Response Of The Islamic Emirate Of Afghanistan Regarding A
Picture Published By Time Magazine
07 August 2010
By Al-Ikhwah Al-Mujahidun
In the Name of Allah,
the Most Beneficent, the Most Merciful.
Time magazine has
recently published a picture of an Afghan women Aisha,
and described her horrifying story which is connected
to the Taliban under the title ‘Afghan women and the
return of the Taliban’.
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan rejects this
fabrication by the Americans, who are publishing these
lies to divert attention of the people from their
clear and disgraceful defeat.
This desperate propaganda by Time magazine has shown
the whole world to the lengths which the world media
will go to please America, even at the cost of their
Journalistic integrity.
This picture published by Time magazine and the
barbaric story wrongly attached to Islamic Emirate is
not only false, but publishing these images are
against the morals and ethics of professional
journalism. A lot of journalists worldwide have
condemned this act of Time magazine and called it a
crime against journalism.
As far as the story of Aisha is concerned, Islamic
Emirate of Afghanistan has condemned this barbaric,
inhumane and unislamic act and declares that this case
has never been forwarded to any court or persons of
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan uses Shariate law to
solve any internal or human right issues. Shariate
laws promote peace and justice to the society, not
hatred and cruelty.
In sacred Islamic law, cutting of human ears and noses
whether the human is alive or dead is illegal and
prohibited. In many hadith from Muhammad PBUH, cutting
of noses, ears and lips of a dead unbeliever is
prohibited, so how can the Islamic Emirate of
Afghanistan carry out this act especially when the
person to whom it is done is alive and is a Muslim.
Under Shariate law if someone carries out this heinous
act, the same thing will be done to the criminal who
has perpetuated this act.
We sympathize with our sister Aisha and call this
atrocious act a crime against humanity and against
Shariate law.
We call on Time and other western media to stop
trampling on their own moral principles, just to hide
and divert people’s attention from Americas military
and political defeat by publishing such fabrications.
We also call on Afghani media to stop spreading the
lies of Islam hating western media by becoming their
translators. Journalism is an important duty, thus it
should not be used is spreading mischief.
The Islamic Emirate Of
Afghanistan
Below are few American
statistics which the theunjustmedia.com like to draw
peoples attention to, America which claims that it
needs to protect and liberate Afghan women, to this we
say, if there is any place on the earth were women
need to be protected and treated with dignity it is in
America, were close to half a million females are
raped each year, keeping in mind that more then 50%
rapes are not reported.
U.S.
Statistics
Fact #1: 17.6 %
of women in the United States have survived a
completed or attempted rape. Of these, 21.6% were
younger than age 12 when they were first raped, and
32.4% were between the ages of 12 and 17. (Full
Report of the Prevalence, Incidence, and Consequences
of Violence Against Women, Findings from the National
Violence Against Women Survey, November, 2000)
Fact #2: 64% of
women who reported being raped, physically assaulted,
and/or stalked since age 18 were victimized by a
current or former husband, cohabiting partner,
boyfriend, or date. (Full Report of the Prevalence,
Incidence, and Consequences of Violence Against Women,
Findings from the National Violence Against Women
Survey, November, 2000)
Fact #3: Only
about half of domestic violence incidents are reported
to police. African-American women are more likely than
others to report their victimization to police
Lawrence A. Greenfeld et al. (1998). (Violence by
Intimates: Analysis of Data on Crimes by Current or
Former Spouses, Boyfriends, and Girlfriends. Bureau of
Justice Statistics Factbook. Washington DC: U.S.
Department of Justice. NCJ #167237. Available from
National Criminal Justice Reference Service.)
Fact #4: The
FBI estimates that only 37% of all rapes are reported
to the police. U.S. Justice Department statistics are
even lower, with only 26% of all rapes or attempted
rapes being reported to law enforcement officials.
Fact #5: In the
National Violence Against Women Survey, approximately
25% of women and 8% of men said they were raped and/or
physically assaulted by a current or former spouse,
cohabiting partner, or date in their lifetimes. The
survey estimates that more than 300,000 intimate
partner rapes occur each year against women 18 and
older. (Full Report of the Prevalence, Incidence,
and Consequences of Violence Against Women, Findings
from the National Violence Against Women Survey,
November, 2000)
Fact #6: The
National College Women Sexual Victimization Study
estimated that between 1 in 4 and 1 in 5 college women
experience completed or attempted rape during their
college years (Fisher 2000).
Fact #7: Men
perpetrate the majority of violent acts against women
(DeLahunta 1997).
Fact #8: Every
two minutes, somewhere in America, someone is sexually
assaulted. (Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network
(RAINN) calculation based on 2000 National Crime
Victimization Survey. Bureau of Justice Statistics,
U.S. Department of Justice)
Fact #9: One
out of every six American women have been the victims
of an attempted or completed rape in their lifetime.
(Prevalence, Incidence and Consequences of Violence
Against Women Survey, National Institute of Justice
and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1998)
Fact #10:
Factoring in unreported rapes, about 5% - one out of
twenty - of rapists will ever spend a day in jail. 19
out of 20 will walk free. (Probability statistics
based on US Department of Justice Statistics)
Fact #11: Fewer
than half (48%) of all rapes and sexual assaults are
reported to the police (DOJ 2001).
Fact #12:
Sexual violence is associated with a host of short-
and long-term problems, including physical injury and
illness, psychological symptoms, economic costs, and
death (National Research Council 1996).
Fact #13: Rape
victims often experience anxiety, guilt, nervousness,
phobias, substance abuse, sleep disturbances,
depression, alienation, sexual dysfunction, and
aggression. They often distrust others and replay the
assault in their minds, and they are at increased risk
of future victimization (DeLahunta 1997).
Fact #14:
According to the National Crime Victimization Survey,
more than 260,000 rapes or sexual assaults occurred in
2000; 246,180 of them occurred among females and
14,770, among males (Department of Justice 2001).
Fact #15:
Sexual violence victims exhibit a variety of
psychological symptoms that are similar to those of
victims of other types of trauma, such as war and
natural disaster (National Research Council 1996).
A number of long-lasting symptoms and illnesses have
been associated with sexual victimization including
chronic pelvic pain; premenstrual syndrome;
gastrointestinal disorders; and a variety of chronic
pain disorders, including headache, back pain, and
facial pain (Koss 1992).Between 4% and 30% of
rape victims contract sexually transmitted diseases as
a result of the victimization (Resnick 1997).
Fact #16: More
than half of all rapes of women occur before age 18;
22% occur before age 12. (Full Report of the
Prevalance, Incidence, and Consequences of Violence
Against Women, Findings from the National Violence
Against Women Survey, November, 2000)
Fact #17: In
2000, nearly 88,000 children in the United States
experienced sexual abuse (ACF 2002).
Fact #18: About
81% of rape victims are white; 18% are black; 1% are
of other races. (Violence Against Women, Bureau of
Justice Statistics, U.S. Dept. of Justice, 1994.)
Fact #19: About
half of all rape victims are in the lowest third of
income distribution; half are in the upper two-thirds.
(Violence against Women, Bureau of Justice Statistics,
U.S. Dept. of Justice, 1994.)
Fact #20:
According to the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance
Survey (YRBSS), a national survey of high school
students, 7.7% of students had been forced to have
sexual intercourse when they did not want to. Female
students (10%) were significantly more likely than
male students (5%) to have been forced to have sexual
intercourse. Overall, black students (10%) were
significantly more likely than white students (7%) to
have been forced to have sexual intercourse (CDC
2002).
Fact #21:
Females ages 12 to 24 are at the greatest risk for
experiencing a rape or sexual assault (DOJ 2001).
Fact #22:
Almost two-thirds of all rapes are committed by
someone who is known to the victim. 73% of sexual
assaults were perpetrated by a non-stranger (— 38% of
perpetrators were a friend or acquaintance of the
victim, 28% were an intimate and 7% were another
relative.) (National Crime Victimization Survey,
2005)
Fact #23: The
costs of intimate partner violence against women
exceed an estimated $5.8 billion. These costs include
nearly $4.1 billion in the direct costs of medical
care and mental health care and nearly $1.8 billion in
the indirect costs of lost productivity and present
value of lifetime earnings. (Costs of Intimate
Partner Violence Against Women in the United States,
Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for
Injury Prevention and Control, Atlanta, Georgia, March
2003).
Fact #24:
Domestic violence occurs in approximately 25-33% of
same-sex relationships. (NYC Gay and Lesbian
Anti-Violence Project, October 1996.)
Fact #25: Boys
who witness their fathers' violence are 10 times more
likely to engage in spouse abuse in later adulthood
than boys from non-violent homes. (Family Violence
Interventions for the Justice System, 1993)
Fact #26: An
estimated 50,000 women and children are trafficked
into the United States annually for sexual
exploitation or forced labor. (U.S. Central
Intelligence Agency, 2000)
Fact #27:
Somewhere in America a woman is battered, usually by
her intimate partner, every 15 seconds. (UN Study
On The Status of Women, Year 2000)
Fact #28: A
University of Pennsylvania research study found that
domestic violence is the leading cause of injury to
low-income, inner-city Philadelphia women between the
ages of 15 to 44 - more common than automobile
accidents, mugging and rapes combined. In this study
domestic violence included injuries caused by street
crime.
Fact #29:
Following the Supreme Court's decision in 2000 to
strike down the civil-rights provision of the Federal
Violence Against Women Act (ruling that only states
could enact such legislation), only two states in the
country (Illinois and California) have defined
gender-based violence, such as rape and domestic
violence, as sex discrimination, and created specific
laws that survivors can use to sue their perpetrators
in civil court. (Kaethe Morris Hoffer, 2004).
Fact #30: A
study reported in the New York Times suggests that one
in five adolescent girls become the victims of
physical or sexual violence, or both, in a dating
relationship. (New York Times, 8/01/01)
Source: U.S.
Statistics
1/3rd of Women in US Military Raped
According to NPR, “In 2003, a survey of female
veterans found that 30 percent said they were raped in
the military. A 2004 study of veterans who were
seeking help for post-traumatic stress disorder found
that 71 percent of the women said they were sexually
assaulted or raped while serving. And a 1995 study of
female veterans of the Gulf and earlier wars, found
that 90 percent had been sexually harassed.”
The BBC recently reported on The Lonely Soldier: The
Private War of Women Serving in Iraq by Helen
Benedict. This book examines the extreme difficulties
female soldiers have in serving abroad. Benedict
interviewed several women in the military to get a
deeper understanding of the issue, and some of their
stories were real eye openers.
Army specialist
Chantelle Henneberry spoke of some of her experiences
in Iraq, “Everybody’s supposed to have a battle
buddy in the army, and females are supposed to have
one to go to the latrines with, or to the showers –
that’s so you don’t get raped by one of the men on
your own side. But because I was the only female
there, I didn’t have a battle buddy. My battle buddy
was my gun and my knife.”
Another study
concluded that 90% of all women serving are sexually
harassed. Another one estimates that 90% of all the
rapes do not get reported, despite supposedly easier
ways to report the crime with confidentiality since
2005. Either way, this appears to be an epidemic that
needs to be dealt with.
An online discussion
from a former soldier whose identity is being
protected had this to say, “At least a rape ends.
It’s the day-to-day degradation that eats at you. None
of my friends who were raped on active duty reported
it. Or if we tried, we were told to shut up for
‘morale.’ Working with your rapist on a daily basis
isn’t a lot of fun, believe me.”
How the military is
dealing with this appears to demonstrate a pattern of
sweeping it under the rug. In 2008, 62% of those that
were convicted of sexual assault or rape received very
lenient punishments such as demotion, suspension, or a
written reprimand.
This problem is not
confined to the US military either. This abuse is
rampant among private defense contractors overseas as
well, as recently highlighted by the recent press
about Jamie Leigh Jones. Ms. Jones was in Iraq in 2005
when seven Halliburton/KBR employees drugged and
brutally gang-raped her. Her injuries were so
extensive that she had lacerations to her vagina and
anus, her breast implants were ruptured, and her
pectoral muscles torn. The response of KBR was to lock
her in a shipping container with only a bed, and to
deny her food, water, and medical treatment. The rape
kit that was taken after she regained consciousness
was mysteriously lost.
This crime eventually
led to an amendment being added to the defense
appropriations bill by Sen. Al Franken (D-MN). This
would require defense contractors to allow their
employees access to US courts in cases of rape or
sexual assault, regardless of where they are
stationed. The 30 Republican senators voted against
this amendment are currently being humiliated on the
Republicans for Rape website
[http://www.republicansforrape.org/legislators/] and
by John Stewart on the Daily Show.
The culture of sexual
violence against women that is allowed to exist in
both the US military and private contractors needs to
come to an end. When almost a third of all women
serving are raped, and over two thirds sexually
assaulted, this problem is rampant and systemic.
Source: 1/3rd of Women in US Military Raped
[http://newsjunkiepost.com/2010/01/26/13rd-of-women-in-us-military-raped/]