The Most Dangerous Places For Women
source: http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2011/06/201161582525243992.html
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- wanderingmissy
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Survey says war-torn nation worst place for women while Congo, which has "horrific levels of rape", is ranked second.
Afghanistan has been ranked as the world's most dangerous country for women, with Congo taking a close second position, a Thomson Reuters Foundation expert poll has said.
Violence, dismal healthcare and brutal poverty afflicts women in Afghanistan, while in Congo there are horrific levels of rape, the survey conducted by TrustLaw, an arm of Thomson Reuters, said on Wednesday.
Pakistan, India and Somalia ranked third, fourth and fifth respectively in the global survey of perceptions of threats ranging from domestic abuse and economic discrimination to female foeticide, genital mutilation and acid attacks.
"Ongoing conflict, NATO airstrikes and cultural practices combined make Afghanistan a very dangerous place for women," Antonella Notari, head of women change makers, a group that supports women social entrepreneurs around the world, said.
The survey asked 213 gender experts from five continents to rank countries by overall perceptions of danger as well as by six risks. The risks were health threats, sexual violence, non-sexual violence, cultural or religious factors, lack of access to resources and trafficking.
Some experts said the poll showed that subtle dangers such as discrimination that don't grab headlines are sometimes just as significant risks for women as bombs, bullets, stonings and systematic rape in conflict zones.
"I think you have to look at all the dangers to women, all the risks women and girls face," Elisabeth Roesch, who works on gender-based violence for the International Rescue Committee in Washington, said.
"If a woman can't access healthcare because her healthcare isn't prioritised, that can be a very dangerous situation as well."
Female rights
Afghanistan emerged as the most dangerous country for women overall and worst in three of the six risk categories: health, non-sexual violence and lack of access to economic resources.
Respondents cited sky-high maternal mortality rates, limited access to doctors and a near total lack of economic rights.
Afghan women have a one in 11 chance of dying in childbirth, according to UNICEF.
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), still reeling from a 1998-2003 war and accompanying humanitarian disaster that killed 5.4m people, came second mainly due to staggering levels of sexual violence in the lawless east.
More than 400,000 women are raped in the country each year, according to a recent study by US researchers. The United Nations has called Congo the rape capital of the world.
"Statistics from DRC are very revealing on this: ongoing war, use of rape as a weapon, recruitment of females as soldiers who are also used as sex slaves," Clementina Cantoni, a Pakistan-based aid worker with ECHO, the European Commission's humanitarian aid department, said.
"The fact that the government is corrupt and that female rights are very low on the agenda means that there is little or no recourse to justice."
Rights activists say militia groups and soldiers target all ages, including girls as young as three and elderly women. They are gang-raped, raped with bayonets and have guns shot into their vaginas.
Pakistan ranked third largely on the basis of cultural, tribal and religious practices harmful to women. These include acid attacks, child and forced marriage and punishment or retribution by stoning or other physical abuse.
"Pakistan has some of the highest rates of dowry murder, so-called honour killings and early marriage," Divya Bajpai, reproductive health advisor at the International HIV/AIDS Alliance, said.
Some 1,000 women and girls die in honour killings annually, according to Pakistan's Human Rights Commission.
Trafficking of women
India ranked fourth primarily due to female foeticide, infanticide and human trafficking.
In 2009, India's then-Home Secretary Madhukar Gupta estimated that 100m people, mostly women and girls, were involved in trafficking in India that year.
"The practice is common but lucrative so it goes untouched by government and police," Cristi Hegranes, founder of the Global Press institute, which trains women in developing countries to be journalists, said.
India's Central Bureau of Investigation estimated that in 2009 about 90 per cent of trafficking took place within the country and that there were some 3m prostitutes, of which about 40 per cent were children.
In addition to sex slavery, other forms of trafficking include forced labour and forced marriage, according to a US state department report on trafficking in 2010. The report also found slow progress in criminal prosecutions of traffickers.
Up to 50m girls are thought to be "missing" over the past century due to female infanticide and foeticide, the UN Population Fund said.
Some experts said the world's largest democracy was relatively forthcoming about describing its problems, possibly casting it in a darker light than if other countries were equally transparent about trafficking.
Somalia ranked fifth due to a catalogue of dangers including high maternal mortality, rape and female genital mutilation, along with limited access to education, healthcare and economic resources.
"I'm completely surprised because I thought Somalia would be first on the list, not fifth," Maryan Qasim, the Somali women's minister said.
"The most dangerous thing a woman in Somalia can do is to become pregnant. When a woman becomes pregnant her life is 50-50 because there is no antenatal care at all. There are no hospitals, no healthcare, no nothing.
"Add to that the rape cases that happen on a daily basis, the female genital mutilation that is being done to every single girl in Somalia. Add to that the famine and the drought. Add to that the fighting (which means) you can die any minute, any day."
Poll respondents included aid professionals, academics, health workers, policymakers, journalists and development specialists.
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2011/06/201161582525243992.html
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- recommended by:
- Vierotchka
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2helenahandbasket
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What do these countries have in common?
- 11 months ago
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2helenahandbasket
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wanderingmissy
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2helenahandbasket:
They are the worst places in the world for women to live. i.e domestic violence, sex trafficking, sexual assault, sky high maternal mortality rates, infanticide, foeticide, honor killings, genital mutiliation. etc.
- 11 months ago
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wanderingmissy
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treewolf39
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2helenahandbasket:
Shitty corrupt government and destabilization by American intervention.
- 11 months ago
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treewolf39
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2helenahandbasket
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treewolf39:
These countries were shitholes with more regard for their animals than their women long before America existed. They are all Muslim countries. THAT'S what they have in common. Women have been second class citizens or less in these countries since their misogynist leader came to be.
- 11 months ago
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2helenahandbasket
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treewolf39
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2helenahandbasket:
Is the Congo Muslim? I know that these countries have not always been Muslim. Women were not abused in Afghanistan until the 90s. America created a vacuum. And what the fuck? We have been occupying Afghanistan for almost 10 years, you think we could have helped a bit fucking more!!!!!!!
- 11 months ago
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treewolf39
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wanderingmissy
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treewolf39:
Also, India is predominantly Hindu.
- 11 months ago
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wanderingmissy
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wanderingmissy
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wanderingmissy:
I agree though, Islamic culture and dictators have been cruel to women. We can't forget the role America has played in Afghanistan and Iraq though. We have only set them back further.
- 11 months ago
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wanderingmissy
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treewolf39
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wanderingmissy:
I wish I knew Indian history. I think the cast system is one of the most evil things on the planet.
- 11 months ago
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treewolf39
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2helenahandbasket
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treewolf39:
Well, we HAVE helped rout the Taliban. Women can now seek a doctor if they need one. Girls CAN go to school now in some areas. The problem is NOT America, it's Muslim fanatics who have taken over the cities and kill folks who don't go by their ridiculous rules.
- 11 months ago
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2helenahandbasket
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treewolf39
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2helenahandbasket:
It is a bit better and you are damned right fanatics in general suck. Religious fanatics are the worst. I hear we are in talks with the Taliban.
- 11 months ago
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treewolf39
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14_Crusaders
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been down that road..no comment sorry..
- 11 months ago
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14_Crusaders
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Incredulous
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Great post, and meanwhile, we have some woman on the Metro having a meltdown because the conductor dared to ask her to be a bit more considerate of the other passengers....this report kind of puts our ridiculousness in perspective.
- 11 months ago
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Incredulous
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PIANORAMA
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Incredulous:
The incident you refer to is a sad commentary on the deterioration of the social graces in our country. A lot of these individuals who evidently think no one else counts won't even move aside to share a sidewalk. It's disheartening.
- 11 months ago
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PIANORAMA
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Imzadi
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Incredulous:
Indeed. Thank you for putting that all in perspective.
- 11 months ago
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Imzadi
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wanderingmissy
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Incredulous:
Great comparison, it really highlights our confusion with freedom and sense of entitlement.
- 11 months ago
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wanderingmissy
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treewolf39
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Much needed post, voted up! I was not aware of this form of killing "foeticide"
http://www.iheu.org/female-foeticide-in-indiaFemale Foeticide in India
By Indu Grewal and J. KishoreIntroduction
Some of the worst gender ratios, indicating gross violation of women’s rights, are found in South and East Asian countries such as India and China. The determination of the sex of the foetus by ultrasound scanning, amniocentesis, and in vitro fertilization has aggravated this situation. No moral or ethical principle supports such a procedure for gender identification. The situation is further worsened by a lack of awareness of women’s rights and by the indifferent attitude of governments and medical professionals. In India, the available legislation for prevention of sex determination needs strict implementation, alongside the launching of programmes aimed at altering attitudes, including those prevalent in the medical profession.
Background
The killing of women exists in various forms in societies the world over. However, Indian society displays some unique and particularly brutal versions, such as dowry deaths and sati. Female foeticide is an extreme manifestation of violence against women. Female foetuses are selectively aborted after pre-natal sex determination, thus avoiding the birth of girls. As a result of selective abortion, between 35 and 40 million girls and women are missing from the Indian population. In some parts of the country, the sex ratio of girls to boys has dropped to less than 800:1,000. The United Nations has expressed serious concern about the situation.
The sex ratio has altered consistently in favour of boys since the beginning of the 20th century (see Table), and the effect has been most pronounced in the states of Punjab, Haryana and Delhi. It was in these states that private foetal sex determination clinics were first established and the practice of selective abortion became popular from the late 1970s. Worryingly, the trend is far stronger in urban rather than rural areas, and among literate rather than illiterate women, exploding the myth that growing affluence and spread of basic education alone will result in the erosion of gender bias.
- 11 months ago
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treewolf39
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wanderingmissy
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treewolf39:
Thanks for the post treewolf. A disturbing subject we know too little about.
- 11 months ago
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wanderingmissy
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treewolf39
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wanderingmissy:
It made me sick; in the stomach and in the heart. Education is our weapon against these atrocities.
- 11 months ago
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treewolf39
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wanderingmissy
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treewolf39:
I agree, education has been proven time and time again as the most effective way of fighting oppression.
- 11 months ago
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wanderingmissy
