- The eight-year-old Saudi girl who was previously denied a divorce has finally been granted one.
- Doctors are worried about the levels of anorexia nervosa among teenage girls in the Emirates.
- Dr. Fahmida Mirza, Pakistan’s first female speaker of the national assembly, asks for help for Pakistan.
- Women’s employment in Turkey is rising despite the economy.
- The Iraqi Minister of Human Rights says her department is working to improve the situation of women in Iraq.
- CITYarts will honor Shaikha Manal in recognition for her patronage to the arts.
- The Kurdish Globe describes the place of mothers in Kurdish society.
- Increasingly popular sports clubs and gyms for women in Saudi Arabia face closures. More from Arab News and the BBC.
- An Emirati couple who severely abused their nine-year-old daughter have been sentenced to 10 years in prison.
- A look at the journey behind Football Under Cover.
- Saudi Arabia is considering allowing women to vote in municipal elections; they would still be barred from running for office.
- Reuters highlights Afghan Shi’a women’s views on the law that has sparked international attention. President Karzai has vowed to change said law.
- The Winnipeg Free Press says that the decline of Muslim society is connected with the decline of women’s rights.
- Billboards featuring women appear again in Peshawar, Pakistan.
- The “N7nu” project in Saudi Arabia discusses the right of women to drive.
- On the religious/secular divide and its impact on Turkish women’s rights.
- The LA Times discusses domestic violence in the Muslim community through the Aasiya lens.
- Ayesha Siddiqui is the first Pakistani Muslim female student to be the New York City College of Technology valedictorian this year.
- A tragic narrative of the women in an Afghan literary group.
- Kinky business makes big money in Pakistan. Link is safe for work.
- Five years after the 2004 family code reform in Morocco, writers weigh in on the reforms’ effects.
- In Yanbu, Saudi Arabia, a woman will open the first bakery solely owned and operated by women.
- Radio Free Europe discusses Roxana Saberi’s future. A filmmaker hears others’ memories of her before her arrest.
- The New York Times reviews Dragon Fighter, the story of one Uighur Muslim woman’s fight for peace with China.
- Bitch magazine wonders whether a recent priest, who has announced that she is both Christian and Muslim (and been defrocked for it), is receiving the same treatment that her white male counterparts are.
- Jamerican Muslimah gives her thoughts on Dalia Mogahed’s appointment to the Obama administration’s faith council.
- Iranian women form a council to present the demands of women within Iran through the pivotal period and space of the presidential election.
- On rape, honor killing, and the prison system in Iraq. More from a UN report.
- Nuseiba takes Mona El Tahawy to task for a recent article about Afghan women.
- AltMuslim examines the war on girls’ schooling in Pakistan.
- After thieves rob a jewelry store using hijabs as a disguise, Muslim women are banned from wearing headscarves in the store. The twist: the store owners are Muslims.
- Faith ponders on spousal support in the African American Muslim community.
- Politicans in Denmark unite against forced marriages and imams who conduct them.
- Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat writes about women’s rights as human rights in the UN Chronicle.
- And speaking of the UN, Nuseiba outlines why CEDAW doesn’t work.
- The National gives opposing views on the recent Egyptian campaign to de-niqab government workers.
- Female candidates have swept the election, winning all seats in Indonesia’s Borneo province of West Kalimantan.
- Ayman Udas, a rising Pakistani singer, has been murdered. May Allah give her peace and justice.
- A court halved the sentence of a man convicted of killing his wife.
- Three women have committed suicide in Kurdistan. May Allah give them peace.
- AltMuslimah asks whether sexual taboos contribute to sex trafficking.
- The Daily Beast airs a perfectly eye-rolling article about temporary marriage.
- The Celebrating Muslim Motherhood Carnival is now up! Take a look.
- Iranian journalist and women’s rights worker Narges Mohammadi has won the international Alexander Langer award for 2009.
- Muslim women in the northern Italian province of Bergamo now have private access to a local swimming pool. Via Islam in Europe.
UPDATED: Amnesty International reports that Delara Darabi has been executed. My Allah give her peace and justice.