Women suffering from 'worst violence in history of modern Iraq'

Jun 08, 2011

(PhysOrg.com) -- Women have been left defenceless and at the mercy of militia groups in the aftermath of the Iraq war in 2003 according to research from the University of Birmingham.

The struggle taking place in and its impact on following the dismantling of the state has been investigated by a senior academic in Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Birmingham who suggests the war has had detrimental consequences for and women’s rights.

Dr. Haifaa Jawad’s paper, ‘From liberation to resistance; women in Iraq’ examines the involvement of women in the resistance movement, both Islamist and secular, through the eyes and experiences of women present at the scene and subjected to patriarchal and political forces.

Dr. Jawad commented: “The 2003 war on Iraq which aimed among other things, to improve human rights, has had a negative impact on women who are now suffering the worst violence in the history of modern Iraq. The struggle currently taking place in Iraq at the hands of militia groups who have introduced their own laws is having a devastating impact on women.”

Dr. Jawad will be presenting this research during a one-day conference taking place at the University of Birmingham on Monday 27 June, where specialists from across the country will explore the current discourse between women, Islamism and resistance in the Middle East.

Hosted by the Centre for Islamic Studies, ‘Women, Islamism and resistance in the Arab world will incorporate a series of lectures delivered by experts from universities across the country. Key themes set to be explored include feminism in Egypt, the right of Palestinian women to resist and Islamic doctrine and praxis in the contemporary world.

Dr. Jawad explained: “The relationship between women and Islamism in the Arab world is very complicated. The emergence of Islamism in recent decades calls into question women’s rights. Some claim that Islamism has the ability to empower women and allow them to play a broad public role,  but whether this is actually occurring will be explored by a group of respected specialists during this one-day event.”

Experts from the University of Birmingham and the Universities of Cambridge, Lancaster and Westminster will be discussing and debating the current discourse between women, Islamism and female forms of resistance in the Arab world. Highlights will include University of Birmingham Research Fellow Dr Laura McDonald’s exploration of Islamist Women in the Middle East and the implications they have on Muslim women’s activisms in the West and PhD researcher Elisabeth Buergener’s discussion on the post-Islamist revivalism, Syrian women and the Da’wa movement.

Explore further: Throwing the bum out: When should scandal-hit politicians stage a come back?

Provided by University of Birmingham

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User comments : 12

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Vendicar_Decarian
0.5 / 5 (40) Jun 08, 2011
In any decent, civilized nation, George Bush's lifeless body would be swinging from a long rope. Beside it would be the tortured bodies of Cheney, Pearle, and the other Lying ChickenHawks.

frajo
4.3 / 5 (6) Jun 08, 2011
Civilized nations refrain from torture and death penalty.
Vendicar_Decarian
0.5 / 5 (39) Jun 08, 2011
Beating, whipping and suffocation isn't torture according to Bushie and Co.

What goes around, comes around.
ryggesogn2
2 / 5 (5) Jun 08, 2011
"Last October another bride, 18, was dragged, resisting, into a guardhouse on one of Uday's properties, according to a maid who worked there. The maid says she saw a guard rip off the woman's white wedding dress and lock her, crying, in a bathroom. After Uday arrived, the maid heard screaming. Later she was called to clean up. The body of the woman was carried out in a military blanket, she said. There were acid burns on her left shoulder and the left side of her face. The maid found bloodstains on Uday's mattress and clumps of black hair and peeled flesh in the bedroom. A guard told her, "Don't say anything about what you see, or you and your family will be finished."

Read more: http://www.time.c...OjxyPHwV
"
Worst violence in modern Iraq history?
RobertKarlStonjek
5 / 5 (3) Jun 09, 2011
A few stories of Uday's bloody reign only amounts to a few unfortunate incidences. After the invasion, honour killings, which were 'suppressed' under Saddam Hussein, once again took the lives of thousands of females caught dating the wrong guy or for losing their virginity or other 'offences' against Islam.

For those of us who can count past our own toes and fingers, the thousands of murders and the current suppression of women adds up to more than personal oppression by one deranged man who was unable to perform sexually after a murder attempt left him disfigured and disabled.
Vendicar_Decarian
0.4 / 5 (38) Jun 09, 2011
And it was all for Oil.

Sold via a non stop stream of lies coming from Conservatives in the White House and Faux news.

Conservative Filth.
MarkyMark
5 / 5 (2) Jun 09, 2011
And it was all for Oil.

Sold via a non stop stream of lies coming from Conservatives in the White House and Faux news.

Conservative Filth.

Its not like anyone here in the UK was suprised by this, we have known the whole WMD excuse was just a cover a few months before the invasion of Iraq began. Here tho we felt the main driving force was Bushes fathers desire to avenge What happened when the first iraq way ended as it did since them they have wanted to 'get' sadam.
jjoensuu
not rated yet Jun 09, 2011
Bush wanted to look good in his dad's eyes?

Besides that the Bush presidency probably gave Cheney a way to push his own agenda. Like what-ever-he-now-was-up-to during that war game scenario testing that was going on in New York on 9-11.

Actually came to think about it, perhaps I should make a kids book "What your government has not told you", sold it at Amazon and send a copy to the White House.
hush1
1 / 5 (1) Jun 11, 2011
My Pet Goat
(Wrong narrative, Hush)

My First Day
Guantanamo
(Almost)
Vendicar_Decarian
0.1 / 5 (34) Jun 13, 2011
"Its not like anyone here in the UK was suprised by this, we have known the whole WMD excuse was just a cover a few months before the invasion of Iraq began." - MarkMark

Ya it was obvious to everyone but low IQ Americans.

Powell's presentation to the U.N. had me in tears with laughter.

The audience should have walked out on him when he brought out the cartoons.
TheGhostofOtto1923
1 / 5 (2) Jun 13, 2011
And it was all for Oil...Conservative Filth.
You are a little shallow sometimes, you know that VD? look at the Mideast now. Unrest breaking out as hungry, unemployed disaffected youth take to the streets. This is what aggressive religion-mandated pop growth looks like.

What would the Mideast look like if it hadn't been divided up and compartmentalized by western forces? Regime after regime overthrown, and those angry throngs united under the Islamist banner of a new caliphate stretching from India to the levant. Pakistani nukes at their disposal.

There would have been no impediment to the emergence of a new Islamist empire, intent on spreading itself around the world by strangling the west. You seem to think oil is some kind of optional luxury perhaps?

The strategic invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq were undertaken in anticipation of this. They were Planned by People willing to accept the implications of the Inevitable, and to act against it with prudence and forethought.
TheGhostofOtto1923
1 / 5 (2) Jun 13, 2011
Its not like anyone here in the UK was suprised by this, we have known the whole WMD excuse was just a cover a few months before the invasion of Iraq began.
And yet you fail to acknowledge the most dangerous WMD of all, that being the 4th largest military machine in the world at the time, which was capable of regional destruction unmatched by any NBC arsenal. As Powell said we cut it off and then we killed it. Twice.

So VD. I've given you a much more plausible explanation for events in the mideast than the pap you've absorbed from your tv. I say it is not about the quality of life in the west, but of life itself. About needs, not wants. About survival and the preservation good, not greed. You have an answer?

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