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Archive for October, 2014

Forced Marriage: Kazakhstan Stealing the Bride Video Highlights ‘Barbaric’ Kidnapping Practice

Footage of a Kazakh woman apparently being kidnapped and dragged into the house of her future husband has surfaced online. The video shows the woman being pulled out from a car and forced to enter the house of the man who wants to marry her. Some people take pictures and videos as the girl cries and refuses to get off the car, while neighbours look on with curiosity.

When the girl is dragged into the new house, women throw petals and confetti on her. The video, entitled Stealing the Bride, depicts an ancient tradition still practised in several countries in central Asia, Africa and South America, according to which future brides are abducted by friends of the husband-to-be.

During the kidnapping, women cry and beg to be released and when they reach the house of the men who want to marry them, they are pressurised to accept the marriage and celebrate with the new family.

Read more:http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/forced-marriage-kazakhstan-stealing-bride-video-highlights-barbaric-kidnapping-practice-1469927

Diana Nammi on women’s rights: ‘We should not use culture to justify murdering women’

Diana Nammi has been battling for women’s rights since she was a teenager growing up in Iran. A former Peshmerga fighter who came to the UK in 1996, she has been instrumental in the campaign to bring honour killers to justice in British courts as well as striving to get forced marriages banned in this country.

Her achievements will be recognised when she is named as one of the six recipients of the Barclays Women of the Year Awards in London tomorrow. She has earned this for her work at the Iranian and Kurdish Women’s Rights Organisation (IKWRO), which she founded in her home in 2002 to provide advice and counselling for women from Middle Eastern, North African and Afghan communities. It now has 16 paid staff and last year helped 780 women face to face as well as taking thousands of phone calls.

 

Read More: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/diana-nammi-on-womens-rights-we-should-not-use-culture-to-justify-murdering-women-9789223.html

Girl Summit 2014

Did you know the Halo Project is part of a Global campaign to end FGM and CEFM (childhood early forced marriage)? We attended an event organised by World Leaders to show our commitment and pledge to stop this abuse-Halo Project, working to put our region, our voice on a Global platform

Halo News

We have now established Halo in Durham, (watch out for our press release) supported by Durham PCC and working in partnership with Durham University we have support for victims and advice for agencies. Halo has some exciting announcements shortly, keep posted or sign up to our forthcoming newsletter and training packages, for more information  contact us info@haloproject.org.uk

 

 

www.haloproject.org.uk

Gambian youth come together for conference to tackle #FGM

They call the Gambia the smiling coast, and as 100 young people from across the country poured into the Paradise Suites Hotel in Kololi beach on Wednesday, it was easy to see why.

They came from all corners of the nation – girls and boys, rural and urban, in school and out, uniting for the first ever youth summit on female genital mutilation. Chatting, smiling and laughing – but determined that FGM would end with their generation.

It’s the first time young people in this small west African nation have decided to take the fight against FGM into their own hands, but they also remembered to invite the grown-ups. Key officials of the Gambian government came to the event on Tuesday, in a move described as “groundbreaking” by campaigners against the practice.

Spearheaded by Gambian-born Jaha Dukureh, the face of a Guardian-backed campaign to combat FGM in the US, the youth summit has brought 100 Gambians between the ages of 17 and 25 together to teach campaigning and social media skills and equip them with the legal and medical knowledge to go out and spread the word among their own generation.

Read more: http://www.theguardian.com/society/2014/oct/07/gambian-youth-conference-fgm

How One Young Woman Escaped Childhood Abuse and a Forced Marriage

Nashwa el-Sayed grew up in Alexandria, Egypt, in a violent home. Her father and stepmother both beat her, and she was forced to become a maid in her own house. She grew up believing her biological mother had died after abandoning her as a baby. Then at the age of nine, everything changed.

Nashwa returned home after a particularly horrible day at school, and found her father standing with someone, a “foreign looking woman.” Nashwa’s father told her, “this is your mom.” As it turned out, Nashwa was not from Alexandria. She wasn’t even from Egypt. She was a native New Yorker. She had spent her early years in Queens, where her father had physically abused both her and her mother. Even after Nashwa’s mother filed for divorce and gained custody, Nashwa’s father was still allowed to see his daughter, unsupervised, which was how was able to abduct her and take her to Egypt. Nashwa was shocked. It was as if a door to an alternate universe, free of abuse and harsh restrictions, had opened. “I learned that I have another place that I belong to,” she explains.

Even though her mother had to leave, they stayed in touch. With her mother’s help, Nashwa became conversational in English. She began watching American television and listening to American pop music, including the Backstreet Boys and Madonna. Following the United States’ invasion of Iraq in 2003, Nashwa decided that she wanted to leave home after high school to study international politics. But as high school came to a close, her father made an announcement that hit Nashwa like a thunderbolt. He had found a husband for Nashwa, and she was to be married within four months. “It destroyed me,” she says, “because all my dreams depended on me leaving. They were crushed in a second, and I had to marry this person.”

All you’ll see in this video, Nashwa had to make a decision whether to accept this life or take matters into her own hands (with a little help from the FBI). Nashwa wants more people to hear her story because, as she says, “There are two kinds of people who go through this. Some accept it and are in love with the idea of not being able to plan their own life. And there are some who are in disagreement about it [but] can’t do anything. People are scared of failure, which is why they don’t go after their own happiness.”

Read more:http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/10/08/how-one-young-woman-escaped-childhood-abuse-and-a-forced-marriage.html

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