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Indian police today sealed off parts off New Delhi and appealed for calm after the death of a woman gang-raped on a bus in the city. The woman was flown to Mount Elizabeth Hospital, Singapore for treatment 10 days after she was brutally attacked by six men who inserted an iron rod into her body on December 16. In response to the attack, the Indian government has promised to publicise photos, names and addresses of convicted rapists following days of widespread protests.


Six men charged with murder after death of horrifically mutilated gang-rape victim as family prepare to fly home with her body

Indian police today sealed off parts off New Delhi and appealed for calm after the death of a woman gang-raped on a bus in the city. The woman was flown to Mount Elizabeth Hospital, Singapore for treatment 10 days after she was brutally attacked by six men who inserted an iron rod into her body on December 16. In response to the attack, the Indian government has promised to publicise photos, names and addresses of convicted rapists following days of widespread protests.

Six men charged with murder after death of horrifically mutilated gang-rape victim as family prepare to fly home with her body

— 4 months ago
#india  #rape  #female  #women  #gender  #women´s rights 
Protests, violence in wake of gang rape in India: The brutal assault of a 23-year-old student who was riding a bus in New Delhi brought a wave of protests. She died early Saturday.
National uproar over young woman’s death triggers public conversation about rape

By Rama Lakshmi, Updated: Saturday, December 29, 9:47 AM




NEW DELHI — Hundreds of Indians poured into the streets of New Delhi on Saturday to mourn the death of a young woman who was gang raped nearly two weeks ago in an incident that triggered a national conversation about violence against women.
Police announced that the six men arrested in connection with the attack were charged with murder after the woman, who suffered a brain injury and other internal damage, died in a hospital in Singapore, where she had been taken for care.
The government, responding to rising anger, promised to put the trial on a fast track.
“We have already seen the emotions and energies this incident has generated,” Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said in a statement Saturday. “These are perfectly understandable reactions from a young India and an India that genuinely desires change.”
To prevent a repeat of last week’s massive protests, many streets in the capital were blocked by police and barricades and 10 Metro stations were shut down Saturday.
The protesters, many of whom wore black tape across their mouths and held candles, were not allowed to march on the central boulevard, called India Gate, as they did last week. Police boxed them into a tiny street in the heart of the city where they sat on the ground chanting slogans and singing songs.
In other parts of the city, a steady stream of mourners also marched silently along sidewalks and in neighborhood parks. As night fell, many gathered in cities across the country, holding candles in tribute to the victim.
“Every Indian girl has died with her today because we all felt so connected emotionally with her,” Anubhuti Shukla, 23-year-old communications intern, said as she texted her friends information about the candlelight vigil in New Delhi. “If we forget the issues after her death, it would be the real shame. She died, but she woke us up.”
The victim was returning home from a movie and had boarded a bus with a male friend on the night of Dec. 16 when four men, including the bus driver, allegedly beat them up and gang raped her. The victims were then thrown out of the bus and left to die.
On Saturday, the bus stop where the woman boarded the bus had been turned into an informal memorial, with dozens of people leaving messages and flowers.
Indian authorities have been bitterly criticized for not doing enough for women’s safety, and later for attacking the protesters with canes, tear gas shells and water cannons. Many doctors even questioned the government’s decision to send the victim to Singapore in such a fragile condition, with some saying it was a political decision and not a medical one, aimed at containing the street protests.
“She should have been stabilized first and then sent off to Singapore,” said Samiran Nundy, who heads the department of gastroenterology at Sir Gangaram Hospital in New Delhi. “The risks of transporting her in that condition outweighed any benefits that may accrue in a hospital in another country.”
Since the incident, Indians have heatedly discussed issues concerning the treatment of women, including violence, police attitudes, safety on public transportation, clothing and even Bollywood’s gender stereotypes.
Meanwhile, another rape case has also drawn widespread public. On Wednesday, a teenage rape victim committed suicide in the northern state of Punjab after police reportedly asked her demeaning questions when she went to the station to report.
“The police refused to file a complaint. Instead, they asked my sister such vulgar details, it was as if she was being raped all over again,” the victim’s sister, Charanjit Kaur, said in a telephone interview from her village. “There was no lady police officer, they were all men. My sister cried in front of them and kept asking, ‘Would you still ask such questions if I were your daughter?’ ”
Activists say that such cases illustrate why sexual violence largely goes unreported in India. In recent years, New Delhi has earned the title of being the “rape capital” of the nation. This year, more than 560 cases of rapes have been reported. But activists say that only a small fraction of sex crimes are reported in India.
“The biggest fear that a woman faces when she summons the courage to report rape or sexual harassment is that she will be judged and labeled as a morally loose woman by the police, by the medical officer, lawyer and judge,” said Suman Nalwa, deputy commissioner of police who heads the crime against women cell in New Delhi.
“Women prefer to stay silent, ignore and look away when they face sexual violence,” she said. “They know if they speak up, nobody would support. They internalize it to such an extent that it influences their life choices about where they will go to study, where they will work and when they will go out.”

Protests, violence in wake of gang rape in India: The brutal assault of a 23-year-old student who was riding a bus in New Delhi brought a wave of protests. She died early Saturday.

National uproar over young woman’s death triggers public conversation about rape

NEW DELHI — Hundreds of Indians poured into the streets of New Delhi on Saturday to mourn the death of a young woman who was gang raped nearly two weeks ago in an incident that triggered a national conversation about violence against women.

Police announced that the six men arrested in connection with the attack were charged with murder after the woman, who suffered a brain injury and other internal damage, died in a hospital in Singapore, where she had been taken for care.

The government, responding to rising anger, promised to put the trial on a fast track.

“We have already seen the emotions and energies this incident has generated,” Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said in a statement Saturday. “These are perfectly understandable reactions from a young India and an India that genuinely desires change.”

To prevent a repeat of last week’s massive protests, many streets in the capital were blocked by police and barricades and 10 Metro stations were shut down Saturday.

The protesters, many of whom wore black tape across their mouths and held candles, were not allowed to march on the central boulevard, called India Gate, as they did last week. Police boxed them into a tiny street in the heart of the city where they sat on the ground chanting slogans and singing songs.

In other parts of the city, a steady stream of mourners also marched silently along sidewalks and in neighborhood parks. As night fell, many gathered in cities across the country, holding candles in tribute to the victim.

“Every Indian girl has died with her today because we all felt so connected emotionally with her,” Anubhuti Shukla, 23-year-old communications intern, said as she texted her friends information about the candlelight vigil in New Delhi. “If we forget the issues after her death, it would be the real shame. She died, but she woke us up.”

The victim was returning home from a movie and had boarded a bus with a male friend on the night of Dec. 16 when four men, including the bus driver, allegedly beat them up and gang raped her. The victims were then thrown out of the bus and left to die.

On Saturday, the bus stop where the woman boarded the bus had been turned into an informal memorial, with dozens of people leaving messages and flowers.

Indian authorities have been bitterly criticized for not doing enough for women’s safety, and later for attacking the protesters with canes, tear gas shells and water cannons. Many doctors even questioned the government’s decision to send the victim to Singapore in such a fragile condition, with some saying it was a political decision and not a medical one, aimed at containing the street protests.

“She should have been stabilized first and then sent off to Singapore,” said Samiran Nundy, who heads the department of gastroenterology at Sir Gangaram Hospital in New Delhi. “The risks of transporting her in that condition outweighed any benefits that may accrue in a hospital in another country.”

Since the incident, Indians have heatedly discussed issues concerning the treatment of women, including violence, police attitudes, safety on public transportation, clothing and even Bollywood’s gender stereotypes.

Meanwhile, another rape case has also drawn widespread public. On Wednesday, a teenage rape victim committed suicide in the northern state of Punjab after police reportedly asked her demeaning questions when she went to the station to report.

“The police refused to file a complaint. Instead, they asked my sister such vulgar details, it was as if she was being raped all over again,” the victim’s sister, Charanjit Kaur, said in a telephone interview from her village. “There was no lady police officer, they were all men. My sister cried in front of them and kept asking, ‘Would you still ask such questions if I were your daughter?’ ”

Activists say that such cases illustrate why sexual violence largely goes unreported in India. In recent years, New Delhi has earned the title of being the “rape capital” of the nation. This year, more than 560 cases of rapes have been reported. But activists say that only a small fraction of sex crimes are reported in India.

“The biggest fear that a woman faces when she summons the courage to report rape or sexual harassment is that she will be judged and labeled as a morally loose woman by the police, by the medical officer, lawyer and judge,” said Suman Nalwa, deputy commissioner of police who heads the crime against women cell in New Delhi.

“Women prefer to stay silent, ignore and look away when they face sexual violence,” she said. “They know if they speak up, nobody would support. They internalize it to such an extent that it influences their life choices about where they will go to study, where they will work and when they will go out.”

— 4 months ago with 5 notes
#india  #women  #rape  #women´s rights  #gender 

Kim Hee-Chul/European Pressphoto Agency
Park Geun-hye waved to supporters after she was declared the winner of the presidential election on Wednesday in Seoul.

Daughter of Dictator Wins South Korea Presidency
By CHOE SANG-HUN
Published: December 19, 2012
SEOUL, South Korea — Park Geun-hye, the daughter of South Korea’s longest-ruling dictator, was elected president on Wednesday, the first woman to win the post.
Voters appeared to prefer stability and “motherly” leadership over her opponent’s calls for radical change in how the country addresses economic inequality and military threats from North Korea.
With nearly 96 percent of the votes counted, according to the National Election Commission, Ms. Park had won 51.64 percent of the vote compared with 47.93 percent for Moon Jae-in, a former human rights lawyer who was once imprisoned for opposing her father’s authoritarian rule. With her lead seen as insurmountable, Mr. Moon conceded defeat.
“This is the victory of the people,” Ms. Park told her cheering supporters, who gathered in freezing weather in downtown Seoul,. “This is a victory for the people’s wish to overcome crises and revive the economy.”
The result will not be officially confirmed until Thursday.
The election of Ms. Park, 60, a five-term lawmaker and the candidate of President Lee Myung-bak’s governing Saenuri Party, is a milestone for a society that is still heavily male-dominated despite the inroads women have made in business and government in recent years.
Ms. Park was also the first child of a past president to hold the country’s highest office. The rule of her father, Park Chung-hee, from 1961 to 1979 left a legacy of economic vibrancy and political repression that still divides the country.
Under the incumbent, Mr. Lee, anti-establishment sentiment deepened in the country, especially among younger voters, as job opportunities dwindled, political corruption persisted and tensions with North Korea intensified. But a majority of voters evidently did not see a solution to those problems in the opposition Democratic United Party, which is mired in infighting. Critics say the party is too soft on North Korea and too radical in its plans to rein in the country’s huge family-controlled business conglomerates, whose unruly expansion in recent years is blamed for aggravating the gap between rich and poor, political analysts said.
Mr. Moon offered congratulations to Ms. Park and said, “I am sorry for those who supported me.”
Throughout the campaign, Ms. Park, who has never married, said that her sex would be an asset in leading the nation in difficult times.
“I have no family to take care of,” she said. “I have no child to inherit my properties. You, the people, are my only family, and to make you happy is the reason I do politics. And if elected, I would govern like a mother dedicated to her family.”
For Ms. Park, her victory on her second try — she tried for her party’s nomination in 2007 but lost to Mr. Lee — redeemed her family’s tragic history.Her mother, Yuk Young-soo, was killed by a Communist agent in 1974 when Ms. Park was 22 and a student in Paris; she abandoned her studies to return to Seoul and serve as acting first lady. Five years later, her father was assassinated by his disgruntled spy chief. Her reaction to the news was widely quoted: “Is everything all right along the border with North Korea?”
After years out of public view as the country rapidly democratized and her father was vilified as a dictator, Ms. Park returned to political life in 1998 with a vow to “save the country,” which at the time was struggling with the Asian financial crisis. Voters who remembered her father’s charismatic leadership elected her to a seat in parliament by a landslide margin.
She has since built a reputation as a principled and steely leader, rallying conservatives to unlikely victories even at times when it was steeped corruption scandals. She cited the former British Prime Minster Margaret Thatcher and Queen Elizabeth I as her role models.“She saved her country from the verge of bankruptcy and turned it into a nation where the sun never set,” Ms. Park said during a recent speech of the queen who ruled England from 1558 to 1603, whose loss of parents to tragedy she said she sympathized with. “Because she knew misfortune, she knew how to care for others.”
When asked why she was not married, she often said she was “married” to the country.
“Her image among her supporters is a stable leader, calm during crises, strong and dependable. To them, she is a woman yet not a woman,” said Choi Jin, head of the Institute of Presidential Leadership. “Principle, trust and stability are key words in her rhetoric. Given the torturous life experience she went through, she is not seen as one pushing for radical reform but as a leader who prefers gradual change.”
Kim Hee-Chul/European Pressphoto Agency

Park Geun-hye waved to supporters after she was declared the winner of the presidential election on Wednesday in Seoul.

Daughter of Dictator Wins South Korea Presidency

SEOUL, South Korea — Park Geun-hye, the daughter of South Korea’s longest-ruling dictator, was elected president on Wednesday, the first woman to win the post.

Voters appeared to prefer stability and “motherly” leadership over her opponent’s calls for radical change in how the country addresses economic inequality and military threats from North Korea.

With nearly 96 percent of the votes counted, according to the National Election Commission, Ms. Park had won 51.64 percent of the vote compared with 47.93 percent for Moon Jae-in, a former human rights lawyer who was once imprisoned for opposing her father’s authoritarian rule. With her lead seen as insurmountable, Mr. Moon conceded defeat.

“This is the victory of the people,” Ms. Park told her cheering supporters, who gathered in freezing weather in downtown Seoul,. “This is a victory for the people’s wish to overcome crises and revive the economy.”

The result will not be officially confirmed until Thursday.

The election of Ms. Park, 60, a five-term lawmaker and the candidate of President Lee Myung-bak’s governing Saenuri Party, is a milestone for a society that is still heavily male-dominated despite the inroads women have made in business and government in recent years.

Ms. Park was also the first child of a past president to hold the country’s highest office. The rule of her father, Park Chung-hee, from 1961 to 1979 left a legacy of economic vibrancy and political repression that still divides the country.

Under the incumbent, Mr. Lee, anti-establishment sentiment deepened in the country, especially among younger voters, as job opportunities dwindled, political corruption persisted and tensions with North Korea intensified. But a majority of voters evidently did not see a solution to those problems in the opposition Democratic United Party, which is mired in infighting. Critics say the party is too soft on North Korea and too radical in its plans to rein in the country’s huge family-controlled business conglomerates, whose unruly expansion in recent years is blamed for aggravating the gap between rich and poor, political analysts said.

Mr. Moon offered congratulations to Ms. Park and said, “I am sorry for those who supported me.”

Throughout the campaign, Ms. Park, who has never married, said that her sex would be an asset in leading the nation in difficult times.

“I have no family to take care of,” she said. “I have no child to inherit my properties. You, the people, are my only family, and to make you happy is the reason I do politics. And if elected, I would govern like a mother dedicated to her family.”

For Ms. Park, her victory on her second try — she tried for her party’s nomination in 2007 but lost to Mr. Lee — redeemed her family’s tragic history.Her mother, Yuk Young-soo, was killed by a Communist agent in 1974 when Ms. Park was 22 and a student in Paris; she abandoned her studies to return to Seoul and serve as acting first lady. Five years later, her father was assassinated by his disgruntled spy chief. Her reaction to the news was widely quoted: “Is everything all right along the border with North Korea?”

After years out of public view as the country rapidly democratized and her father was vilified as a dictator, Ms. Park returned to political life in 1998 with a vow to “save the country,” which at the time was struggling with the Asian financial crisis. Voters who remembered her father’s charismatic leadership elected her to a seat in parliament by a landslide margin.

She has since built a reputation as a principled and steely leader, rallying conservatives to unlikely victories even at times when it was steeped corruption scandals. She cited the former British Prime Minster Margaret Thatcher and Queen Elizabeth I as her role models.“She saved her country from the verge of bankruptcy and turned it into a nation where the sun never set,” Ms. Park said during a recent speech of the queen who ruled England from 1558 to 1603, whose loss of parents to tragedy she said she sympathized with. “Because she knew misfortune, she knew how to care for others.”

When asked why she was not married, she often said she was “married” to the country.

“Her image among her supporters is a stable leader, calm during crises, strong and dependable. To them, she is a woman yet not a woman,” said Choi Jin, head of the Institute of Presidential Leadership. “Principle, trust and stability are key words in her rhetoric. Given the torturous life experience she went through, she is not seen as one pushing for radical reform but as a leader who prefers gradual change.”

— 5 months ago
#south korea  #women  #politics  #korea 
Ringing the changes … Chilean student rebel Camila Vallejo. Photograph: Linda Nylind for the Guardian

Chilean rebel Camila Vallejo: ‘The problem is bigger – it’s structural’
Her call for free education in Chile led to a nationwideshutdown last year. Now student leader Camila Vallejo is aiming higher - she wants a social revolution

Patrick Kingsley

The Guardian, Tuesday 20 November 2012 19.00 GMT

I almost didn’t meet Camila Vallejo. She missed her flight from Chile, and by the time the allotted hour arrived, she was still 7,000 miles away in Santiago. To my surprise, I got a call the next day. Could we reschedule? Vallejo had charmed her way on to another plane, and was already scudding across the Atlantic. “If she can shut down a city,” mused the press officer for the National Union of Students, whose conference for global student leaders Vallejo was due to address, “she can blag some air travel too.”
In 2011, that is what 24-year-old Vallejo sort of did. The then leader of Chile’s most prominent student union, Vallejo – a would-be geographer – helped inspire a wave of protests that stopped the country in its tracks.
Dozens of universities and hundreds of schools were occupied for months. Entire academic years had to be cancelled. Up to 200,000 students marched through Santiago every week, each a mini-carnival. The police response was often brutal: tear-gas and water cannon. There were even cases, Vallejo claims, “of torture, of sexual abuse”. Police shot one boy dead. Vallejo (pronounced Va-yay-ho) was herself ambushed with tear-gas after a student meeting. “My whole body was burning,” shehas said: “it was brutal.”
These weren’t like the student protests occurring simultaneously in Britain: they were more radical, far more popular, and demonstrably more effective. At its height in 2011, the movement’s approval ratings topped 70%. It forced several concessions from the Chilean government, and ousted two ministers from office. And at its centre was Vallejo, “a Botticelli beauty” – in the words of the novelist Francisco Goldman – who at 23 became both a nose-ringed national treasure and a megastar of the international left.
When she visited Mexico in June, crowds stood in the rain to see her. “I love you!” some of them cried, handing her flowers. “Camila Vallejo,”wrote Alex Kapranos of Franz Ferdinand, one of her half-million Twitter followers: “I have a crush.”
It feels strange to see her in a more becalmed context. We meet on a grey day in a conference room at the University of East London, buried among the scrapyards and dual-carriageways of the Docklands. Outside, aeroplanes screech across the runway opposite every other minute. Inside, three-dozen jetlagged student leaders from across the globe – drained by two days of solid conferencing – slide in sleepily, some several minutes late for her speech. Vallejo calmly waits at the back. It’s a strange place to find a revolutionary.
What is she fighting for? Free education, first and foremost. According to the New York Times, Chile has proportionally the world’s most expensive university education: degrees cost $3,400 a year, while Chile’s average annual salary is only $8,500. More shockingly still, only 40% of teenagers get free high school classes. “The choice people have is between having debt,” Vallejo tells me later, “or not having an education.”
But Vallejo’s demands go further. Her generation is pushing for a wider reimagining of Chilean neoliberal society – a society that they argue has not changed enough since the days of Augusto Pinochet, and which has created one of the world’s largest gaps between rich and poor.
“We realised the problem was bigger, the problem was structural,” Vallejo tells me, or rather I’m told she tells me by her translator Rossana Leal, a Chilean who grew up in Scotland after her family fled the Pinochet regime. I don’t speak Spanish, and Vallejo doesn’t speak English, so our every utterance must pass through the stoic Leal. Everything gets confused, and I don’t feel I’m meeting the Vallejo whose fluent and arresting presence you can find so easily on YouTube. We speak for 75 minutes, but cover what would have taken 15 in Spanish.
Still, we give it a go. “The debate became about the link between education and the bigger economic model in Chile,” says Vallejo, explaining how the Chilean movement became so radical.
The message, repeated in her speech, seems to jar with her surroundings. Her presentation is sandwiched by a talk from Lord Michael Bates, a Conservative who voted for fees, and another from Luis Juste, a banker turned corporate responsibility guru at Santander. So how does it feel to be squeezed between a banker and a Tory baron? And how much ground can Vallejo – a communist – really share with the centre-left NUS? Out of pragmatism, the NUS favours refashioning fees, rather than culling them completely, and its leaders have not always been particularly supportive of creative protest.
“It makes it much more relevant to be here,” says Vallejo, who gives a wry smile once Leal’s translation filters through. “It’s important not to only talk to people who are convinced. We want to enable a continuous debate about what’s happening with education.”
The Chilean movement only became so radical through a similarly lengthy debate, she says. “2011 was the product of 10 years of debate,” adds Paul Floor Pilquil, Vallejo’s colleague at the University of Chile student union (Fech). A decade ago, he says, Chile’s main student bodies were as bogged down in the smaller issues as they are now in Britain. “But then we started to connect all the specific problems.”
Pilquil’s intervention is significant not just for what he’s saying, but that he’s saying it at all. The interview was supposed to be a one-on-one with Vallejo, but – for diplomatic reasons – Pilquil has to be here too. Why? Because Vallejo is no longer the Fech president. She was ousted last winter by a law student, Gabriel Boric – and is now only his deputy. As such, she can’t be seen to hog the limelight.
Nine months on, Vallejo laughs off the loss. It was almost a blessing, she claims: “The role of the president is very administrative. They have to see how the money is spent.”
The presidency had been draining in other ways. Vallejo received death threats that were serious enough for her parents – one-time opponents of Pinochet who now run an air-conditioning business – to persuade her to move home for her own safety. “Kill the bitch,” a later-sacked government official tweeted, in a riff on a quote from Pinochet.
Vallejo lost the presidency in part because she was seen to be too prepared to engage with institutional hierarchies. She’s a communist, for a start, she wants to form partnerships with centre-left parties, and she hasn’t ruled out running for parliament.
“We’re talking about the now,” says Vallejo. “We’re talking about taking our proposals to the elections next year.”
It’s a position that puts her at odds not just with other Chilean students, but with leftwing ideas on the rise in the rest of the world too. The Occupy movement – with which the Chilean student occupations are sometimes lumped – is seen as mainly anti-authoritarian; it rejects parliamentary democracy, and there’s also clear water between it and the old-school workers’ left. By contrast, Vallejo can see the logic in running for office.
Why? It’s cultural, says Vallejo. Salvador Allende, the Marxist president deposed by Pinochet’s 1973 coup, “is one of the most important political figures I admire”. Allende reached the presidency through democratic elections, which in Vallejo’s mind shows how the electoral system can be used for hard-left ends.
Some of her contemporaries disagree, but Vallejo doesn’t necessarily see this as a bad thing: “I’m not going to deny we don’t have different political views, [and] we don’t know if this debate is ever going to find a solution,” says Vallejo, as another jet screeches to a halt at the nearby City airport. “But we know the debate itself is important.”
It’s an oddly low-key statement to end on, but then this has been an odd morning: one grey day in the Docklands, communist Camila Vallejo has blagged a flight halfway round the world to share a platform with Conservative Michael Bates.

Ringing the changes … Chilean student rebel Camila Vallejo. Photograph: Linda Nylind for the Guardian


Chilean rebel Camila Vallejo: ‘The problem is bigger – it’s structural’

Her call for free education in Chile led to a nationwideshutdown last year. Now student leader Camila Vallejo is aiming higher - she wants a social revolution

I almost didn’t meet Camila Vallejo. She missed her flight from Chile, and by the time the allotted hour arrived, she was still 7,000 miles away in Santiago. To my surprise, I got a call the next day. Could we reschedule? Vallejo had charmed her way on to another plane, and was already scudding across the Atlantic. “If she can shut down a city,” mused the press officer for the National Union of Students, whose conference for global student leaders Vallejo was due to address, “she can blag some air travel too.”

In 2011, that is what 24-year-old Vallejo sort of did. The then leader of Chile’s most prominent student union, Vallejo – a would-be geographer – helped inspire a wave of protests that stopped the country in its tracks.

Dozens of universities and hundreds of schools were occupied for months. Entire academic years had to be cancelled. Up to 200,000 students marched through Santiago every week, each a mini-carnival. The police response was often brutal: tear-gas and water cannon. There were even cases, Vallejo claims, “of torture, of sexual abuse”. Police shot one boy dead. Vallejo (pronounced Va-yay-ho) was herself ambushed with tear-gas after a student meeting. “My whole body was burning,” shehas said: “it was brutal.”

These weren’t like the student protests occurring simultaneously in Britain: they were more radical, far more popular, and demonstrably more effective. At its height in 2011, the movement’s approval ratings topped 70%. It forced several concessions from the Chilean government, and ousted two ministers from office. And at its centre was Vallejo, “a Botticelli beauty” – in the words of the novelist Francisco Goldman – who at 23 became both a nose-ringed national treasure and a megastar of the international left.

When she visited Mexico in June, crowds stood in the rain to see her. “I love you!” some of them cried, handing her flowers. “Camila Vallejo,”wrote Alex Kapranos of Franz Ferdinand, one of her half-million Twitter followers: “I have a crush.”

It feels strange to see her in a more becalmed context. We meet on a grey day in a conference room at the University of East London, buried among the scrapyards and dual-carriageways of the Docklands. Outside, aeroplanes screech across the runway opposite every other minute. Inside, three-dozen jetlagged student leaders from across the globe – drained by two days of solid conferencing – slide in sleepily, some several minutes late for her speech. Vallejo calmly waits at the back. It’s a strange place to find a revolutionary.

What is she fighting for? Free education, first and foremost. According to the New York Times, Chile has proportionally the world’s most expensive university education: degrees cost $3,400 a year, while Chile’s average annual salary is only $8,500. More shockingly still, only 40% of teenagers get free high school classes. “The choice people have is between having debt,” Vallejo tells me later, “or not having an education.”

But Vallejo’s demands go further. Her generation is pushing for a wider reimagining of Chilean neoliberal society – a society that they argue has not changed enough since the days of Augusto Pinochet, and which has created one of the world’s largest gaps between rich and poor.

“We realised the problem was bigger, the problem was structural,” Vallejo tells me, or rather I’m told she tells me by her translator Rossana Leal, a Chilean who grew up in Scotland after her family fled the Pinochet regime. I don’t speak Spanish, and Vallejo doesn’t speak English, so our every utterance must pass through the stoic Leal. Everything gets confused, and I don’t feel I’m meeting the Vallejo whose fluent and arresting presence you can find so easily on YouTube. We speak for 75 minutes, but cover what would have taken 15 in Spanish.

Still, we give it a go. “The debate became about the link between education and the bigger economic model in Chile,” says Vallejo, explaining how the Chilean movement became so radical.

The message, repeated in her speech, seems to jar with her surroundings. Her presentation is sandwiched by a talk from Lord Michael Bates, a Conservative who voted for fees, and another from Luis Juste, a banker turned corporate responsibility guru at Santander. So how does it feel to be squeezed between a banker and a Tory baron? And how much ground can Vallejo – a communist – really share with the centre-left NUS? Out of pragmatism, the NUS favours refashioning fees, rather than culling them completely, and its leaders have not always been particularly supportive of creative protest.

“It makes it much more relevant to be here,” says Vallejo, who gives a wry smile once Leal’s translation filters through. “It’s important not to only talk to people who are convinced. We want to enable a continuous debate about what’s happening with education.”

The Chilean movement only became so radical through a similarly lengthy debate, she says. “2011 was the product of 10 years of debate,” adds Paul Floor Pilquil, Vallejo’s colleague at the University of Chile student union (Fech). A decade ago, he says, Chile’s main student bodies were as bogged down in the smaller issues as they are now in Britain. “But then we started to connect all the specific problems.”

Pilquil’s intervention is significant not just for what he’s saying, but that he’s saying it at all. The interview was supposed to be a one-on-one with Vallejo, but – for diplomatic reasons – Pilquil has to be here too. Why? Because Vallejo is no longer the Fech president. She was ousted last winter by a law student, Gabriel Boric – and is now only his deputy. As such, she can’t be seen to hog the limelight.

Nine months on, Vallejo laughs off the loss. It was almost a blessing, she claims: “The role of the president is very administrative. They have to see how the money is spent.”

The presidency had been draining in other ways. Vallejo received death threats that were serious enough for her parents – one-time opponents of Pinochet who now run an air-conditioning business – to persuade her to move home for her own safety. “Kill the bitch,” a later-sacked government official tweeted, in a riff on a quote from Pinochet.

Vallejo lost the presidency in part because she was seen to be too prepared to engage with institutional hierarchies. She’s a communist, for a start, she wants to form partnerships with centre-left parties, and she hasn’t ruled out running for parliament.

“We’re talking about the now,” says Vallejo. “We’re talking about taking our proposals to the elections next year.”

It’s a position that puts her at odds not just with other Chilean students, but with leftwing ideas on the rise in the rest of the world too. The Occupy movement – with which the Chilean student occupations are sometimes lumped – is seen as mainly anti-authoritarian; it rejects parliamentary democracy, and there’s also clear water between it and the old-school workers’ left. By contrast, Vallejo can see the logic in running for office.

Why? It’s cultural, says Vallejo. Salvador Allende, the Marxist president deposed by Pinochet’s 1973 coup, “is one of the most important political figures I admire”. Allende reached the presidency through democratic elections, which in Vallejo’s mind shows how the electoral system can be used for hard-left ends.

Some of her contemporaries disagree, but Vallejo doesn’t necessarily see this as a bad thing: “I’m not going to deny we don’t have different political views, [and] we don’t know if this debate is ever going to find a solution,” says Vallejo, as another jet screeches to a halt at the nearby City airport. “But we know the debate itself is important.”

It’s an oddly low-key statement to end on, but then this has been an odd morning: one grey day in the Docklands, communist Camila Vallejo has blagged a flight halfway round the world to share a platform with Conservative Michael Bates.


— 5 months ago with 11 notes
#personalities  #camila vallejo  #women  #chile 
After being shot in the brain for opposing the Taliban, the inspiring Pakistani teenager is starting to recover - and began by thanking her supporters for their ‘inspiring’ well-wishes. Her message came as thousands of people have called for her to be awarded a Nobel Peace Prize for her demand for education for women in Pakistan, a right that the terrorists opposes.

Reading from her hospital bedside, Taliban-shooting victim Malala, 15, defies the extremists who oppose female education

Thousands demand teenager who was shot for campaigning for education is awarded Nobel Peace Prize
As she recovers in Birmingham’s Queen Elizabeth’s Hospital, the brave schoolgirl reads cards from well-wishers
Malala is ‘amazed’ at how many people care about her health 
Teenager cheated death after a bullet grazed her brain and hit her neck

After being shot in the brain for opposing the Taliban, the inspiring Pakistani teenager is starting to recover - and began by thanking her supporters for their ‘inspiring’ well-wishes. Her message came as thousands of people have called for her to be awarded a Nobel Peace Prize for her demand for education for women in Pakistan, a right that the terrorists opposes.


Reading from her hospital bedside, Taliban-shooting victim Malala, 15, defies the extremists who oppose female education

  • Thousands demand teenager who was shot for campaigning for education is awarded Nobel Peace Prize
  • As she recovers in Birmingham’s Queen Elizabeth’s Hospital, the brave schoolgirl reads cards from well-wishers
  • Malala is ‘amazed’ at how many people care about her health 
  • Teenager cheated death after a bullet grazed her brain and hit her neck




— 6 months ago with 5 notes
#women  #female  #female education  #women's rights  #feminism  #gender 
The FEOs work to build relationships with Afghan women in some of the most dangerous parts of Helmand. As interaction between women and male soldiers is strictly forbidden in these small communities, the FEOs are drawn from female volunteers from across the army who receive specialist cultural and language training to enable them to carry out their role.Picture: Alison Baskerville
Women in the British Army in Afghanistan photographed by Alison Baskerville

The FEOs work to build relationships with Afghan women in some of the most dangerous parts of Helmand. As interaction between women and male soldiers is strictly forbidden in these small communities, the FEOs are drawn from female volunteers from across the army who receive specialist cultural and language training to enable them to carry out their role.Picture: Alison Baskerville

Women in the British Army in Afghanistan photographed by Alison Baskerville

— 6 months ago with 6 notes
#military  #women soldiers  #women  #female soldier 

1) Swat valley,Pakistan (Source: The New York Times); 2) On Tuesday, a Taliban gunman in Mingora, Pakistan, boarded a bus and shot three girls. His main target was 14-year-old Malala Yousufzai, who had blogged about the terrors of life under the Taliban’s extremist rule and advocated girls’ education; 3) Three years ago, when the Taliban still ruled over the Swat Valley, they warned her to stop writing the blog. In December 2011, when Yousufzai was awarded Pakistan’s first National Youth Peace Prize, Ahasnullah Ahsan, a spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban, announced that she was on the extremists’ hit list. After this week’s attack, the same spokesman told reporters that Yousufzai would remain a target even if she survives; 4) Pakistan, Swat Valley map (Source The New York Times)

Schoolgirl ShootingPakistanis Fear Resurgent Taliban in Swat Valley

By Hasnain Kazim in Islamabad

Tuesday’s shooting of a 14-year-old advocate of girls’ education in Pakistan has shocked and appalled the world. Doctors say Malala Yousufzai will most likely survive the attack, but it has still left Pakistanis outraged — and afraid that a return of the Taliban’s fundamentalist rule might lie ahead.

— 7 months ago with 2 notes
#asia  #pakistan  #girls  #female  #women  #female education  #taliban 
In hospital in Peshawar, Shazia Ramzan said Malala had told classmates she might be a target but refused to hide from the Taliban. She also described the callous way the gunman shot Malala in the head and then turned his gun on her and another of Malala’s classmates before fleeing.

We WILL defy the Taliban and go back to school, says friend shot with brave Malala

In hospital in Peshawar, Shazia Ramzan said Malala had told classmates she might be a target but refused to hide from the Taliban. She also described the callous way the gunman shot Malala in the head and then turned his gun on her and another of Malala’s classmates before fleeing.

We WILL defy the Taliban and go back to school, says friend shot with brave Malala

— 7 months ago with 1 note
#gender  #women  #female education  #taliban 
The effects were seen regardless of whether regular or decaffeinated coffee was consumed
Six cups of coffee a day ‘cuts risk of both womb and prostate cancer’
By ROGER DOBSON

Women who drink four to six cups of coffee a day are less likely to suffer from womb cancer, while men who drink this amount are less likely to suffer prostate cancer, according to a study using 117,000 volunteers.
The effects were seen regardless of whether they drank regular or decaffeinated coffee, suggesting the effects are not linked to caffeine.
Although many people limit the amount of coffee they consume because it can cause a spike in blood pressure, recent studies suggest the drink may also offer health benefits.
Regular coffee drinkers also appear to have a lower risk of Type-2 diabetes, gallstones, colon cancer and even Parkinson’s disease.
In the latest research, a team from Harvard University looked at the drinking habits of 67,000 women whose health had been tracked for more than 20 years.
They found those who drank four or more cups a day reduced their risk of endometrial cancer by 25 per cent, compared with those who drank less than one cup a day. 
A similar effect was found for decaffeinated coffee, but tea consumption had no impact. The researchers then looked at coffee intake among a group of 50,000 men over a 20-year period. 
The results showed that those who drank six or more cups had an 18 per cent lower risk of suffering prostate cancer and a 60 per cent lower risk of developing its most deadly form.

The effects were seen regardless of whether regular or decaffeinated coffee was consumed

Six cups of coffee a day ‘cuts risk of both womb and prostate cancer’

By ROGER DOBSON


Women who drink four to six cups of coffee a day are less likely to suffer from womb cancer, while men who drink this amount are less likely to suffer prostate cancer, according to a study using 117,000 volunteers.

The effects were seen regardless of whether they drank regular or decaffeinated coffee, suggesting the effects are not linked to caffeine.

Although many people limit the amount of coffee they consume because it can cause a spike in blood pressure, recent studies suggest the drink may also offer health benefits.

Regular coffee drinkers also appear to have a lower risk of Type-2 diabetes, gallstones, colon cancer and even Parkinson’s disease.

In the latest research, a team from Harvard University looked at the drinking habits of 67,000 women whose health had been tracked for more than 20 years.

They found those who drank four or more cups a day reduced their risk of endometrial cancer by 25 per cent, compared with those who drank less than one cup a day. 

A similar effect was found for decaffeinated coffee, but tea consumption had no impact. The researchers then looked at coffee intake among a group of 50,000 men over a 20-year period. 

The results showed that those who drank six or more cups had an 18 per cent lower risk of suffering prostate cancer and a 60 per cent lower risk of developing its most deadly form.





— 7 months ago with 4 notes
#health  #nutrition  #coffee  #decaffeinated coffee  #women  #men 

1) Recovery: Maria De Villota appears on the front of Spain’s version of HELLO!, 2) Speed queen: Maria De Villota before the crash


‘I had 140 stitches in my face and they looked like boat rope. I was terrified.’ Female F1 driver De Villota relives horror smash in which she lost an eye

Maria de Villota was a woman on a mission when she entered the testosterone-fuelled world of Formula One — to rub shoulders with Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso in motor racing’s big time.

Now the Spanish F1 test driver is just grateful she has won her toughest race — to still be alive.

De Villota, 32, lost her right eye, suffered a fractured skull and severe facial injuries after crashing into the loading ramp of a transporter moments after completing her first straight-line test for F1 team Marussia  at Duxford Aerodrome, in Cambridgeshire, on July 3.

She was taken to Addenbrooke’s Hospital and, speaking for the first time about the horrific crash to Spanish magazine Hola, De Villota recalls the horror of looking into a mirror.



She said: ‘In the beginning they  were covering my eye so I couldn’t see it. The first time that I looked in the mirror I had 104 black stitches in my face that looked like they had been stitched with maritime rope and I had lost my right eye. It left me terrified.’ 

De Villota, who now wears an eye patch, added: ‘I remember everything — even the moment of the impact. When I woke up in  hospital everyone was around me and they didn’t even know if I was going to speak, or how I was going to speak. I started speaking in English.

‘Then my dad said, “Please, Maria, speak Spanish, because your mother is missing half the things you’re saying”.’ 

Although unwilling to speak about details of the crash, De Villota did reveal the traumatic experience had given her a new perspective on life.

‘Even now that I only have one eye, maybe I see more things than before,’ she said. ‘My life was completely against the clock, a fight against the stopwatch.


‘Now I see you have to stop and measure things in a different way. Now it is not about tenths of a  second on a stopwatch, rather those small moments. My new life goes beyond my dreams because my dream was Formula One and I achieved it. I’m a driver, I feel like a driver. I have won this race because I am alive.’ 

Marussia say the investigation into the causes of the crash is closed after hearing nothing further from the Health and Safety Executive following their probe.

De Villota remains under contract to the team and their relationship is good despite reports claiming her family had been upset by Marussia’s previous assertion their own probe had revealed no fault on the car,  leading to speculation they were blaming her for the crash.

‘I felt deeply loved, highly respected by my colleagues and everybody in the world of motorsport,’ De Villota said.


She will undergo two further reconstructive operations although the worst of the surgery is behind her.

But De Villota revealed there have been other lasting effects. ‘I have headaches that they don’t know how long will last — maybe years. I have to control my efforts a lot because of the cranial pressure. I have also lost smell, and taste, which is linked to smell. Now I like things with a very strong taste.’ 

She has not given up hope of racing again in another category other than F1 and is also keen to work on improving safety in the sport.

Whatever the future holds, her courageous approach to life is nothing short of inspirational.




To read the full interview with Maria, pick up a copy of next week’s HELLO!, on sale from Monday October 15 - click here for more details




— 7 months ago with 5 notes
#de villota  #f1  #maria de villota  #sports  #strong women  #women  #f1 female 
Kevin Mazur/WireImage/Getty Images; Jezebel; YouTube

Culture of Shaming Women Must End
From Rihanna’s love life to a TV anchor’s weight, women are scrutinized for their so-called flaws.
By: Nsenga K. Burton, Ph.D. | Posted: October 9, 2012 at 12:31 AM



(The Root) — The “flaws” of women are often used as fodder for jokes, gossip and plain old bullying and mean-spiritedness. Many people — including women — are socialized to embarrass, humiliate and highlight the perceived flaws of women on a regular basis.
That highlighting can happen under the guise of entertainment (insert almost any reality show featuring women), news or gossip (see your local church or temple or Kristen Stewart).Women are often shamed for things they can control (affairs with married partners or poor decision-making) and sometimes for things that are beyond their control (health issues, religious or spiritual practices and mental illness).
It is the latter that most interests me — the idea that there are no boundaries when it comes to publicly shaming women, despite what issues they may be facing. With the pervasiveness of the Web, this public shaming has moved beyond neighborhoods and institutions — the real world, if you will — and has landed squarely at our fingertips by way of laptops, cellphones and tablet devices, taking the public shaming of women to a different level.
Not surprisingly, a lot of the shaming of women has to do with physical appearance, since this is the way that women are often measured in society and, quite honestly, it is the way that many of us measure our self-worth. Despite what might be going on underneath (physical- or mental-health issues, religious beliefs or ideologies that choose not to privilege physical appearance over other aspects of the body), we cling to the culture of shaming women around what they look like, as opposed to who they are as whole people.
One doesn’t have to look far to find examples. Take, for instance, the news story about a Web user with the e-handle “European_Douchebag,” who posted a photo on Reddit of a Sikh woman with a visible beard standing in line, minding her own business at a restaurant. The caption read: “I’m not sure what to conclude from this.” What we can conclude is that the user, who posted the Sikh woman’s photowithout her permission, wanted to embarrass or shame her for having “excessive facial hair,” according to dominant beauty standards.
Cultural critic-comedian W. Kamau Bell has done a fantastic job of showing us how little Americans know about the Sikh community, so it is no surprise that the user obviously did not know that Sikhs do not alter their physical appearance, because of their belief in the sacredness of the body. The user, who eventually apologized after the Sikh woman in the photo learned of the incident and responded with an eloquent and informative post, admitted that the initial intent was to embarrass and degrade this woman under the guise of humor.
I immediately thought to myself, why would a presumably grown person have the intent to cause pain to or ridicule another person under any circumstances? The short answer is that the user is, in fact, a “douchebag” — his or her words, not mine — or is caught up in this culture of shaming, which is an extension of bullying women because there is an audience for it.
Another recent example of shaming women comes from La Cross, Wis., where TV anchorwoman Jennifer Livingston responded to an email from a viewer, who admitted that he didn’t watch her newscast but felt the need to comment on her weight anyway. The viewer had stated in the email that Livingston was not “a suitable example for this community’s young people” because she is overweight. Livingston, the mother of three girls, responded with an on-air editorial about bullying and why her weight should be of no concern to the viewer or anyone else, for that matter.
In this instance, again, someone who knows nothing about this woman felt the need to shame her for being overweight, as if she didn’t know it (which is the irony when someone tells you you’re fat, as stated by Livingston). And anyway, how does that help the person who is struggling with her weight? The viewer’s goal was not to help but to harm — to shame Livingston into doing something about her weight, which in his mind outweighs (tongue planted firmly in cheek) anything else she might have to offer.
Beyond the fact that men, who can’t give birth, should never be allowed to criticize a woman who has had children — particularly with all the changes that women’s bodies experience through that process — is the fact that this man thought it was his right to shame a woman who is paid to inform the public about local news, not to entertain this man’s idea of beauty or health. The viewer, who stands by his comments, doesn’t know if her weight is due to illness, life demands, an eating disorder or laziness. What he did assume from the outset is that shaming this woman over her weight would be acceptable, and it isn’t.
The shaming of women goes beyond appearance and can include behavior. Michael Arceneaux’s piece on“slut shaming” highlights the double standard that high-profile celebrity women face when they appear to be sexually adventurous or free. This shaming can even be perpetuated by a male celebrity whose sexual behavior is as risqué as that of the female celebrity — Drake and Rihanna, in recent cases. The shaming of Rihanna’s alleged sexual behavior is trumped only by the shaming around her “friendship” with Chris Brown, her former lover and batterer. Headlines have decried the pop princess’ steady march toward reconciling with Brown, who was arrested for beating her three years ago.
Rihanna’s decision to reconnect with Brown is her choice, not ours. The further shaming of victims of domestic violence won’t help anyone, especially not Rihanna. Anyone who knows anything about domestic violence knows that shame is at the center of the behavior and is what fuels the reasons that victims (men and women) stay in those relationships. Shaming someone who is obviously battered (physically, emotionally and spiritually) is not the way to address the issue.
I’m not saying that fans should support Rihanna in what many will agree is a bad decision at best, but making her feel worse about herself, for someone who obviously suffers from self-esteem issues and low self-worth, is not helpful to her or other victims and survivors of domestic violence out there. For many victims, it takes a tremendous amount of time and therapy to get out and stay out of toxic relationships. Rihanna’s celebrity status does not insulate her from this behavior, which is reflective of mental anguish and illness.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: With the millions of domestic violence victims and survivors in the world, why are we fixated on this one case? Is someone with Rihanna’s beauty and status above being victimized or fallible?
The point is that a culture of shaming women has to stop. It is unacceptable and damaging to everyone, not just women. Much of the shaming is rooted in issues around beauty, particularly in dominant standards of beauty and what happens when you don’t meet them (Livingston), when you challenge them (the Sikh woman) or when you embody them (Rihanna).
What does it mean not to be pretty enough or “normal” enough, or so pretty that you can’t be vulnerable or damaged? There is so much shaming of women that terms like slut shaming, fat shaming and pregnancy shaming are now commonplace. Is it any wonder that “shame punishments” are on the rise? One thing is certain: If we continue this culture of shame against women, then the real shame will be on us as a society.
Nsenga K. Burton, Ph.D., is editor-at-large for The Root. She is also editor-in-chief of the Burton Wire, a blog dedicated to world news related to the African Diaspora and global culture. 

Kevin Mazur/WireImage/Getty Images; Jezebel; YouTube


Culture of Shaming Women Must End

From Rihanna’s love life to a TV anchor’s weight, women are scrutinized for their so-called flaws.



(The Root) — The “flaws” of women are often used as fodder for jokes, gossip and plain old bullying and mean-spiritedness. Many people — including women — are socialized to embarrass, humiliate and highlight the perceived flaws of women on a regular basis.

That highlighting can happen under the guise of entertainment (insert almost any reality show featuring women), news or gossip (see your local church or temple or Kristen Stewart).Women are often shamed for things they can control (affairs with married partners or poor decision-making) and sometimes for things that are beyond their control (health issues, religious or spiritual practices and mental illness).

It is the latter that most interests me — the idea that there are no boundaries when it comes to publicly shaming women, despite what issues they may be facing. With the pervasiveness of the Web, this public shaming has moved beyond neighborhoods and institutions — the real world, if you will — and has landed squarely at our fingertips by way of laptops, cellphones and tablet devices, taking the public shaming of women to a different level.

Not surprisingly, a lot of the shaming of women has to do with physical appearance, since this is the way that women are often measured in society and, quite honestly, it is the way that many of us measure our self-worth. Despite what might be going on underneath (physical- or mental-health issues, religious beliefs or ideologies that choose not to privilege physical appearance over other aspects of the body), we cling to the culture of shaming women around what they look like, as opposed to who they are as whole people.

One doesn’t have to look far to find examples. Take, for instance, the news story about a Web user with the e-handle “European_Douchebag,” who posted a photo on Reddit of a Sikh woman with a visible beard standing in line, minding her own business at a restaurant. The caption read: “I’m not sure what to conclude from this.” What we can conclude is that the user, who posted the Sikh woman’s photowithout her permission, wanted to embarrass or shame her for having “excessive facial hair,” according to dominant beauty standards.

Cultural critic-comedian W. Kamau Bell has done a fantastic job of showing us how little Americans know about the Sikh community, so it is no surprise that the user obviously did not know that Sikhs do not alter their physical appearance, because of their belief in the sacredness of the body. The user, who eventually apologized after the Sikh woman in the photo learned of the incident and responded with an eloquent and informative post, admitted that the initial intent was to embarrass and degrade this woman under the guise of humor.

I immediately thought to myself, why would a presumably grown person have the intent to cause pain to or ridicule another person under any circumstances? The short answer is that the user is, in fact, a “douchebag” — his or her words, not mine — or is caught up in this culture of shaming, which is an extension of bullying women because there is an audience for it.

Another recent example of shaming women comes from La Cross, Wis., where TV anchorwoman Jennifer Livingston responded to an email from a viewer, who admitted that he didn’t watch her newscast but felt the need to comment on her weight anyway. The viewer had stated in the email that Livingston was not “a suitable example for this community’s young people” because she is overweight. Livingston, the mother of three girls, responded with an on-air editorial about bullying and why her weight should be of no concern to the viewer or anyone else, for that matter.

In this instance, again, someone who knows nothing about this woman felt the need to shame her for being overweight, as if she didn’t know it (which is the irony when someone tells you you’re fat, as stated by Livingston). And anyway, how does that help the person who is struggling with her weight? The viewer’s goal was not to help but to harm — to shame Livingston into doing something about her weight, which in his mind outweighs (tongue planted firmly in cheek) anything else she might have to offer.

Beyond the fact that men, who can’t give birth, should never be allowed to criticize a woman who has had children — particularly with all the changes that women’s bodies experience through that process — is the fact that this man thought it was his right to shame a woman who is paid to inform the public about local news, not to entertain this man’s idea of beauty or health. The viewer, who stands by his comments, doesn’t know if her weight is due to illness, life demands, an eating disorder or laziness. What he did assume from the outset is that shaming this woman over her weight would be acceptable, and it isn’t.

The shaming of women goes beyond appearance and can include behavior. Michael Arceneaux’s piece on“slut shaming” highlights the double standard that high-profile celebrity women face when they appear to be sexually adventurous or free. This shaming can even be perpetuated by a male celebrity whose sexual behavior is as risqué as that of the female celebrity — Drake and Rihanna, in recent cases. The shaming of Rihanna’s alleged sexual behavior is trumped only by the shaming around her “friendship” with Chris Brown, her former lover and batterer. Headlines have decried the pop princess’ steady march toward reconciling with Brown, who was arrested for beating her three years ago.

Rihanna’s decision to reconnect with Brown is her choice, not ours. The further shaming of victims of domestic violence won’t help anyone, especially not Rihanna. Anyone who knows anything about domestic violence knows that shame is at the center of the behavior and is what fuels the reasons that victims (men and women) stay in those relationships. Shaming someone who is obviously battered (physically, emotionally and spiritually) is not the way to address the issue.

I’m not saying that fans should support Rihanna in what many will agree is a bad decision at best, but making her feel worse about herself, for someone who obviously suffers from self-esteem issues and low self-worth, is not helpful to her or other victims and survivors of domestic violence out there. For many victims, it takes a tremendous amount of time and therapy to get out and stay out of toxic relationships. Rihanna’s celebrity status does not insulate her from this behavior, which is reflective of mental anguish and illness.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: With the millions of domestic violence victims and survivors in the world, why are we fixated on this one case? Is someone with Rihanna’s beauty and status above being victimized or fallible?

The point is that a culture of shaming women has to stop. It is unacceptable and damaging to everyone, not just women. Much of the shaming is rooted in issues around beauty, particularly in dominant standards of beauty and what happens when you don’t meet them (Livingston), when you challenge them (the Sikh woman) or when you embody them (Rihanna).

What does it mean not to be pretty enough or “normal” enough, or so pretty that you can’t be vulnerable or damaged? There is so much shaming of women that terms like slut shaming, fat shaming and pregnancy shaming are now commonplace. Is it any wonder that “shame punishments” are on the rise? One thing is certain: If we continue this culture of shame against women, then the real shame will be on us as a society.

Nsenga K. Burton, Ph.D., is editor-at-large for The Root. She is also editor-in-chief of the Burton Wire, a blog dedicated to world news related to the African Diaspora and global culture. 

— 7 months ago
#women  #gender  #culture  #bullying 
The Myth of Male Decline
By STEPHANIE COONTZ
SCROLL through the titles and subtitles of recent books, and you will read that women have become “The Richer Sex,” that “The Rise of Women Has Turned Men Into Boys,” and that we may even be seeing “The End of Men.” Several of the authors of these books posit that we are on the verge of a “new majority of female breadwinners,” where middle-class wives lord over their husbands while demoralized single men take refuge in perpetual adolescence.
How is it, then, that men still control the most important industries, especially technology, occupy most of the positions on the lists of the richest Americans, and continue to make more money than women who have similar skills and education? And why do women make up only 17 percent of Congress?
These books and the cultural anxiety they represent reflect, but exaggerate, a transformation in the distribution of power over the past half-century. Fifty years ago, every male American was entitled to what the sociologist R. W. Connell called a “patriarchal dividend” — a lifelong affirmative-action program for men.
The size of that dividend varied according to race and class, but all men could count on women’s being excluded from the most desirable jobs and promotions in their line of work, so the average male high school graduate earned more than the average female college graduate working the same hours. At home, the patriarchal dividend gave husbands the right to decide where the family would live and to make unilateral financial decisions. Male privilege even trumped female consent to sex, so marital rape was not a crime.
The curtailment of such male entitlements and the expansion of women’s legal and economic rights have transformed American life, but they have hardly produced a matriarchy. Indeed, in many arenas the progress of women has actually stalled over the past 15 years.
Let’s begin by determining which is “the richer sex.”
Women’s real wages have been rising for decades, while the real wages of most men have stagnated or fallen. But women’s wages started from a much lower base, artificially held down by discrimination. Despite their relative improvement, women’s average earnings are still lower than men’s and women remain more likely to be poor.
Today women make up almost 40 percent of full-time workers in management. But the median wages of female managers are just 73 percent of what male managers earn. And although women have significantly increased their representation among high earners in America over the past half-century, only 4 percent of the C.E.O.’s in Fortune’s top 1,000 companies are female.
What we are seeing is a convergence in economic fortunes, not female ascendance. Between 2010 and 2011, men and women working full time year-round both experienced a 2.5 percent decline in income. Men suffered roughly 80 percent of the job losses at the beginning of the 2007 recession. But the ripple effect of the recession then led to cutbacks in government jobs that hit women disproportionately. As of June 2012, men had regained 46.2 percent of the jobs they lost in the recession, while women had regained 38.7 percent of their lost jobs.
The 1970s and 1980s brought an impressive reduction in job segregation by gender, especially in middle-class occupations. But the sociologists David Cotter, Joan Hermsen and Reeve Vanneman report that progress slowed in the 1990s and has all but stopped since 2000. For example, the percentage of female electrical engineers doubled in each decade in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. But in the two decades since 1990 it has increased by only a single percentage point, leaving women at just 10 percent of the total.
Some fields have become even more gender-segregated. In 1980, 75 percent of primary school teachers and 64 percent of social workers were women. Today women make up 80 and 81 percent of those fields. Studies show that as occupations gain a higher percentage of female workers, the pay for those jobs goes down relative to wages in similarly skilled jobs that remain bastions of male employment.
Proponents of the “women as the richer sex” scenario often note that in several metropolitan areas, never-married childless women in their 20s now earn more, on average, than their male age-mates.
But this is because of the demographic anomaly that such areas have exceptionally large percentages of highly educated single white women and young, poorly educated, low-wage Latino men. Earning more than a man with less education is not the same as earning as much as an equally educated man.
Among never-married, childless 22- to 30-year-old metropolitan-area workers with the same educational credentials, males out-earn females in every category, according to a reanalysis of census data to be presented next month at Boston University by Philip Cohen, a sociologist at the University of Maryland. Similarly, a 2010 Catalyst survey found that female M.B.A.’s were paid an average of $4,600 less than men in starting salaries and continue to be outpaced by men in rank and salary growth throughout their careers, even if they remain childless.

The Myth of Male Decline

SCROLL through the titles and subtitles of recent books, and you will read that women have become “The Richer Sex,” that “The Rise of Women Has Turned Men Into Boys,” and that we may even be seeing “The End of Men.” Several of the authors of these books posit that we are on the verge of a “new majority of female breadwinners,” where middle-class wives lord over their husbands while demoralized single men take refuge in perpetual adolescence.

How is it, then, that men still control the most important industries, especially technology, occupy most of the positions on the lists of the richest Americans, and continue to make more money than women who have similar skills and education? And why do women make up only 17 percent of Congress?

These books and the cultural anxiety they represent reflect, but exaggerate, a transformation in the distribution of power over the past half-century. Fifty years ago, every male American was entitled to what the sociologist R. W. Connell called a “patriarchal dividend” — a lifelong affirmative-action program for men.

The size of that dividend varied according to race and class, but all men could count on women’s being excluded from the most desirable jobs and promotions in their line of work, so the average male high school graduate earned more than the average female college graduate working the same hours. At home, the patriarchal dividend gave husbands the right to decide where the family would live and to make unilateral financial decisions. Male privilege even trumped female consent to sex, so marital rape was not a crime.

The curtailment of such male entitlements and the expansion of women’s legal and economic rights have transformed American life, but they have hardly produced a matriarchy. Indeed, in many arenas the progress of women has actually stalled over the past 15 years.

Let’s begin by determining which is “the richer sex.”

Women’s real wages have been rising for decades, while the real wages of most men have stagnated or fallen. But women’s wages started from a much lower base, artificially held down by discrimination. Despite their relative improvement, women’s average earnings are still lower than men’s and women remain more likely to be poor.

Today women make up almost 40 percent of full-time workers in management. But the median wages of female managers are just 73 percent of what male managers earn. And although women have significantly increased their representation among high earners in America over the past half-century, only 4 percent of the C.E.O.’s in Fortune’s top 1,000 companies are female.

What we are seeing is a convergence in economic fortunes, not female ascendance. Between 2010 and 2011, men and women working full time year-round both experienced a 2.5 percent decline in income. Men suffered roughly 80 percent of the job losses at the beginning of the 2007 recession. But the ripple effect of the recession then led to cutbacks in government jobs that hit women disproportionately. As of June 2012, men had regained 46.2 percent of the jobs they lost in the recession, while women had regained 38.7 percent of their lost jobs.

The 1970s and 1980s brought an impressive reduction in job segregation by gender, especially in middle-class occupations. But the sociologists David Cotter, Joan Hermsen and Reeve Vanneman report that progress slowed in the 1990s and has all but stopped since 2000. For example, the percentage of female electrical engineers doubled in each decade in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. But in the two decades since 1990 it has increased by only a single percentage point, leaving women at just 10 percent of the total.

Some fields have become even more gender-segregated. In 1980, 75 percent of primary school teachers and 64 percent of social workers were women. Today women make up 80 and 81 percent of those fields. Studies show that as occupations gain a higher percentage of female workers, the pay for those jobs goes down relative to wages in similarly skilled jobs that remain bastions of male employment.

Proponents of the “women as the richer sex” scenario often note that in several metropolitan areas, never-married childless women in their 20s now earn more, on average, than their male age-mates.

But this is because of the demographic anomaly that such areas have exceptionally large percentages of highly educated single white women and young, poorly educated, low-wage Latino men. Earning more than a man with less education is not the same as earning as much as an equally educated man.

Among never-married, childless 22- to 30-year-old metropolitan-area workers with the same educational credentials, males out-earn females in every category, according to a reanalysis of census data to be presented next month at Boston University by Philip Cohen, a sociologist at the University of Maryland. Similarly, a 2010 Catalyst survey found that female M.B.A.’s were paid an average of $4,600 less than men in starting salaries and continue to be outpaced by men in rank and salary growth throughout their careers, even if they remain childless.

— 7 months ago with 3 notes
#gender  #sociology  #men  #women  #feminism  #men-women 
Photo By UESLEI MARCELINO/REUTERS
Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff waves during a civic-military parade commemorating of Brazilian independence Day in Brasilia September 7, 2012. REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino 

Photo By UESLEI MARCELINO/REUTERS

Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff waves during a civic-military parade commemorating of Brazilian independence Day in Brasilia September 7, 2012. REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino 

— 8 months ago with 3 notes
#brazil powerful women  #women  #brazil's independence day  #dilma rousseff 
Speech — Choose Between a President Who “Either Has Our Back, Or Turns His Back”
Women’s rights activist and attorney Sandra Fluke spoke at the DNC on Wednesday night, telling the audience that it’s now “time to choose” … to choose, Fluke said, between “a country where our president either has our back or turns his back.”
Watch her full remarks below, and read the full transcript here:
Stay tuned — video will be posted momentarily.

Speech — Choose Between a President Who “Either Has Our Back, Or Turns His Back”

Women’s rights activist and attorney Sandra Fluke spoke at the DNC on Wednesday night, telling the audience that it’s now “time to choose” … to choose, Fluke said, between “a country where our president either has our back or turns his back.”

Watch her full remarks below, and read the full transcript here:

Stay tuned — video will be posted momentarily.

— 8 months ago with 1 note
#dnc 2012  #election 2012  #sandra fluke  #women  #women's rights