Spt yg gua selalu bilang, makin kuat Islamnya, makin gila sex dan
making doyan merkosa orang2 Islam tsb. Jg makin doyan jadi pedophile.
=========
Kuat sex???
elu itu rupanya Goyim perempuan yang kehausan SEX
kartu mati.



________________________________
 From: itemabu2 <itema...@gmail.com>
To: proletar <proletar@yahoogroups.com> 
Sent: Monday, February 18, 2013 8:40 PM
Subject: [proletar] The ‘Epidemic’ of Sexual Harassment—and Rape—in Morsi’s 
Egypt
 
Spt yg gua selalu bilang, makin kuat Islamnya, makin gila sex dan
making doyan merkosa orang2 Islam tsb. Jg makin doyan jadi pedophile.


http://frontpagemag.com/2013/raymond-ibrahim/the-epidemic-of-sexual-harassment-and-rape-in-egypt/


The ‘Epidemic’ of Sexual Harassment—and Rape—in Morsi’s Egypt
February 15, 2013 By Raymond Ibrahim

Since the “Arab Spring” came to Egypt and the Muslim Brotherhood
assumed power, sexual harassment, abuse, and rape of women has
skyrocketed.  This graph, which shows an enormous jump in sexual
harassment beginning around January 2011, when the Tahrir revolts
began, certainly demonstrates as much. Its findings are supported by
any number of reports appearing in both Arabic and Western media, and
from both Egyptian and foreign women.

Hundreds of Egyptian women recently took to the streets of Tahrir
Square to protest the nonstop harassment they must endure whenever
they emerge from their homes and onto the streets.  They held slogans
like “Silence is unacceptable, my anger will be heard,” and “A safe
square for all; Down with sexual harassment.” “Marchers also shouted
chants against President Mohamed Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood
group from which he hails,” wrote Al Ahram Online

The response?  More sexual harassment and rapes.

One woman recently appeared on Egyptian TV recounting her horrific
experiences.  On the program, she appeared shaded, to conceal her
identity—less because she felt personal shame or guilt at what
happened and more to protect her and her family from further abuses.
She recounted how she saw a Facebook notice that Egyptian women were
going to protest the unsafe conditions for women on the Egyptian
street and decided to join them on their scheduled march in Tahrir
Square on January 25, the anniversary of the revolution. “I did not
realize I would become the victim,” she lamented. When it started to
get dark, her group heard that “strange looking men” were appearing
and that it was best to leave the area.

During some chaos she was lost from her group.  One man told her “this
way,” pretending to help her to safety—“I was so naïve to believe
him!”—only to lead her to a large group of men, she estimated around
50, who proceeded to encircle and rape her.  “This was the first time
someone touched me” quietly recounted the former virgin: “Each one of
them attacked a part of my body.”  Several pinned her down while
others pulled off her pants and stripped her naked, gang-raping her
for approximately 20 minutes.  She explained how she truly thought she
was going to die, and kept screaming “I’m dying!” In response, one of
her rapists whispered in her ears: “Don’t worry.  Take it,” even as
the rest called her derogatory names she would not recite on the air.

Considering that in late November last year, when many Egyptians were
protesting President Morsi’s Sharia-heavy constitution and the Muslim
Brotherhood responded by paying gangs and thugs to rape protesting
women in the streets, anecdotes like the above are becoming
commonplace.  Indeed, to appreciate the regularization of sexual
harassment and rape in Egypt, consider the words of popular Salafi
preacher Abu Islam, who openly, and very sarcastically, blamed the
victims:

    “They tell you women are a red line. They tell you that naked
women—who are going to Tahrir Square because they want to be raped—are
a red line! And they ask Mursi and the Brotherhood to leave power!”
Abu Islam added that these women activists are going to Tahrir Square
not to protest but to be sexually abused because they had wanted to be
raped.  “They have no shame, no fear and not even feminism. Practice
your feminism, sheikha! It is a legitimate right for you to be a
woman,” he said. “And by the way, 90 percent of them are crusaders
[i.e. Christian Copts] and the remaining 10 percent are widows who
have no one to control them. You see women talking like monsters,” he
added.

No doubt some will argue that Abu Islam is just a “radical” who speaks
for himself.  Yet many more formal bodies made similar observations,
including the new Egyptian parliament’s Shura Council’s “human rights
committee,” whose members said

    that women taking part in protests bear the responsibility of
being sexually harassed, describing what happens in some
demonstrators’ tents as “prostitution.” Major General Adel Afify,
member of the committee representing the Salafi Asala Party,
criticized female protesters, saying that they “know they are among
thugs. They should protect themselves before requesting that the
Interior Ministry does so. By getting herself involved in such
circumstances, the woman has 100 percent responsibility.”

These sentiments are widely shared in Egypt.  A study by the Egyptian
Center for Women’s Rights said that 98% of foreign female visitors and
83% of Egyptian women have experienced sexual harassment. Sixty-two
percent of men admitted to harassing women, while 53% blame women for
“bringing it on.”

Even non-Egyptian women are becoming increasingly familiar with this
phenomenon. After describing her own personal experiences with sexual
harassment in Egypt, Sarah A. Topol asserts that “Sexual harassment —
actually, let’s call it what it is: assault — in Egypt is not just
common. It’s an epidemic. It inhabits every space in this society,
from back alleys to the birthplace of the newest chapter of Egyptian
history.… For the 18 days of protest last year, for me, Tahrir Square
was a harassment-free zone. I noticed it, everyone did. But as soon as
President Hosni Mubarak stepped down, the unity ended and the
harassment returned.”

Journalists Sophia Jones and Erin Banco also elaborated on the
epidemic of sexual harassment in Egypt:

    It’s difficult to write about sexual harassment and assault in
Egypt without sounding like Angry White Girls. But as journalists, it
is not merely our job to report in such an environment, it is an
everyday psychological and sometimes even physical battle. We open our
closets in the morning and debate what to wear to lessen the
harassment—as if this would help. Even fully veiled women are harassed
on Cairo’s streets. As one young Cairo-based female reporter recently
remarked, “it’s a f–ked-up reality that we will be touched.”….  Like
hundreds of other countries around the world, sexual harassment and
assault happens everyday in Egypt. It happens to both Egyptian women,
and to foreign women. It happens at all times of the day, despite what
some may think, at the hands of men—young boys, grown men, police
officers, military officers, and almost everyone in between.

The journalists then offer an all too familiar story:

    Nor is this merely limited to sexual harassment, but it often,
under the right circumstances—few witnesses, the availability of dark
allies—culminates into fullblown gangrape.  For example, Natasha Smith
a young British journalist covering Tahrir Square, was dragged from
her male companion into a frenzied mob in the hundreds. “Men began to
rip off my clothes,” she wrote on her blog. They “pulled my limbs
apart and threw me around. They were scratching and clenching my
breasts and forcing their fingers inside me in every possible way …
All I could see was leering faces, more and more faces sneering and
jeering as I was tossed around like fresh meat among starving lions.”

All this is yet one more example of the true nature of the
Obama-supported “Arab Spring.”


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