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Friday Links — December 25, 2009


Posted by fatemeh on 25 Dec 2009 / 0 Comment
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  • Fifteen-year-old Fahema Abdillahi has been missing for over a week. May Allah keep her.
  • Afghan women write their stories for the Afghan Women’s Writing Project.
  • Iran plans on holding an International Congress on Successful Women Who Wear Hijab.
  • A French parliamentarian said he would file legislation to bar Muslim women from wearing veils that hide their faces in public.
  • Egypt’s Attorney General Abdel Maguid Mahmoud revealed that there were an estimated 9,351 under-age marriages in the country.
  • The Saudi Writer’s Conference focuses on women and literature.

  • Violence against women is not a tenet of Islam.
  • According to the National, victims of domestic violence and abuse in the Emirates may see justice carried out more swiftly after the courts and women’s rights campaigners signed a new agreement.
  • An article promoting polyandry for women published in an independent Egyptian newspaper has caused a stir.
  • British laws against female genital cutting aren’t producing any results.
  • A woman was elected to the board of the Abu Dhabi Chamber of Commerce and Industry on her first attempt.
  • South Asian women from all social arenas met in Washington, D.C., to fight against AIDS.
  • Today’s Zaman explores the hijab ban in Turkey.
  • A leading Cairo university will appeal a court decision allowing female students to don the full face veil on campus dormitories.
  • Malaysia’s High Court fixed January 25th, 2010 as the day when a decision will be made about the book by Sisters in Islam that has been banned.
  • On the need for more female bankers in predominantly Muslim countries.
  • Iran’s Karate Federation banned a specific style of karate because female athletes were forced to remove their headscarves to be allowed to compete in Germany.
  • A 90-year-old Emirati woman will compete in the region’s Qur’an memorization competition.
  • Only 60 of the 890 eligible women cast their votes for the Eastern Province chamber of commerce in Jeddah on a day that was reserved exclusively for women voters.
  • The Telegraph profiles Nora Naraghi, an Iranian motor cross champion.
  • A couple in Ajman, U.A.E., who bought a young Iraqi girl from her parents and prostituted her were each jailed for three years yesterday. Six years total? Really?
  • Access to cheap, ready-baked bread has helped liberate Egyptian women from the kitchen, allowing them to enter the workforce or spend more time with their children.
  • Somayeh Rashidi, an Iranian women’s rights activist, has been arrested.
  • Poorna Shetty discusses honor killings in the wake of Tulay Goren’s murder.
  • A new law will guarantee that any groom who discovers that his bride is not actually a virgin will be eligible for a refund from Egypt’s Consumer Protection Agency. WTF.
  • Women’s political participation in Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia is to be enhanced under a new United Nations-backed project launched for an innovative website to provide them access to information, the exchange of experiences, ideas and good practices.
  • Shad, a 30-year-old Kurdish woman from Iraq, has immigrated to the United States in hopes she can live without fear for the first time in her life.
  • Her Royal Highness Princess Basma Bint Talal highlighted the role of Jordanian women.
  • Al Arabiya interviews author and activist Siba Shakib.
  • AltMuslimah investigates the obsession with fair skin.
  • In Pakistan, P@sh@ has launched Take Back the Tech, a collaborative campaign to promote technology to end violence against women.
  • Uzbekistani Umid Ahmedova is facing trumped-up charges from the state.
  • Mahboubeh Abbasgholizadeh has been released.

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