aamirsaab said...
Name me one muslim woman who thinks they have no rights due to Islam or that they are treated unjustly because of Islam.
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I cant think of one muslim woman who truly believes in Islam and is committed to allah that will tell you se is treated unjustly..However you will find that there are some women who are born muslims and are not really committed and usually have an unjust husband that will say they arent treated justly and the west will latch on to these people as proof of oppression .....Its interesting that any woman who has reverted to Islam especially western reverts will tell you its the opposite...women are treated with respect....hence why they reverted...but the critics will tell you she was brain washed, like a gun was put to her head to revert to Islam...
here is a newspaper report that might help
Education to counter honour killings
June 14, 2008
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LONDON: Lessons about "honour" killings and forced marriage should be a statutory requirement in British schools and become a compulsory part of the sex and relationships curriculum, MPs say.
A report from the House of Commons home affairs select committee said education on the issues seemed to be "at best variable, and at worst non-existent", with some schools apparently resistant to discussing them for fear of offending parents.
It said there was evidence to suggest children were in danger of being removed from school or further education and forced into marriage.
Other recommendations include a specialised victim protection program, similar to witness protection, for women fleeing such violence and refusing visa applications for the prospective spouses of reluctant brides or bridegrooms.
The committee acknowledged significant steps had been taken to stop domestic and honour-based violence; however, it criticised the British Government's focus on the criminal justice system.
The committee's chairman, Keith Vaz, said: "We are still failing victims in different ways: through a shortage of refuge space; through the ignorance or disbelief of professionals; or by allowing the continued abuse of some of those forced into marriage by granting visas to their spouses."
There needed to be a shift in focus towards education, prevention and early intervention, he said. "We educate our young people about the dangers of drugs or road safety but not, it seems, about domestic and honour-based violence and forced marriage, which will affect a quarter of all women in their lifetime and many men, too."
Posters and other publicity material should be routinely sent out to schools rather than waiting for a specific request from teachers, the report said.
The MPs also suggested there should be a public education campaign about domestic violence, along the lines of a road safety campaign, and that doctors and nurses undergo training in identifying victims of domestic violence.