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Kitty's Corner

Posts tagged with "News"

Legalization of rape in Afghanistan

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I usually don't comment on other countries' laws, but this one really got me up from my chair!

A new Afghan law, passed last month, says a husband can demand sex with his wife every four days unless she is ill or would be harmed by intercourse, and regulates when and for what reasons a wife may leave her home alone.

"It is essential for the woman to submit to the man's sexual desire," the law says.

The legislation has raised the specter of the deposed hard-line Taliban regime, which fell in 2001 after the US invaded Afghanistan. The Taliban required women to wear all-covering burqas and banned them from leaving home without a male relative.

Following an international uproar over the new law, which President Barack Obama called "abhorrent," Afghan President Hamid Karzai put it under review. The move puts enforcement on hold.

Mohammad Asif Mohseni, a top Afghan cleric and one of the law's main drafters, said the legislation cannot be revoked or changed because it was enacted through a legislative process — passed by both houses of parliament and signed by Karzai.

"The Westerners claim that they have brought democracy to Afghanistan. What does democracy mean? It means government by the people for the people. They should let the people use these democratic rights," Mohseni told reporters in the capital, Kabul.

Surrounded by supporters, Mohseni unfurled reams of paper with hundreds of women's signatures and thumbprints backing the law. The legislation came out of three years of debate and revision involving both Islamic scholars and members of parliament, Mohseni said.

Afghanistan is an Islamic state and its constitution defers to the Quran as the ultimate authority. Mohseni said the law simply reiterates rules from Islam's holy book.

"In Shariah law, it states that a woman cannot go out without the permission of her husband," he said. He argued that the law is permissive because it allows a woman to go out for a medical emergency or other urgent reason without asking.

Mohseni said much of the uproar has come from people misinterpreting the law. He said a woman can refuse sex with her husband for many reasons beyond illness, including fasting for Ramadan, preparing for a pilgrimage, menstruating, or recovering from giving birth.

Mohseni also argued that the law can be interpreted to mean simply sleeping in the same room as a couple every four nights, but an Associated Press translation of the pertinent article suggests this reading is unlikely.

The law says that every fourth day a man "can pass the night with his wife, unless it is harmful for either side, or either of them is suffering from any kind of sexual disease."

"If she is not sick, and if she does not have another problem, it is the right of a man to ask for sex and she should make herself ready for it," Mohseni explained.

Though the law only applies to the country's Shiite population — 10 percent to 20 percent of Afghanistan's 30 million people — Mohseni, the country's top Shiite cleric, said most of the articles could also be applied to Sunnis. A prominent Sunni cleric, Mawlawi Habibullah Ahsam, said the rules about women submitting to sex and leaving the home would also be acceptable to Sunnis.

Earlier this week, dozens of Afghan lawmakers and officials condemned the legislation, saying it encourages re-Talibanization.

Much has improved for women since the fall of the Taliban. Millions of girls now attend school, and many women own businesses. Of 351 parliamentarians, 89 are women. But in the conservative country, critics fear those gains could easily be reversed.

Mohseni argued that women and men are very far from equal in today's Afghanistan and should not be treated as such. He said many rural women are illiterate and would not be able to find work. Men are typically expected to provide for their wives and children.

"For all these expenses, can't we at least give the right to a husband to demand sex from his wife after four nights?" he said.


:bomb:


This really pisses me off. Demand sex? If those guys made it good for the women, they might not even have to ask for sex. Morons!

Female crosswalk signals

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Copenhagen will not install crosswalk signals showing a dress-clad female figure after all.

Despite the idea reportedly having a majority behind it last May, the proposal was quashed this week by city council as being an unnecessary waste of resources.

The idea for female crosswalk signals was originally proposed – and is still supported – by the Social Liberals. The party expressed its disappointment at the decision.

‘The deep-rooted idea that men and women are not equal is already presented to us from when we’re children,’ argued the Social Liberal’s Manu Sareen. ‘We can take a small step forward on that issue by children seeing both sexes on the crosswalk signals.’

Although the proposal will remain on the party’s agenda, there is still uncertainty as to whether the idea can be implemented according to traffic regulations.

Meanwhile Viborg (a town in Jutland) recently decided to introduce the female figures to traffic lights in the area.


If we really want to do something for equality between men and women I suggest that we start by paying men and women equal wages for equal jobs - and to stop choosing men over women at job interviews because of the "danger" to risk that the women will get pregnant and go on maternity leave. :irked:

More shootings in Copenhagen

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A 29-year-old man was shot multiple times by two masked men on a motorbike in the Nørrebro area of Copenhagen this Tuesday, in an incident police are linking to the ongoing gang conflict.

The man, who was walking his toddler in a pushchair, was shot three times in the leg and once in the hand around lunchtime by the men. Witnesses said the two sped off on a red Yamaha motorbike.

The shooting took place only a few metres from Blågårds Plads Square (The Black Square) – an area which has been central to the conflict between immigrant gangs and bikers.

Tensions in the neighbourhood boiled over, when shortly after the shooting a large number of local young men surrounded the crime scene. Police were in the process of sealing off the scene so the man could receive medical attention, when they were attacked by the onlookers.

According to Copenhagen Police they had to use force to drive back the crowd so paramedics could attend to the wounded man. Three people were arrested following the tussles with police.

The man was taken to the city hospital where his condition is said to be stable. But more trouble broke out at the hospital when a large number of people tried to visit the wounded man. Police used pepperspray to disperse the crowd.

The news reports that the victim is an accountant and father of two who has no connection to the criminal gang conflict - but he had a bullet proof vest in his car not far away from where he got shot. How many ordinary people have got that kind of gear?!


I hope this war will end soon. It's not fair that innocent people are supposed to be afraid to take a walk in Copenhagen. :irked:

Google and privacy

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Google Denmark is launching 360 degree views of city streets, but promises to take the privacy of the public into consideration

Google will begin photographing the streets of Copenhagen, Odense and Århus starting yesterday to add them to its "Street View"-database.

The Street View feature of Google Maps allows the user to see a 360 degree panoramic view of a particular map location from ground level. It has already been launched in the US, Australia, Japan and a number of European cities.
Google will begin photographing all the major streets of the country’s three largest cities using a special camera mounted to the roof of a car.

The country director for Google in Denmark could not say when the images would be available online, but said they are taking advantage of the good weather to capture as many images as possible.

The phenomenon, which started in 2007, recently caused concern in the UK. An angry mob of local residents in Buckinghamshire blocked a Google camera car from entering their street at the start of April over privacy fears.

The Google director says the company uses a technology which automatically blurs licence plates and faces, and members of the public who are captured on film can also request to be removed from the image.

*note to self*: remember to draw the curtains before taking a shower! :o:
(Who the f*ck wants to be blurred out!) :D

Freedom of speech?

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The Danish Free Press Society will soon be selling signed reprints of the infamous Mohammed cartoons to raise money for its daughter organisation, the International Free Press Society.

The controversial cartoon originally appeared in JyllandsPosten newspaper on 30th September 2005 causing a national and international debate on the freedom of speech and the press. I've blogged about this several times.

The 1000 reprints, signed by cartoonist Kurt Westergaard, are of the Prophet Mohammed with a bomb in his turban. They will be available for sale on the society’s website at 185 Eur.

However, the project to promote the freedom of speech and the press faced an unexpected hurdle when the society was unable to find a Danish printing company willing to reprint the drawings for them: The society contacted six different printers, all of whom turned the job down. In the end, a foreign printer was contracted to print the 1000 signed samples.

The president of the Free Press Society said that one of the printers told them that they would not be successful finding a Danish printer, because rumours of the controversial printing order had spread.

He told Jyllands-Posten newspaper that, despite the freedom of speech being protected in the constitution, he feared that one day printers would avoid printing certain books out of fear of reprisals.

The Danish Free Press Society was founded in 2005 as a private organisation with no state funding, which champions the cause of freedom of speech in society.

In conjunction with its coverage of the society’s latest news, Jyllands-Posten newspaper chose to print the Mohammed cartoon in question. The editor said the decision was "purely journalistic" and was not intended as a sign of support or otherwise.

"It is nothing special. We shouldn’t be afraid of showing a cartoon," he says. "In the same way as when our front page story about President Obama required having a photo of him, if we talk about a cartoon in a story, then we should show it."

And I agree. I do believe in freedom of speech.

The loss of a penis

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Imagine this: A 42 year old man went to his doctors in 2006 complaining of pain and swelling in his penis. Following tests, specialists diagnosed a fatal form of cancer and recommended immediate amputation.

There were only two options: Either he would die from the cancer, or he would choose the amputation. Having both wife and kids he chose the latter.

However, one year later a familiar swelling returned in his scrotum, causing doctors to have concerns about their initial diagnosis. A review of tissue samples by other hospitals found that he had been misdiagnosed with cancer and was instead suffering from a rare infection.

The man requested compensation of 200,000 kroner (26,800 Eur) from the Patient Insurance Association, which decides claims for patients injured in connection with treatment in the national health service.

However, last week the association sent its second rejection letter to the man, saying that if the presiding doctor was judged to have been the most experienced in the field of treatment then compensation was not possible, even if the health issue was misdiagnosed. In other words: No money for the man, who had hoped for compensation for the physical and mental hardships he has suffered since the amputation, including the loss of his sex life.

So, the good news for him is: He hasn't got cancer.
The bad news is: They amputated his willy for no reason.

I do understand if the man is angry!

The Little Mermaid on vacation

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This Thursday the City Council voted to approve an agreement to send the Little Mermaid statue to China next year.

And it's not just any landmark, but a landmark that has become synonymous with Copenhagen; the Little Mermaid that has gazed out over the harbour from her perch at Langelinie Quay since 1913, but for eight months beginning next April, she will be in Shanghai as part of the Danish pavilion for the 2010 World Expo.

The pavilion will also showcase a water feature containing water from Copenhagen harbour and the chance for visitors to try out Copenhagen city bicycles.

The decision taken by the council has been subject to controversy. Recent polls suggest that more than half of the public is against the idea of sending the statue abroad.

However, that did not stop 32 of the council’s 46 members voting in favour of the proposal Thursday afternoon. Twelve voted against and two abstained.

The mermaid will be at the World Expo between May and November.


While the statue is gone, tourists to Langelinie will not be left empty-handed. A number of Chinese artists have been appointed to recreate different interpretations of the Little Mermaid. I believe that some tourists will be pretty disappointed when they find that our mermaid has travelled far away and what they get instead is... made in China.

The statue was sculpted by Edvard Eriksen and inspired by the Hans Christian Andersen fairytale. While she has been subjected to vandalism over the years, including being doused in paint and having her head chopped off, this will be the first time she leaves the capital. And hopefully the last time too. She f*cking belongs in Copenhagen! :furious:

I put up a poll. I am curious what my readers think about this subject, so please do vote. :smile:

Edit: It seems the poll isn't showing. :irked:

Shooting in Copenhagen

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Last year the police registered 20 incidents of shooting in Copenhagen. In 2009 there has already been 55 incidents.

The numbers of incidents exploded after the Hells Angels and their supporters in AK81 ganged up against some gangs of immigrants here. But it also seems like some people find it "normal" to carry a gun. I think it's outrageous. One: If they can't hit, then they shouldn't shoot. And two: Don't shoot at people unless you're sure of who it is you're firing at. :furious:

Here's the last months' incidents.

1st of March: Two masked foreigners pull a man out of a bar in the Amager district and forces him down on the pavement. Then they open the door to the bar and shoot ten times; 3 persons get hit, one of them dies. Then the men discuss whether to kill the man on the pavement or not, and decides to just shoot him in the knee and in the buttocks before they run away.
The men who got shot have no connections to gangs.

28th February: A 32 year old man, originally from the Faroe Islands, but living in Denmark, was driving to Norrebro district to go to a concert. He was looking for a parking place when two men on bicycles passed him and shot at the car five times. He was hit in the back, and is still in the hospital. Doctors say that he will probably survive. The man has no connection to any gangs.

27th February: A man originally from Iraq stands next to his car and talks with a friend in the Norrebro district. A car with three men pulls over and fires at him ten times. He dies from his wounds.

23rd February: The police makes a big weapon raid in the Norrebro district. Shortly after they left, a car drives off, and there is fired from it twice. Nobody gets hit. The police thinks that it's a demonstration of the no use of raids.

22nd February: Two men of foreign origin pass by the Hells Angels headquarter in Copenhagen and shoots against the building. Nobody gets hurt.

21st February: A Danish guy picked up his friend in the Norrebro district. When the friend entered the car, four foreigners tried to pull him back out of the car. He managed to escape, and the two Danes drove off, followed by a car with the four other men. During the car chase, the four men shoot five times against the two men. Luckily no one gets hit. This happens during the afternoon in the Frederiksberg district, and the two men have no connection to any gangs.

18th February: A man stops his car because of the red light signal in Frederiksberg district. A man runs to him, yanks his door open and points at him with a gun. The man reacts instinctively by stepping on the speeder, driving off fast. The man on the street shoots after him. Luckily nobody gets hurt. The man has no connection with gangs.

29th January: A man connected to the Hells Angels got shot by two foreigners while he was at a juice bar in central Copenhagen. The incident happens during the day where lots of people are around the biker.


The Night owls out of Norrebro

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The voluntary Night Owls organisation, which patrols the streets at night to help young people stay out of trouble, is pulling out of the Nørrebro district in Copenhagen over safety fears.

The National Night Owls Association says that this is the first time the organisation has had to give up on an area. It has simply become too dangerous. All of the shootings which are taking place have made it unsafe for people to walk around there, especially at night.

The Night Owls represent a visible presence on the streets at night in their identifiable yellow jackets and are there to offer advice or help to young people if they need it. It is not their aim to interfere in situations, but hoped that their presence would act as a deterrent to young people who otherwise might engage in violence or vandalism.

There are at least 7,000 active volunteers nationwide involved with 223 local Night Owls’ associations.
But unfortunately not on Norrebro anymore. :frown:

New Taxes

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The government announced it wants to increase charges on tobacco, candy and saturated fats as part of its tax reform in a bid to help us live healthier.

The increased duties are expected to fatten the state coffers by an extra 1.45 billion kroner (about 192 millions Eur).

The duty will be raised by 3 kroner for a pack of 20 cigarettes, (from circa 4.25 Eur to 4.65 Eur) while rolled tobacco will be levied by 120 kroner per kilogram. (15.9 Eur)

Ice cream, candy and chocolate will see a duty increase of 25 percent, while saturated fats in dairy products and oils will be levied at 20 kroner per kilo. (2.65 Eur)

Our health Minister welcomed the move and hopes it will help curb the prevalence of lifestyle illnesses like heart disease and diabetes, which can be caused by over consumption of sugars and fat.

The government wants that the level of smoking among Danes to be reduced, with almost a fourth of all deaths annually linked to smoking.

‘The increased prices will help people to quit smoking, and most importantly help young people to make the right decision never to being smoking to start with.’

Or at least that is what they think. I don't agree with them.

This initiative will give more money to the state coffers, but if you want kids to not start smoking, then you got to raise the price with more than just 0.40 Eur a pack. 40 Eurocents does not make a difference to youngsters. Double the price, and you will see the desired results.

As for the higher prices on food - I don't believe that method either. Lower the prices on healthy food instead, so it becomes more attractive to buy that. When I am buying for instance meat, they have 3 sorts of minced beef: One with 3-6 % fat in it, one with 10-12 % fat in it, and one with 18-20 % fat in it. And the low fat version is sometimes double the price as the high fat one. Reverse the prices and I am sure you'll see a big difference in the consumers' buying habits. :up:

But that's just my opinion of course! *goes to have milk and a home baked cookie*