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Friday Links — January 15, 2009


Posted by fatemeh on 15 Jan 2010 / 0 Comment
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  • After the Afghan parliament rejected several of his cabinet member appointments, Hamid Karzai submits new nominees, three of which are women. But don’t get excited yet: the rejected nominees include a woman, so it’s unclear whether parliament doesn’t want any women, or just one in particular.
  • One of Turkey’s most prominent human rights lawyers reveals a secret about her family that may help begin to heal the Turkish-Armenian divide.
  • Nadia Hassan speaks out about her invasive airport search last week in Chicago.
  • Atlanta gets its first Muslim sorority.
  • Malaysia announces that it has begun an allocation for Muslim women who are undergoing divorce and have not been paid maintenance. More here.
  • Kuwait is getting their own ladies-only taxi service! Meanwhile, a women’s group in Egypt is against the same idea.
  • Grazia gets it, sort of: why fining women for wearing niqabs is just as bad as outright banning them.
  • Common Ground News examines the role of female religious guides (murshidat or mourchidat).
  • The BBC follows a female driving instructor–who wears a niqab.  More here.
  • The Independent examines the “face behind the veil.” *eyeroll*
  • USA Today looks at France’s attempt to ban the niqab. So does Islam Online.
  • Speaking of burqa bans, here’s another reason it’s stupid to ban them in Denmark: only three women in Denmark wear the burqa.
  • AltMuslimah examines the Hui Muslim practice of female spiritual leaders (nu ahong).
  • A first-of-its-kind survey by the Malay Muslim Women’s Organization has revealed what could be a worrying trend of early remarriages among Malay divorcees.
  • A student organizes a charity run that will benefit the Jordan River Project, a charity that helps Jordanian women and children.
  • Newsweek interviews the widow of the Jordanian man who blew himself up in Afghanistan, and looks at the role of women in Al Qaeda.
  • People in the Indonesian government believe that banning “gossip programs” will decrease the divorce rate. Riiiiight.
  • The Feminist School gives us a list of all of the female activists arrested in Iran before and during Ashura, and many of them have been denied visitors.
  • Sex education changes attitudes in Muslim communities in Sweden. Via Islam in Europe.
  • The rate of divorce in Oman has fallen as a result of men marrying second wives without divorcing their first to “keep families together.”
  • How Iranian women may benefit from the country’s current political crisis.
  • The Saudi Gazette reports that a conference at the University of Manchester recently covered female Arab writers in the diaspora.
  • Two Shariah officers in Indonesia have been arrested on charges of raping a female detainee. May Allah give her justice and peace. More here.
  • Iranian television presenter Shahin Mahinfar is refusing to give in to government pressure to deny claims that her son was killed by security forces.
  • Pakistani-Canadian Tahmena Bokhari was crowned Miss Pakistan 2010 this week in Toronto. More here.
  • A domestic worker was thrown out of her employer’s third-story home. By her employer. May Allah give this woman justice.
  • Global Voices Online hosts female bloggers in Yemen as part of a project to increase blogging worldwide.
  • Hürriyet Daily News discusses the language of women in the Kurdish movement.
  • Bachelors, students and working women are facing residential problems due to the acute shortage of accommodation facilities in the Pakistani twin cities of federal capital Islamabad and the adjacent Rawalpindi.
  • The horrifically regular story of sex trafficking in the Emirates.
  • Thirty members of Iran’s “Mourning Mothers” have been arrested, after they were attacked during an earlier gathering.
  • Muslim women in Singapore participate in the Empowered Muslim Women Run 2010. Via Hijabtrendz.
  • A local official of Italy’s anti-immigrant Northern League accused a Muslim cleaning woman of being a security threat. Via Islam in Europe.
  • A lack of adequate childcare centers is costing Emirati women and their country. More here.
  • Iraqi widows speak out against female suicide bombers.
  • An Emirati man spreads the message about spending more time with one’s wives and children.
  • TwoCircles profiles the Muslim women of Malabar.
  • On maternal mortality in rural Indonesia.

As always, if we’ve missed any news stories about Muslim women, please feel free to post them in the comments!

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