer resembled her current appearance, the soldiers detained her, together with Maya. The bus driver pleaded with the soldiers not to detain the women, but the soldiers responded that the women would be sent back to their point of origin. The driver left. Alisa and Maya were taken to separate underground shelters near the checkpoint. In Alisa's shelter were four Russian soldiers who accused her of being a sniper.

They gave her a gun and told her to dismantle it, put it back together, and then shoot. Alisa told Human Rights Watch that she had never held a gun and did not know how to handle one. One of the soldiers hit her with either his wrist or fist, and Alisa fell to the floor. Two other soldiers began kicking her. The soldiers told Alisa, "You will never have children again." Then the soldiers raped her. Some time later, Maya was brought into the underground shelter where Alisa was being held.

According to Alisa, Maya was covered in blood and her mouth was cut. Alisa told Human Rights Watch that Maya said she had also been raped. Alisa told Human Rights Watch that she believes Chechen fighters paid the Russian forces for their release. She spent three weeks in bed recovering from the abuse.

Rape is considered a war crime under Protocol II additional to the Geneva Conventions, which prohibits it in its Article Four (Fundamental Guarantees), "at any time, and in any place whatsoever outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment, rape, enforced prostitution, and any form of indecent assault."

source:http://www.anusha.com/russrape.htm

Wednesday 17 September 2008

The world’s strangest rape cases

The world’s oldest rape victim

It could be the 98-year-old woman at an Australian nursing home. As reported by ABC TV in February 2006, the woman suffering from dementia was raped three times in a nursing home in Victoria State by a staff members. In addition, he also allegedly abused other residents.

The world’s oldest person on whom rape was attempted

In June 2006, the BBC reported that Paul Blackwood broke into a 101-year-old woman’s house in West Midlands, United Kingdom, in November 2005 and attempted to rape her.


The world’s strangest rape case (I)

In February 2007, The Oregonian reported that Georgie Audean Buoy, an 82-year-old woman, and described as a “kind old church volunteer who enjoys gardening”, has been sentenced to 3 years jail for having a sexual relationship with an 11-year-old boy in The Dalles, Oregon, USA. Even residents of the town where it happened are still having a hard time believing it. She was apparently a foster mother to the boy and was arrested a year ago in the town with a population of 12,000. The DA felt compelled to offer a copy of her taped confession to quell the protests of the many doubters. Buoy has been a member of the local church for more than 20 years, greeted parishioners on Sundays and welcomed those in need to stay at her house. The pastor summed it up: “This is one of those things that’s unexplainable to us”.

The world’s strangest rape case (II)

Apparently, in November 2004, sobkor.ru reported that a cat named Timka raped a woman in Russia - she was hospitalised with “severe injuries to her genitals”. How did it happen? Well, 2 women, Vera and Svetlana wanted to er… “experience sexual pleasure via intimate contact with a cat.” Yep, zoophilia, bestiality, whatever you call it was on the cards. Can’t really blame the cat, can you?

Full story after the jump.

When the ambulance arrived at the woman’s house, Svetlana was lying on the sofa wearing only a jumper, and had streaks of blood on her legs. Her friend Vera could not explain what had happened. Initially doctors thought that a maniac had attacked Svetlana, but imagine their shock, when she confessed her indescretions after her recovery.

source:
http://worldrec.info/2007/03/25/the-worlds-strangest-rape-cases

Monday 23 June 2008

Rape Victim ordered 200 lashes and prison by Saudi judges


What can be called a travesty of judiciary, the Saudi Arabia's Higher Judicial Council has actually sentenced a rape victim to receive 200 lashes and prison while the perpetrators of humanity, most heinous crime were allowed to walk free.

The 19-year-old Shiite woman who was raped by six armed men was originally sentenced to receive 90 lashes for traveling in the car of an unrelated male at the time of the rape. However after the woman had the temerity of not unquestioningly submitting herself to be tortured as punishment of being raped, the judges on Saudi Arabia's Higher Judicial Council more than doubled her punishment for attempting to influence the judiciary through the media.

Saturday 21 June 2008

Muslim leader blames women for sex attacks

(October 25, 2006)

Women are abandoned "meat" and temptations from Satan. All this justifies Sharia provisions about veiling, of course, and thus is part of the overall imperative to impose Sharia on the rest of us.

Taj Din al-Hilali has a history of outrageous statements.

By Richard Kerbaj in The Australian, with thanks to David:

THE nation's most senior Muslim cleric has blamed immodestly dressed women who don't wear Islamic headdress for being preyed on by men and likened them to abandoned "meat" that attracts voracious animals.

In a Ramadan sermon that has outraged Muslim women leaders, Sydney-based Sheik Taj Din al-Hilali also alluded to the infamous Sydney gang rapes, suggesting the attackers were not entirely to blame.

While not specifically referring to the rapes, brutal attacks on four women for which a group of young Lebanese men received long jail sentences, Sheik Hilali said there were women who "sway suggestively" and wore make-up and immodest dress ... "and then you get a judge without mercy (rahma) and gives you 65 years".

"But the problem, but the problem all began with who?" he asked....

In the religious address on adultery to about 500 worshippers in Sydney last month, Sheik Hilali said: "If you take out uncovered meat and place it outside on the street, or in the garden or in the park, or in the backyard without a cover, and the cats come and eat it ... whose fault is it, the cats or the uncovered meat?

"The uncovered meat is the problem."

The sheik then said: "If she was in her room, in her home, in her hijab, no problem would have occurred."

He said women were "weapons" used by "Satan" to control men.

"It is said in the state of zina (adultery), the responsibility falls 90 per cent of the time on the woman. Why? Because she possesses the weapon of enticement (igraa)."

source:http://www.jihadwatch.org/dhimmiwatch/archives/013729.php

concernedheart says:

Women are abandoned "meat" and temptations from Satan????

Is this statement made by another SATAN?

Will  you ever call your mother as an abandoned meat?

Stop being narrow minded & stop blaming women's attire!

Why don't you blame the men who is not being religious?I'm sure no religion will ever teach a man to commit such a morally repugnant behavior(to rape or brutalize)!
A victim can never be blamed for the detrimental act the merciless animal(s).

This is not an issue which concerns only muslims,its a worldwide issue, so let us all be united and fight over this horrendous act!


Thursday 19 June 2008

Child Abuse & Incest


Dear readers,
While reading thru some articles on sexual abuse,i came across this useful information and would to share it with you all.
The information below is basically related to children who have been sexually abused.

If at all any of the signs or symptoms present in your child's behaviour,please be more attentive and make a further move towards identifying your child's problem.

Hopefully we can protect more kids from getting abused and we shall create a secured environment for their childhood.

Forgetting Childhood Rape/Abuse

It is not rare for people to say they don't remember an abuse experience that actually happened.

It is not rare for people to report that there were times when they didn't remember an abuse experience that they remember now.

When people say these things, we try to describe and explain what they are reporting with psychological constructs:


"forgetting"
"amnesia"
"repression"
"dissociation"


Three crucial points:

1. "Amnesia" is a descriptive construct. It directs our attention to the condition of being unable to remember experiences like childhood sexual abuse.

2. "Repression" and "dissociation" are explanatory constructs. They point to hypothesized psychological mechanisms that may be responsible for the condition of amnesia.

3. All constructs exist on a continuum from descriptive to explanatory. When it comes to empirical evidence of traumatic and recovered memories, dissociation is more descriptive of more empirical evidence than is repression.

It is not rare for people to say that at some point they came to remember a past abuse experience which they had not previously remembered.


Signs of Sexual Abuse

Because most children cannot or do not tell about being sexually abused, it is up to concerned adults to recognize signs of abuse. Physical evidence of abuse is rare. Therefore, we must look for behavior signs. Unfortunately, there is no one behavior alone that definitely determines a child has been sexually abused.

The following are general behavior changes that may occur in children who have been sexually abused:

Physical complaints:

  • Fear or dislike of certain people or places

  • Sleep disturbances

  • Headaches/Migraines (nausea)

  • School problems

  • Withdrawal from family, friends, or usual activities

  • Excessive bathing or poor hygiene

  • Return to younger, more babyish behavior

  • Depression

  • Anxiety (social anxiety)

  • Discipline problems

  • Running away

  • Eating disorders

  • Passive or overly pleasing behavior

  • Delinquent acts

  • Low self-esteem

  • Self-destructive behavior

  • Hostility or aggression

  • Drug or alcohol problems

  • Sexual activity or pregnancy at an early age

  • Suicide attempts

  • Additional Symptoms

Children who have been sexually abused frequently have more specific symptoms:

  • Copying adult sexual behavior

  • Persistent sexual play with other children, themselves, toys or pets

  • Displaying sexual knowledge, through language or behavior, that is beyond what is normal for their age

  • Unexplained pain, swelling, bleeding or irritation of the mouth, genital or anal area; urinary infections; sexually transmitted diseases

  • Hints, indirect comments or statements about the abuse


The Silent Problem

Often children do not tell anyone about sexual abuse because they:

  • are too young to put what has happened into words

  • were threatened or bribed by the abuser to keep the abuse a secret

  • feel confused by the attention and feelings accompanying the abuse

  • are afraid no one will believe them

  • blame themselves or believe the abuse is punishment for being "bad"

  • feel too ashamed or embarrassed to tell

  • worry about getting into trouble or getting a loved one into trouble

Silence enables sexual abuse to continue. Silence protects sexual offenders and hurts children who are being abused. Sexual abuse is an extremely difficult and damaging experience. Today there are many resources to help victims and their families. Children no longer need to suffer in silence.


Feelings
Children who have been sexually abused feel many different (and often overwhelming) emotions, including:


Fear...
of the abuser
of causing trouble
of losing adults important to them
of being taken away from home
of being "different"


Anger...
at the abuser
at other adults around them who did not protect them
at themselves (feeling as if they caused trouble)


Isolation...
because "something is wrong with me"
because they feel alone in their experience
because they have trouble talking about the abuse


Sadness...
about having something taken from them
about losing a part of themselves
about growing up too fast
about being betrayed by someone they trusted


Guilt...
for not being able to stop the abuse
for believing they "consented" to the abuse
for "telling"--if they told
for keeping the secret--if they did not tell


Shame...
about being involved in the experience
about their bodies' response to the abuse


Confusion...
because they may still love the abuser
because their feelings change all the time


Protecting Children,

As concerned adults, we want to protect children from sexual abuse, but we can't always be there to do that. We can, however, teach children about sexual abuse in order to increase their awareness and coping skills. Without frightening children, we can provide them with appropriate safety information and support at every stage of their development.


We can provide personal safety information to children in a matter- of-fact way, with other routine safety discussions about fire, water, health, etc. Although even the best educated child cannot always avoid sexual abuse, children who are well prepared will be more likely to tell you if abuse has occurred. This is a child's best defense. In order to protect children, teach them:

  • to feel good about themselves and know they are loved, valued and deserve to be safe

  • the difference between safe and unsafe touches

  • the proper names for all body parts, so they will be able to communicate clearly

  • that safety rules apply to all adults, not just strangers

  • that their bodies belong to them and nobody has the right to touch them or hurt them

  • that they can say "no" to requests that make them feel uncomfortable--even from a close relative or family friend

  • to report to you if any adult asks them to keep a secret

  • that some adults have problems

  • that they can rely on you to believe and protect them if they tell you about abuse

  • that they are not bad or to blame for sexual abuse

  • to tell a trusted adult about abuse even if they are afraid of what may happen

source:http://www.voicesofstrength.org/childabuse.htm