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Palestinian woman is best immigrant in Canada

22-6-2018

32 year old Palestinian woman, Sarah Abul Kheir from Jabalia refugee camp in Gaza, was unanimously elected as the best Canadian Immigrant for 2018. Sarah, a resident of Toronto was nominated for the award this year for her pioneer humanitarian work to promote the rights of refugees and immigrants in Canada. To recall, Sarah has worked with educational and student unions and spearheaded efforts to improve the conditions of emigrants in the higher academic institutions in the North American country. To this end, she set up the first of its kind institution at Ryerson University in Toronto and chaired the Union of Continuing Education Students at the university. (Al Diyar, June 22, 2018)
 

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Violence against women in Lebanese society is structural 

22-6-2018

In collaboration with UNFPA, the Institute of Social Sciences in the Lebanese University launched yesterday a study entitled, ‘Gender equality in Lebanon: Reality, challenges and prospects, 20002018’. The study seeks to understand Lebanese society through reports, research and articles on gender and equality between the years 2000 and 2018, in order to detect the extent of national conformism with the international development vision according to the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) set in 2000 to reach the 2030 agenda. The above study was based on six sectors: Discrimination against women; violence against women; early marriage, forced marriage and female genital mutilation; unpaid housework; women’s participation in public political life, and reproductive life and sexual health. The report concluded by noting that harmful and violent behaviors against women are still firmly rooted in Lebanese society and, therefore, can be classified under gender inequality. The study also determined that violence against women is not only the result of individual or spontaneous behavior, but also the outcome of an act that is deeply entrenched in the structure of relationships that are founded on societal inequality between men and women. This inequality is supported and corroborated by a ‘legislative violence’ protected by the patriarchal system and the supremacy of spiritual courts in the absence of a united personal status law. More on the study in the following link: https://goo.gl/jn82Qz. (Al Akhbar, June 22, 2018)
 

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Tense court session in the case of Ella Tanus

21-6-2018

Flagrant disregard to the lives of Lebanese citizens, namely children, continues in Lebanon. In this respect, a court hearing was held yesterday in the case of child Ella Tanus who lost her arms and legs as a result of alleged medical malpractice (c.f: http://lkdg.org/ar/node/13147). The session, which was devoted for the report of the head of the medical committee that determined numerous medical mistakes, has triggered tension among those present at the hearing, including Single judge in Beirut, Bassem Takieddine, and the defendants, particularly that the child was there with her parents. Ella’s mother placed her child on the counter before the judge which enraged the defendant’s attorney who accused her of ‘using her own daughter’, Al Mustaqbal reported. After a swap of accusations between both sides, the judge intervened to put an end to the controversy asking all parties to work things out to the end of helping the child, who is, after all, the main issue. The hearing was adjourned till November to listen to witnesses. (AL Mustaqbal, June 20, 2018)

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USJ honors Kiwan for her election as AWO’s SG

21-6-2018

In a dinner banquet held yesterday at Le Gabriel hotel in Ashrafieh in the presence of MPs and ministers, USJ handed Dr. Fadia Kiwan the University Shield for her election as secretary general of the Arab Women Organization (AWO). Kiwan, who is also the honorary director of the Institute of Political Science and the Observatory of Civil Service and Good Governance at USJ, pointed to the challenges facing AWO, notably building solidarity and consolidating the presence of member countries in the organization. In his turn, USJ president, Rector Salim Daccach, commended three qualities in the honoree, which are, her passion, preparedness aided with intellectual determination and her close awareness of field reality. (Al Akhbar, June 21, 2018)

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Proposal by My Nationality campaign to amend the law

21-6-2018

Future Movement MP Rula Tabsh Jarudi received on Tuesday a delegation from ‘My Nationality is A Right for Me and My Family’ Campaign led by its coordinator, Karima Shebbo who presented a proposal for the amendment of the nationality law in such that it gives Lebanese mothers equal right to confer nationality to their families as men. A statement issued by the Campaign said the meeting was part of an ongoing cooperation with MP Tabsh since her nomination to the parliamentary elections and her adoption of the Campaign’s proposal to this effect. The meeting discussed the implications of the nationality law and the legal inferences related to the suggested restrictions and exceptions, the statement added. Regional achievements made by My Nationality Campaign in a number of Arab countries through reforming relevant legislations were also tackled, according to the statement. Tabsh reportedly adopted the proposed draft for it comprehensively embraced the criteria for full and complete equality between men and women, and pledged to ensure that the nationality law will be adjusted in an equitable manner that plays fair to Lebanese women. It was agreed that this right will see the light only through modifying the current law, rather than through the issuance of IDs or naturalization decrees or through special offices that receive applications that are subject to favoritism. And regarding the amendment of the Nationality law, The ‘National Coalition for the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women’ and ‘Because they are my children, my nationality is their right’ campaign held a press conference before yesterday under the title, ‘Naturalization laws and the need to amend the nationality law’. The Coalition’s coordinator Azza Hurr delivered a statement which demanded the amendment of the First Paragraph of Article 1 of the Nationality Code to become as such: ‘A person is deemed Lebanese if he is born of a Lebanese father or a Lebanese mother’. (Al Mustaqbal, June 20, 2018)

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Iranian women at Russian stadiums protest ban on women to attend matches at home

20-6-2018

In a special feature today, Al Akhbar newspaper drew attention to the presence of Iranian women at Russian stadiums to watch the FIFA World Cup, pointing to many of them wearing hijab and unfurling banners that protest Iran’s ban on women to attend matches in their country. According to Al Akhbar, the Iranian authorities decided to ban watching the 2018 World Cup in public places. What is odd, the newspaper added, is that in 2005, a partial exception to the ban allowed a group of Iranian women to attend for the first time a football match on a stadium in Central Tehran. They also allowed some 15 women including trainers, arbitrators and a few players to watch the game from seats specially reserved for them but that are separate from men’s seating. Then, Al Akhbar concluded, the so-called reformist circles in Iran advised not to criminalize women for attending matches and to let them in the stadiums with their families. More on the subject on the following link: https://goo.gl/qeNcRC . (Al Akhbar, June 20, 2018)
 

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Indigenous women clean banks of Lake Titicaca

20-6-2018

An Nahar highlighted today an initiative started by indigenous women to clean the polluted banks of Lake Titicaca. It said that under the blazing sun, around a dozen local women pick up cans, bottles and plastic bags in an effort to reduce the devastating contamination of the indigenous community’s sacred lake. The women, An Nahar wrote, come from the villages of Peru and Bolivia close to the highest fresh water lake in the world (at an altitude of 3,800 m), located on the borders between the two countries. The clean-up initiative is supported by a grassroots organization several days each year to remove the plastic, paper, bottles and all types of rubbish. Women wear latex gloves to pick up the garbage and put them in nearby waste containers. It is inconceivable that the efforts of these local women will clean up the banks entirely, An Nahar said, for the amount of trash dumped into the lake in unlikely to be cleared by the campaign, but at least it raises awareness among the locals about the serious rate of pollution. On the subject, Helena Condori, a tradeswoman in a neighboring Peruvian village, told France Presse: “It hurts me that we are cleaning up what others throw away, but this shall not deter us from our work which makes us feel that Peru and Bolivia are more united than ever.” (An Nahar, June 20, 2018)

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Climatic change: floods and drought hit agricultural seasons

19-6-2018

In the wake of the disastrous floods that hit Ras Baalbaq (c.f: https://bit.ly/2JOa4fg), Donniyeh mayors affected by the torrential rains, appealed to concerned authorities to send inspection teams to assess the losses and damages in property and cultivated lands. Meanwhile, rain scarcity in West Beqaa has hit many productive sectors this season, including apples, peaches, pears, apricots, quince, cherries and Mirabelle plums. Al Mustaqbal newspaper highlighted the plight of farmers who are increasingly faced with the decision to relinquish their agriculture work or remain steadfast and strong if the State was quick enough to compensate financially for the catastrophic losses inflicted on them. The newspaper revealed that hundreds of farmers are bracing for a symbolic sit-in this weekend between the villages of Saghbin and Khirbit Kanafar to draw attention to their anguish. Moreover, the swift fluctuations in weather conditions drove tobacco growers in many areas of the South to ask for swift compensation. This follows the visit by the Higher Relief Council (HRC) head weeks ago to Bint Jbeil and Tyre areas. Al Mustaqbal pointed out that the HRC is completing a report on the assessment survey of damages in the tobacco cultivation, in preparation for determining the size of losses and submit the report to the Cabinet to take the appropriate action. Al Mustaqbal also named three diseases that cause the drying of the tobacco leaves in the border villages. (Al Mustqbal, Al Diyar, June 19, 2018)

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UN inactive in protecting Saudi women, a women activist says

19-6-2018

The executive director of Women’s March Global, Lara Stein, says the United Nation’s inaction in the face of arrest of Saudi women activists is irresponsible and dangerous for all the Saudi women. In an article published on the Newsweek website, Stein urged all the global community to join the Movement and call for freeing Saudi women, reminding that the UN was founded on principles of international cooperation and human rights, yet it has done nothing to stop the Kingdom from depriving women of their most basic rights. Stein warned that detaining Saudi women advocating the rights of their peers to drive sends a message that Saudi women remain only half citizens, pointing to the system of male guardianship which makes women vulnerable to violence and exploitation at the hands of their guardians. Stein revealed that Women’s March Global has launched a campaign at the end of May to release Saudi women’s rights activists, mentioning many Saudi women who have been forced to marry or have tried to escape by seeking asylum abroad or who have risked their safety to speak out about the arrests. She disclosed that Saudi women who fled the country have joined the Free Saudi Women Coalition (FSW), a coalition of activists from around the world who gathered some 190,000 signatures to push the UN to intervene for the release of women detainees in the Kingdom. (Al Diyar, June 18)

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Khadija Siddiqui symbol for Pakistani women’s struggle against violence

19-6-2018

An Nahar newspaper spotlighted 23-year Khadija Siddiqui who became the symbol for the struggle of Pakistani women against violence, particularly her determination to put behind bars the assailant who attacked her in broad daylight in one of Lahore’s neighborhoods and who is still at large. Khadija, a law student, recounted to France Press the details of the incident which took place in May 2016. She said the culprit, who is a classroom fellow and once a friend of Khadija, opened the door of the car and stabbed her 23 times in the neck, back and arms, and was sentenced to 7 years in prison. However, Khadija went on to say, the father of the attacker, who is a prominent lawyer, appealed the ruling and the Lahore High Court decided to acquit the aggressor in early June. This unleashed outrage and condemnation throughout Pakistan where thousands of women are killed every year by men who often evade punishment. Anger and uproar exacerbated with the official release of the judicial verdict which prompted the court in June 13 to take up the case and announce the beginning of hearings in the summer. For her part, Khadija expressed regret for the hindrances she faced to prevent her from claiming her legal right, noting that she has been a victim of blackmail and libel. She concluded by stressing the immense moral support she received from her family, namely her father who contends to give a lesson to those who offend, kill or injure women in his country. (An Nahar, June 15, 2018)

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