لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية

لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية


07-14-2009, 07:36 PM


  » http://sudaneseonline.com/cgi-bin/sdb/2bb.cgi?seq=msg&board=240&msg=1247596605&rn=0


Post: #1
Title: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 07:36 PM


Quote: Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein, who writes for the left-wing Al-Sahafa newspaper and works for the media department of the United Nations Mission in Sudan, was arrested in Khartoum last week and charged with dressing indecently.

Ms. al-Hussein told AFP she was at a restaurant on July 3 when police came in and ordered women wearing trousers to follow them to the police station.

"They took away me and 12 other young women, including southerners," she said, referring to women from Sudan's animist and Christian south where the Muslim north's Islamic or Shariah law does not apply.

"Two days later, 10 of them were summoned to the police station in downtown Khartoum and given 10 lashes each," said Ms. al-Hussein, who wears a hijab or Islamic headscarf.

The remaining three women, including Ms. al-Hussein, have been charged under Sudanese law with "committing an indecent act or one which violates public morality or wearing indecent clothes."

If convicted, they face a mandatory 40 lashes. Ms. al-Hussein said she did not know when her case would be heard.

"I want people to know what happened," she said.

Unlike some countries in the region, particularly in the Gulf, women have a prominent place in Sudanese public life. Nevertheless, human rights organizations say that some laws discriminate against women

الواشنطون تايمز
جنى

Post: #2
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 07:40 PM
Parent: #1

Quote: SUDAN: Female journalist faces 40 lashes for choice of clothes

_911502_protest300

A prominent Sudanese female journalist faces 40 lashes for the crime of dressing in a way that contradicts the country's social and religious values.

Lobna Ahmed al Hussein, whose daily column Men Talk often criticizes the Sudanese regime and Islamic fundamentalists for their oppression of women, was charged with violating a 1991 law that forbids women to dress in a manner that causes "public discomfort." She was wearing a loose hijab, top and pants and allegedly wasn't covered in the traditional way of Sudanese women.

The journalist reacted to the charge by sending the media, as well as her supporters, thousands of printed invitations to attend her upcoming trial. Al Hussein said that if convicted she will send similar invitations to her public whipping.

In a statement released on Saturday, the Arab Network for Human Rights Information expressed its disappointment, called for human rights organizations to support al Hussein and requested the Sudanese government to end a case that violates all international treaties.

"Such accusations are a cheap way to undermine this brave reporter. Only tyrannical governments would stoop so low. The Sudanese government should have been as brave as Lobna and declare resentment to her writings instead of this brutal vengeance that aims only to break a free pen," said Abeer Soliman, programs manager at ANHRI.

The Sudanese general discipline law is known to be one of the most oppressive in the world, as it deprives citizens in general and women in particular from many basic rights.

"The law targets female students and working women as though it was tailored for persecuting, humiliating and isolating women from contributing to public life in Sudan," added ANHRI's statement.
لوس انجلس تايمزجنى

Post: #3
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 07:44 PM
Parent: #2

Quote:

A HIGH profile Sudanese woman journalist is facing 40 lashes after being accused of wearing "indecent" clothes, with 10 women already whipped for similar offences against Islamic law.
Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein, who writes for the left-wing Al-Sahafa newspaper and works for the media department of the United Nations Mission in Sudan, was arrested in Khartoum last week and charged with dressing indecently.

Ms Hussein said she was at a restaurant on July 3 when police came in and ordered women wearing trousers to follow them to the police station.

"They took away me and 12 other young women, including southerners," she said, referring to women from Sudan's animist and Christian south where the Muslim north's Islamic or sharia law does not apply.

"Two days later, 10 of them were summoned to the police station in downtown Khartoum and given 10 lashes each," Ms Hussein said.

The remaining three women, including Ms Hussein, have been charged under Sudanese law with "committing an indecent act or one which violates public morality or wearing indecent clothes".

If convicted, they face a mandatory 40 lashes. Ms Hussein said she did not know when her case would be heard.

"I want people to know what happened," she said.

Unlike some countries in the region, particularly in the Gulf, women have a prominent place in Sudanese public life. Nevertheless, human rights organisations say that some laws discriminate against women.
الديلى تلجراف
جنى

Post: #4
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 07:48 PM
Parent: #3




Euro-News

Post: #6
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 07:49 PM
Parent: #4




BBC

Post: #5
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 07:49 PM
Parent: #3

Quote: *

AFP - A well-known Sudanese woman journalist is facing 40 lashes after being accused of wearing "indecent" clothes, with 10 women already whipped for similar offences against Islamic law.

Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein, who writes for the left-wing Al-Sahafa newspaper and works for the media department of the United Nations Mission in Sudan, was arrested in Khartoum last week and charged with dressing indecently.

Hussein told AFP she was at a restaurant on July 3 when police came in and ordered women wearing trousers to follow them to the police station.

"They took away me and 12 other young women, including southerners," she said, referring to women from Sudan's animist and Christian south where the Muslim north's Islamic or sharia law does not apply.

"Two days later, 10 of them were summoned to the police station in downtown Khartoum and given 10 lashes each," said Hussein, who wears a hijab or Islamic headscarf.

The remaining three women, including Hussein, have been charged under Sudanese law with "committing an indecent act or one which violates public morality or wearing indecent clothes."

If convicted, they face a mandatory 40 lashes. Hussein said she did not know when her case would be heard.

"I want people to know what happened," she said.

Unlike some countries in the region, particularly in the Gulf, women have a prominent place in Sudanese public life. Nevertheless, human rights organisations say that some laws discriminate against women.

فرانس 24
جنى

Post: #7
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 07:51 PM
Parent: #5



لوس أنجلز تايمز

Post: #9
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 07:56 PM
Parent: #7


Post: #8
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 07:54 PM
Parent: #5

Quote: Sudan women sentenced to 40 lashes each... for daring to wear trousers in public


Sudanese journalist Lubna Ahmed Al-Hussein wearing her trousers

A group of Sudanese women diners face up to 40 lashes - for wearing trousers.

The women have been accused of dressing 'indecently' while dining at a popular restaurant in Khartoum, the capital.

Up to 30 police stormed the building without warning and arrested those wearing trousers, 13 women in all.

Some have pleaded guilty - so they could ‘get it over with - and received 10 lashes.

Others though have not admitted their 'guilt' and could subsequently receive 40 lashes if tried and convicted by a court.

One of them, journalist Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein, told how the group of policemen stormed into the building without warning and arrested all the women wearing trousers.

'I was wearing trousers and a blouse and the ten girls who were lashed were wearing like me, there was no difference,' Ms Hussein told the BBC's Arabic service.

Ms Hussein is a well-known reporter who writes a weekly column called Men Talk for Sudanese papers. She also works for the United Nations Mission in Sudan.

The country is split in two – Muslim in Khartoum and the north and Christian in the south.

Several of those punished were from the south, although non-Muslims are not supposed to be subject to Sharia law, even in Islamic areas.

It was in Khartoum that British primary school teacher Gillian Gibbons, 55, spent a week in jail in 2007 after her class named a teddy bear Mohammed.
Enlarge

Sudanese protesters burn the picture of the British teacher Gillian Gibbons during a demonstration in 2007

She faced 40 lashes for insulting Islam but was freed after the intervention of two British peers.

Sudan was ravaged by a two-decade civil war that killed 1.5 million of its 39 million people, only to plunge straight afterwards into the horror of the bloodshed in the western region of Darfur.

Two million people have fled their homes and more than 200,000 have been killed.

The International Criminal Court in The Hague this year issued an arrest warrant for Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur.

It is not the only country to enforce laws on dress.

In Iran, the religious police frequently launch crackdowns on indecency, rounding up hundreds of women for wearing ‘bad hijab.’

And a boutique owner was recently ordered to saw the breasts off the mannequins in his shop because they were ruled ‘indecent.’

In a dramatic example of Sharia law in Somalia, a 13-year-old girl was stoned to death last year for adultery after Islamist militants took control of the city of Kismayo.

In fact, Asha Ibrahim Dhuhulow had been raped by three armed men, but was arrested when her aunt took her to a police station to report the crime.

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الديلى ميل
جنى

Post: #10
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:01 PM
Parent: #8


Post: #12
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:04 PM
Parent: #10



مكتوب - أمريكا

Post: #11
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:04 PM
Parent: #8

Quote: Mon, 13 July 17:33 2009 PDF Print E-mail
Journalist Lubna Ahmed Al-Hussein faces 40 lashings for wearing trousers

The 1991 Sudanese law considers this a “threat to the Sudanese society values and virtues.”

BY ALFREDO BLOY

A SUDANESE journalist, Lubna Ahmed Al-Hussein, who is known for her public criticism of the regime’s oppression of women in Sudan, faces 40 lashings after she was charged with breaking a law that forbids women from wearing clothes that causes “public uneasiness” – she was wearing a blouse and trousers.

The Arab Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI) expressed its deepest concern about the case. The General Discipline Police Authority considered Lubna's dressing style a “threat to the Sudanese society values and virtues.” This crime is subject to only one punishment; 40 lashes in public according to article 152 of the Sudanese criminal law of 1991.

Al-Hussein was arrested by 20 to 30 police officers at a popular central Khartoum restaurant with another 12 women for this infringement. Some of the women arrested accepted a guilty verdict and were whipped ten times. Khartoum, unlike South Sudan, is governed by Sharia law.

The Sudanese general discipline law is one of the most discriminating laws against women as it violates basic freedoms to be enjoyed by all citizens. The law targets female students and working women as though it was tailored for persecuting, humiliating and isolating women from contributing to public life.

ANHRI calls on “all human rights NGOs interested in freedom of expression and women's rights to back up Lubna and make efforts to stop this charade trial that violates all international treaties defending freedom of expression and women's rights asserting that the Sudanese government persecutes antagonists in every possible way and would not refrain from using the worst laws and practices.”

ANHRI praises Lubna's “boldness,” as she has printed invitation cards to her trial and sent them to all media and press bodies.

In case of being convicted, Lubna intends to send similar invitations for media to attend her public whipping.

يورو ويكلى
يا سلام عليك يا كوستا تعال نوثق للاجيال
جنى

Post: #13
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:08 PM
Parent: #11

Quote:
Sudan women 'lashed for trousers'
map

Several Sudanese women have been flogged as a punishment for dressing "indecently", according to a local journalist who was arrested with them.

Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein, who says she is facing 40 lashes, said she and 12 other women wearing trousers were arrested in a restaurant in the capital, Khartoum.

She told the BBC several of the women had pleaded guilty to the charges and had 10 lashes immediately.

Khartoum, unlike South Sudan, is governed by Sharia law.

Several of those punished were from the mainly Christian and animist south, Ms Hussein said.

Non-Muslims are not supposed to be subject to Islamic law, even in Khartoum and other parts of the mainly Muslim north.

She said that a group of about 20 or 30 police officers entered the popular Khartoum restaurant and arrested all the women wearing trousers.

"I was wearing trousers and a blouse and the 10 girls who were lashed were wearing like me, there was no difference," she told the BBC's Arabic service.

Ms Hussein said some women pleaded guilty to "get it over with" but others, including herself, chose to speak to their lawyers and are awaiting their fates.

Under Sharia law in Khartoum, the normal punishment for "indecent" dressing is 40 lashes.

Ms Hussein is a well-known reporter who writes a weekly column called Men Talk for Sudanese papers. She also works for the United Nations Mission in Sudan.

البى بي سي

Post: #14
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:10 PM
Parent: #13



BBC-UK

Post: #15
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:13 PM
Parent: #14




Arab-Net

Post: #17
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:14 PM
Parent: #13

Quote: Woman faces 40 lashes for wearing trousers

July 13 2009 at 11:37AM

Khartoum - A well-known Sudanese woman journalist is facing 40 lashes after being accused of wearing "indecent" clothes, with 10 women already whipped for similar offences against Islamic law.

Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein, who writes for the left-wing Al-Sahafa newspaper and works for the media department of the United Nations Mission in Sudan, was arrested in Khartoum last week and charged with dressing indecently.

Hussein told AFP she was at a restaurant on July 3 when police came in and ordered women wearing trousers to follow them to the police station.

"They took away me and 12 other young women, including southerners," she said, referring to women from Sudan's animist and Christian south where the Muslim north's Islamic or sharia law does not apply.
Continues Below ↓





"Two days later, 10 of them were summoned to the police station in downtown Khartoum and given 10 lashes each," said Hussein, who wears a hijab (Islamic headscarf).

The remaining three women, including Hussein, have been charged under Sudanese law with "committing an indecent act or one which violates public morality or wearing indecent clothes".

If convicted, they face a mandatory 40 lashes. Hussein said she did not know when her case would be heard.

"I want people to know what happened," she said.

Unlike some countries in the region, particularly in the Gulf, women have a prominent place in Sudanese public life. Nevertheless, human rights organisations say that some laws discriminate against women. - AFP

Breaking News

آى أو أل

Post: #19
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:23 PM
Parent: #17

Quote: Sudanese women flogged for wearing trousers in violation of strict Islamic law
Trials

SARAH EL DEEB Associated Press Writer

4:17 PM EDT, July 13, 2009

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CAIRO (AP) — Sudanese police arrested 13 women in a raid on a cafe and flogged 10 of them in public for wearing trousers in violation of the country's strict Islamic law, one of those arrested said Monday.

The 13 women were at a cafe in the capital, Khartoum, when they were detained Friday by officers from the public order police, which enforces the implementation of Sharia law in public places.

The force, which is similar to the Saudi religious police, randomly enforces an alcohol ban and often scolds young men and women mingling in public.

One of those arrested Friday, journalist Lubna Hussein, said she is challenging the charges, which can be punishable by up to 40 lashes.

"I didn't do anything wrong," Hussein said.

Islamic Sharia law has been strictly implemented in Sudan since the ruling party came to power in a 1989 military coup.

Public order cases usually involve quick summary trials with sentences carried out shortly afterward, as was the case with 10 of the women arrested Friday. They were flogged and fined 250 Sudanese pounds, or about $120.

Hussein and two other women chose to go to trial. On Monday, she was summoned for questioning and now she awaits a decision from the prosecutor on when the case could go to trial.

Women in northern Sudan, particularly in Khartoum, dress in traditional outfits that include a shawl over their head and shoulder. Western dress is uncommon.

Still, the raid on a Khartoum cafe popular with journalists and foreigners was unusual.

Hussein's lawyer, Nabil Adeeb, said action by the public order police is often arbitrary and aims "from time to time to let people know that big brother is watching you."

Hussein said she decided to speak out because flogging is a practice many women endure in silence. She even sent printed invitations to the press and public figures to attend her expected trial.

"Let the people see for themselves. It is not only my issue," she said. "This is retribution to thousands of girls who are facing flogging for the last 20 years because of wearing trousers," she said. "They prefer to remain silent."
اسوشيتد برس

Post: #25
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:33 PM
Parent: #19

Quote: Sudan: Journo faces 40 lashes
2009-07-13 14:45


Khartoum - A well-known Sudanese woman journalist is facing 40 lashes after being accused of wearing "indecent" clothes, with 10 women already whipped for similar offences against Islamic law.

Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein, who writes for the left-wing Al-Sahafa newspaper and works for the media department of the United Nations Mission in Sudan, was arrested in Khartoum last week and charged with dressing indecently.

Hussein said she was at a restaurant on July 3 when police came in and ordered women wearing trousers to follow them to the police station.

"They took away me and 12 other young women, including southerners," she said, referring to women from Sudan's animist and Christian south where the Muslim north's Islamic or sharia law does not apply.

Indecent act

"Two days later, 10 of them were summoned to the police station in downtown Khartoum and given 10 lashes each," said Hussein, who wears a hijab or Islamic headscarf.

The remaining three women, including Hussein, have been charged under Sudanese law with "committing an indecent act or one which violates public morality or wearing indecent clothes."

If convicted, they face a mandatory 40 lashes. Hussein said she did not know when her case would be heard.

"I want people to know what happened," she said.

Unlike some countries in the region, particularly in the Gulf, women have a prominent place in Sudanese public life. Nevertheless, human rights organisations say that some laws discriminate against women.

- AFP
العالم فى 24ساعة

Post: #26
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:36 PM
Parent: #25

Quote: y, July 14, 2009
Sudan women 'lashed for trousers'

Several Sudanese women have been flogged as a punishment for dressing "indecently", according to a local journalist who was arrested with them.

Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein, who says she is facing 40 lashes, said she and 12 other women wearing trousers were arrested in a restaurant in the capital, Khartoum.

She told the BBC several of the women had pleaded guilty to the charges and had 10 lashes immediately.

Khartoum, unlike South Sudan, is governed by Sharia law.

Several of those punished were from the mainly Christian and animist south, Ms Hussein said.

Non-Muslims are not supposed to be subject to Islamic law, even in Khartoum and other parts of the mainly Muslim north.

She said that a group of about 20 or 30 police officers entered the popular Khartoum restaurant and arrested all the women wearing trousers.

"I was wearing trousers and a blouse and the 10 girls who were lashed were wearing like me, there was no difference," she told the BBC's Arabic service.

Ms Hussein said some women pleaded guilty to "get it over with" but others, including herself, chose to speak to their lawyers and are awaiting their fates.

Under Sharia law in Khartoum, the normal punishment for "indecent" dressing is 40 lashes.

Ms Hussein is a well-known reporter who writes a weekly column called Men Talk for Sudanese papers. She also works for the United Nations Mission in Sudan.
Posted by Ghana Pundit at 10:37 AM
غانا بنديت
حبيبنا ابوالزيك شكرا للمساهمة والتعضيد
جنى

Post: #28
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:43 PM
Parent: #26

Quote:

Women flogged for wearing trousers in Sudan

Tuesday, 14 July 2009
o Extra Large

Police in Sudan arrested 13 women in a raid on a cafe and flogged 10 of them in public for wearing trousers in violation of the country's strict Islamic law, one of those arrested said today.

The 13 women were at a cafe in the capital, Khartoum, when they were detained on Friday by officers from the public order police, which enforces the implementation of Sharia law in public places.

The force randomly enforces an alcohol ban and often scolds young men and women mingling in public.

One of those arrested on Friday, journalist Lubna Hussein, said she is challenging the charges, which can be punishable by up to 40 lashes.

"I didn't do anything wrong," Ms Hussein said.

Islamic Sharia law has been strictly implemented in Sudan since the ruling party came to power in a 1989 military coup.

Public order cases usually involve quick summary trials with sentences carried out shortly afterward, as was the case with 10 of the women arrested on Friday. They were flogged and fined 250 Sudanese pounds (£74).

Ms Hussein and two other women chose to go to trial. Today she was summoned for questioning and now awaits a decision from the prosecutor on when the case could go to trial.

Women in northern Sudan, particularly in Khartoum, dress in traditional outfits that include a shawl over their head and shoulder. Western dress is uncommon.

Ms Hussein said she decided to speak out because flogging is a practice many women endure in silence. She even sent printed invitations to the press and public figures to attend her expected trial.

"Let the people see for themselves. It is not only my issue," she said. "This is retribution to thousands of girls who are facing flogging for the last 20 years because of wearing trousers," she said. "They prefer to remain silent."

Taken from the Belfast Telegraph
الاندبندنتحيدر بدوى شكرا للمرور البهى

Post: #31
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:55 PM
Parent: #28

Quote: The 13 women were at a cafe in the capital, Khartoum, when they were detained Friday by officers from the public order police, which enforces the implementation of Sharia law in public places. (Read "Sudan's Leader Shuts Down Aid Groups.")

The force, which is similar to the Saudi religious police, randomly enforces an alcohol ban and often scolds young men and women mingling in public.

One of those arrested Friday, journalist Lubna Hussein, said she is challenging the charges, which can be punishable by up to 40 lashes.

"I didn't do anything wrong," Hussein said.

Islamic Sharia law has been strictly implemented in Sudan since the ruling party came to power in a 1989 military coup.

Public order cases usually involve quick summary trials with sentences carried out shortly afterward, as was the case with 10 of the women arrested Friday. They were flogged and fined 250 Sudanese pounds, or about $120.

Hussein and two other women chose to go to trial. On Monday, she was summoned for questioning and now she awaits a decision from the prosecutor on when the case could go to trial.

Women in northern Sudan, particularly in Khartoum, dress in traditional outfits that include a shawl over their head and shoulder. Western dress is uncommon.

Still, the raid on a Khartoum cafe popular with journalists and foreigners was unusual.

Hussein's lawyer, Nabil Adeeb, said action by the public order police is often arbitrary and aims "from time to time to let people know that big brother is watching you."

Hussein said she decided to speak out because flogging is a practice many women endure in silence. She even sent printed invitations to the press and public figures to attend her expected trial.

"Let the people see for themselves. It is not only my issue," she said. "This is retribution to thousands of girls who are facing flogging for the last 20 years because of wearing trousers," she said. "They prefer to remain silent."
التايم سى ان ان

Post: #34
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 09:12 PM
Parent: #31

Quote: Sudanese Police Arrest 13 Women for Wearing Pants in Public

Monday, July 13, 2009

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CAIRO — Sudanese police arrested 13 women in a raid on a cafe and flogged 10 of them in public for wearing trousers in violation of the country's strict Islamic law, one of those arrested said Monday.

The 13 women were at a cafe in the capital, Khartoum, when they were detained Friday by officers from the public order police, which enforces the implementation of Sharia law in public places.

The force, which is similar to the Saudi religious police, randomly enforces an alcohol ban and often scolds young men and women mingling in public.

One of those arrested Friday, journalist Lubna Hussein, said she is challenging the charges, which can be punishable by up to 40 lashes.

"I didn't do anything wrong," Hussein said.

Islamic Sharia law has been strictly implemented in Sudan since the ruling party came to power in a 1989 military coup.

Public order cases usually involve quick summary trials with sentences carried out shortly afterward, as was the case with 10 of the women arrested Friday. They were flogged and fined 250 Sudanese pounds, or about $120.

Hussein and two other women chose to go to trial. On Monday, she was summoned for questioning and now she awaits a decision from the prosecutor on when the case could go to trial.

Women in northern Sudan, particularly in Khartoum, dress in traditional outfits that include a shawl over their head and shoulder. Western dress is uncommon.

Still, the raid on a Khartoum cafe popular with journalists and foreigners was unusual.

Hussein's lawyer, Nabil Adeeb, said action by the public order police is often arbitrary and aims "from time to time to let people know that big brother is watching you."

Hussein said she decided to speak out because flogging is a practice many women endure in silence. She even sent printed invitations to the press and public figures to attend her expected trial.

"Let the people see for themselves. It is not only my issue," she said. "This is retribution to thousands of girls who are facing flogging for the last 20 years because of wearing trousers," she said. "They prefer to remain silent."
فوكس نيوز

Post: #35
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 09:17 PM
Parent: #34

Quote:
Inquiry urged after Sudan women flogged for trousers
14 Jul 2009 18:03:54 GMT
Source: Reuters
* South Sudan politician wants probe of Khartoum flogging

* Women from south said punished for violating Islamic law

* Khartoum and north Sudan covered by Islamic sharia law

(Adds U.N. comment)

KHARTOUM, July 14 (Reuters) - A senior Sudanese politician called on Tuesday for an inquiry into reports young women from Sudan's Christian south had been flogged for defying Islamic law by wearing trousers in Khartoum.

Police arrested 13 young women earlier this month, accusing them of wearing indecent clothes in a Khartoum cafe, and later flogged 10 of them, one of the arrested women told journalists.

Lubna Hussein, who works as an information officer for the U.N. mission in Khartoum, said some of the women detained with her were from southern Sudan, where most of the population is Christian.

Khartoum, along with all of Sudan's Muslim north, operates under Islamic sharia law, but the punishment of residents of the capital originating from the south remains a sensitive issue.

Sudan is supposed to be working to soften the impact of sharia for southerners living in Khartoum under a 2005 peace deal that ended decades of north-south civil war. Sharia law was lifted in the south by the deal.

Yasir Arman, a senior member of the south's dominant Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), told Reuters he was calling for an investigation into the case to see why the southern women were not given greater protection.

"We condemn this in the strongest terms. It is an infringement of the rights of women and youths. I believe Commission for the Rights of Non-Muslims in the National Capital should look into it," he said, referring to a body set up under the 2005 accord.

Arman said hundreds of southern women were also regularly punished for brewing alcohol in Khartoum.

"They are being punished for something that is acceptable in the south. This is one of the paradoxes that is undermining the chances of unity of Sudan."

Southerners have been promised a referendum on whether to split off from northern Sudan in January 2011. The SPLM has repeatedly complained that problems in the roll out of the peace deal have made it difficult for them to make the case for unity.

Lubna Hussein, who is from north Sudan, told Reuters on Tuesday she was still waiting for her case to be heard after the arrest. "The police called me in for questioning again yesterday to ask about the shirt I was wearing at the time. They said it was too short and the material too thin," she said.

In New York, U.N. spokeswoman Marie Okabe said U.N. officials in Khartoum had contacted authorities about Hussein to ensure a U.N.-Sudan agreement on the status of the mission was respected "and that basic human rights are upheld in the context of national laws governing such issues."

U.N. officials said the United Nations interpreted the agreement to mean that members of the mission were immune from judicial proceedings but that Sudan did not accept that that applied to Sudanese nationals. (Reporting by Andrew Heavens; Additional reporting by Patrick Worsnip at the United Nations; Editing by Eric Beech)

AlertNet news is provided by

رويتر

Post: #16
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Zakaria Joseph
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:14 PM
Parent: #11

Quote: Khartoum, unlike South Sudan,



If people thing that slip is a slip, then some of us have to wake and face the music. I have been saying it for a long time- before Mr. Hamdi's triangle.
Thanks Lubna.
Thanks jini.

Post: #18
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:20 PM
Parent: #16

يا جني


ياخ أنا تعبت

في صحف المانية و شي فارسية و النت كلو شغال 40 جلدة

Post: #20
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Zakaria Joseph
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:24 PM
Parent: #18

ساتيكم بالاسبانية و الفرنسية و البرتقالية.
Quote: 14/7/2009 17:16 h Y MULTA DE 72 EUROS

Una periodista sudanesa se enfrenta a un castigo de 10 latigazos por vestir pantalones
EFE
JARTUM
Una periodista sudanesa fue detenida el viernes pasado en Jartum por llevar pantalones y tiene que comparecer ante un juez para evitar el castigo inicial que le quería aplicar la policía: diez latigazos y una multa de unos 100 dólares (algo menos de 72 euros).

Se trata de Labna Ahmed Husein, que trabaja en la oficina de prensa de la misión de la ONU en Sudán y que fue acusada por la policía de "vestir ropa inmoral" por usar pantalones en la calle.

Traslado a comisaría

Husein ha señalado que fue detenida cuando visitaba un café de la zona oriental de la capital para hacer una reserva. En ese momento daba un espectáculo un grupo musical egipcio y mientras esperaba la policía llegó al lugar.

Los agentes se llevaron consigo a la periodista y a otras ocho mujeres y las trasladaron a una comisaría, donde había también otras cuatro mujeres, todas ellas vestidas con pantalones.

La ley de la 'sharia'

Post: #21
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Zakaria Joseph
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:25 PM
Parent: #20

Quote: Una periodista se enfrenta a diez latigazos como castigo por vestir pantalones
Efe | Jartum
Actualizado martes 14/07/2009 17:27 horasDisminuye el tamaño del texto Aumenta el tamaño del texto
La periodista sudanesa Labna Ahmed Husein ha sido detenida en Jartum por llevar pantalones y tiene que comparecer ante un juez para evitar el castigo inicial que le quería aplicar la policía: diez latigazos y una multa de unos 100 dólares.

Husein, que trabaja actualmente en la oficina de prensa de la misión de la ONU en Sudán, fue acusada por la policía de "vestir ropa inmoral" por algo tan habitual como usar pantalones en la calle.

Ante este caso, y por la relevancia de su profesión, la periodista ha querido invitar al juicio a compañeros de oficio, además de a políticos y activistas de derechos humanos con el fin de hacer público este acontecimiento y difundirlo lo máximo posible a nivel internacional. "Quiero que mi juicio sea público para que todos puedan informar de que yo he recibido latigazos por vestir con pantalón", afirma Husein.

Su detención ha tenido lugar cuando visitaba un café del oriente de esta capital para hacer una reserva. En ese momento daba un espectáculo un grupo musical egipcio y, mientras esperaba, la policía llegó para llevarse a ella y a otras ocho mujeres. Muchas de ellas fueron castigadas allí mismo a latigazos, pero la periodista fue puesta en libertad bajo fianza tras negarse e instistir en comparecer ante un juez.

Sudán, un país con una población mayoritariamente musulmana, es uno de los más estrictos en la región en asuntos relacionados con la moral pública. En gran parte del país rige la 'sharia' o código legal islámico.

Post: #22
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:26 PM
Parent: #20




لنك الفيديو:

http://www.france24.com/en/20090713-female-journalist-f...rs-islamic-law-sudan

Post: #23
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Zakaria Joseph
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:28 PM
Parent: #22

Quote: En Sudán
Diez latigazos por vestir pantalón

Se trata de Labna Ahmed Husein, que trabaja en la oficina de prensa de la misión de la ONU en Sudán y que fue acusada por la policía de "vestir ropa inmoral"

17:32 VOTE ESTA NOTICIA


EFE Una periodista sudanesa fue detenida el viernes pasado en Jartum por llevar pantalones y tiene que comparecer ante un juez para evitar el castigo inicial que le quería aplicar la policía: diez latigazos y una multa de unos 100 dólares.

Se trata de Labna Ahmed Husein, que trabaja en la oficina de prensa de la misión de la ONU en Sudán y que fue acusada por la policía de "vestir ropa inmoral" por usar pantalones en la calle, según relató hoy.

Husein señaló que fue detenida cuando visitaba un café del oriente de esta capital para hacer una reserva. En ese momento daba un espectáculo un grupo musical egipcio y, mientras esperaba, la policía llegó al lugar.

Los agentes se llevaron consigo a la periodista y a otras ocho mujeres y las trasladaron a una comisaría, donde habia también otras cuatro mujeres, todas ellas vestidas con pantalones.

Varias de las arrestadas fueron castigadas allí mismo a latigazos, pero la periodista sudanesa se negó e insistió en comparecer ante un juez, en presencia de su abogado, por lo que fue puesta en libertad bajo fianza.

Ahora, Labna Ahmed Husein ha decido invitar a su juicio a políticos, periodistas y activistas de derechos humanos. "Quiero que mi juicio sea público y para que todos puedan informar que yo he recibido latigazos por vestir con pantalón", afirmó.

Sudán, un país con una población mayoritariamente musulmana, es uno de los más estrictos en la región en asuntos relacionados con la moral pública. En gran parte del país rige la "sharia" o código legal islámico.

Post: #24
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:30 PM
Parent: #23

لنك مهم جدا

http://www.wikio.com/themes/Lubna+Ahmed+al-Hussein


شكرا لبنى

Post: #27
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Haydar Badawi Sadig
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:40 PM
Parent: #18

العزيز جني،
تحياتي،
تجربة لبنى هذه تؤكد أنه بالقليل من الشجاعة والمواجهة والنشاط التوعوي يمكننا انجاز الكثير في مواجهة التسلط. فلنجعلها دليلاً على قدرتنا على الصمود.

شكراً لك وللأخ كوستاوي على هذا الجهد التوثيقي المقدر، فهو يضاعف من أثر هذه التجربة الفريدة ويجعلها نموذجاً لتجارب مماثلة في المستقبل.

يبدو أن ثورتنا القادمة ستكون ثورة تقودها المرأة، بعد أن عجز الرجال عن تحقيق تطلعات الشعب. وربما يقدم السودان للعالم مثالاً فريداً في هذا الباب!

Post: #29
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:51 PM
Parent: #27




بالصيني

Post: #30
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: عادل عبدالعزيز عبد الرحيم
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:51 PM
Parent: #27

وكتين يضيع عرق الجباه الشم شمار فى مرقة

اه يا لبنى اه

مرة توزن كثير من الرجال

لها التحية يا جنى

Post: #32
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: باسط المكي
Date: 07-14-2009, 08:58 PM
Parent: #30

Quote: تجربة لبنى هذه تؤكد أنه بالقليل من الشجاعة والمواجهة والنشاط التوعوي يمكننا انجاز الكثير في مواجهة التسلط. فلنجعلها دليلاً على قدرتنا على الصمود

التحية لهذه البطلة ..
تحية واختراما لها

Post: #33
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 09:04 PM
Parent: #32


Post: #36
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: khalid abuahmed
Date: 07-14-2009, 09:29 PM
Parent: #33

الاخ العزيز مجنون الصحافة جني..

احيك أخي على هذه المتابعة الصحافية الممتازة والتي لا غنى عنها لكل باحث عن الحقيقة في سودان اليوم، أحتفظت بنسخة من كل هذه القصاصات لليوم ليوم أسود آخر في الطريق..

Post: #37
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 09:31 PM
Parent: #33

Quote:
France condemns Sudan floggings
map

France has condemned the flogging of several women in Sudan, who were being punished for wearing trousers.

The foreign ministry called on Khartoum to abandon the prosecution of several others charged with the same offence.

The women were arrested in a Khartoum restaurant and accused of wearing clothes that threatened the values and virtue of Sudanese society.

One of the women facing charges is a well-known local journalist who has invited reporters to attend her trial.

Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein said several of the women who she was arrested with had pleaded guilty to the charge and been flogged immediately.

The French foreign ministry said in a statement it "strongly condemned" the punishment.

"France, which is fighting for the abolition of cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment or treatment and is combating violence against women, demands that the Sudanese authorities break off its prosecution of these people," the statement said.

Khartoum, unlike South Sudan, is governed by Sharia law.

Several of those punished were from the mainly Christian and animist south, Ms Hussein said.

Non-Muslims are not supposed to be subject to Islamic law, even in Khartoum and other parts of the mainly Muslim north.
البى بي سي

Post: #38
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: كمال عباس
Date: 07-14-2009, 09:36 PM
Parent: #33

العزيز جني
جميل أن نشهد هذا التضامن مع قضية لبني ومن جل الناس
ولكن يجب أن نكون أكتر أتساقا في الوقوف ضد هذه المفاهيم والقوانين
.... فضرب عنق شخص لمجرد إختياره لتغيره معتقده وفكره جريمة تفوق ما تعرضت
لبني وأخواتها ...
رجم شخص بالحجارة لممارسته الجنس الطوعي خارج نطاق الحياة الزوجية وفق
عقوبة خلافية يشكل كارثة ......
.... زج الدين في السياسة هو ما يعطي مشروعية لمثل هذه الممارسات البربرية
,....التشريعات يجب أن تصاغ علي أساس المواطنة وتراعي التعدد الديني
والثقافي وتتناغم مع قيم العصر وتراعي تبائن المفاهيم الدينية الخ
......... شكرا جني وأثمن علي موقفك الإيجابي في قضية الدين والدولة

Post: #39
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 09:44 PM
Parent: #38

Quote:
Sudan women lashed for wearing trousers
Several Sudanese women have been flogged as a punishment for dressing "indecently", according to a local journalist who was arrested with them. Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein, who says she is facing 40 lashes, said she and 12 other women wearing trousers were arrested in a restaurant in the capital, Khartoum.

She said several of the women had pleaded guilty to the charges and had 10 lashes immediately. Khartoum, unlike South Sudan, is governed by Sharia law.

Several of those punished were from the mainly Christian and animist south, Ms Hussein said. Non-Muslims are not supposed to be subject to Islamic law, even in Khartoum and other parts of the mainly Muslim north.


Photo showing Lubna Hussein’s clothing when arrested by Public Order Police from here.

She said that a group of about 20 or 30 police officers entered the popular Khartoum restaurant and arrested all the women wearing trousers. "I was wearing trousers and a blouse and the 10 girls who were lashed were wearing like me, there was no difference," she said.

Ms Hussein said some women pleaded guilty to "get it over with" but others, including herself, chose to speak to their lawyers and are awaiting their fates.

Under Sharia law in Khartoum, the normal punishment for "indecent" dressing is 40 lashes. Ms Hussein is a well-known reporter who writes a weekly column called Men Talk for Sudanese papers. She also works for the United Nations Mission in Sudan.

posted by arbroath at 10:32 AM

الاخ كمال عباسمعا من اجل
دولة واحدة بقانون واحد لا للدولة الدينية
الاديان تفرق ولا توحد
جنى

Post: #40
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 09:47 PM
Parent: #39


وهذا هو الزى الذى اقتيدت به!!!!!!!!!!
جنى

Post: #46
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: المكاشفي الخضر الطاهر
Date: 07-14-2009, 10:49 PM
Parent: #39

Quote: الاديان تفرق ولا توحد


حسبي الله ونعم الوكيل ولا حولة ولا قوة الا بالله العلي العظيم


يقول الله تبارك وتعالى : {إِنَّ الدِّينَ عِندَ اللّهِ الإِسْلاَمُ وَمَا اخْتَلَفَ الَّذِينَ أُوْتُواْ الْكِتَابَ إِلاَّ مِن بَعْدِ مَا جَاءهُمُ الْعِلْمُ بَغْياً بَيْنَهُمْ وَمَن يَكْفُرْ بِآيَاتِ اللّهِ فَإِنَّ اللّهِ سَرِيعُ الْحِسَابِ }آل عمران19


ويقول تعالى : {وَمَن يَبْتَغِ غَيْرَ الإِسْلاَمِ دِيناً فَلَن يُقْبَلَ مِنْهُ وَهُوَ فِي الآخِرَةِ مِنَ الْخَاسِرِينَ }آل عمران85

صدق الله العظيم

الامر واضح جلي ولا يحتاج الى اي شرح

Post: #41
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: بدر الدين الأمير
Date: 07-14-2009, 09:47 PM
Parent: #38

لبنى
درس من دروس انتزاع الحرية ...
وبعض الرجال بل والنتظمات في وطنى
يستجدونها من الدكتاتور .....

Post: #42
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: المكاشفي الخضر الطاهر
Date: 07-14-2009, 10:01 PM
Parent: #41

إن الذين يحبون أن تشيع الفاحشة في الذين آمنوا لهم عذاب ...م في الدنيا والآخرة

Post: #43
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 07-14-2009, 10:12 PM
Parent: #42




Hebrew

Post: #44
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: فتحي الصديق
Date: 07-14-2009, 10:19 PM
Parent: #43

القومة ليها وهي تجمل هامة النضال بوقفتهاهذه.
شكرا جني..شكرا كوستاوي
..

Post: #45
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Bashasha
Date: 07-14-2009, 10:25 PM
Parent: #43

يالغباء هؤلاء الكيزان!

Post: #47
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: jini
Date: 07-14-2009, 11:12 PM
Parent: #45

Quote: صحافية سودانية تواجه الجلد بتهمة ارتدائها ملابس «غير لائقة»

GMT 8:30:00 2009 الثلائاء 14 يوليو



الشرق الاوسط اللندنية

شرطة النظام العام اعتقلتها خلال احتفال عائلي

الخرطوم: إسماعيل آدم

أثارت قضية إلقاء الشرطة في العاصمة السودانية القبض على الصحافية السودانية لبنى أحمد حسين بتهمة «ارتداء ملابس تخدش الشعور العام» ردود فعل واسعة، ويُنتظر أن تقدم الصحافية لبنى إلى المحاكمة في مقبل الأيام.
وقالت لبنى لـ«الشرق الأوسط» إنها خضعت أمس لعدة استجواب من قِبل النيابة. وفي حال أدانتها المحكمة فإنها ستُجلَد 10 جلدات وتفرض عليها غرامة 250 جنيها سودانيا، ما يعادل مائة دولار، وفي حال عدم دفع الغرامة تُسجن لمدة شهر. وقال نقيب الصحافيين السودانيين محيي الدين تيتاوي لـ«الشرق الأوسط» إن النيابة أبلغتهم نهار أمس أن لبنى ستقدم إلى المحاكمة ليقول القضاء كلمة في التهمة الموجهة إليها. ولم يتسنَّ الاتصال بالنيابة للحصول على إفادات في القضية. وروت لبنى ـ وهي صحافية تعمل في مكتب الناطق باسم قوات مراقبة اتفاق السلام بين الشمال والجنوب المعروفة بقوات «يونمس» ـ لـ«الشرق الأوسط» ملابسات إلقاء القبض عليها، فقالت إنها ذهبت مساء الجمعة الماضية إلى نادٍ شهير في العاصمة السودانية للحصول على حجز للنادي من إدارته لإقامة حفل زفاف يخص أحد أفراد أسرتها في الفترة المقبلة، ووجدت في النادي حفلا غنائيا يقيمه فنان مصري يحضره العشرات من «الأسر والشيوخ والشباب والشابات بأعمار مختلفة»، وقالت: «ظللت في الحفل في انتظار نهايته للحصول على الحجز، وفي الساعة الحادية عشرة وعشر دقائق داهمت قوة من الشرطة الخاصة المعروفة بشرطة النظام العام النادي وألقت القبض على 9 من الشابات بينهن أنا، وأغلب اللائي ألقي القبض عليهن من يرتدين السراويل»، وأضافت: «وهناك في قسم الشرطة وجدنا أربع بنات أخريات ألقي القبض عليهن من مكان آخر على ما بدا، فأصبح العدد في المكان 13 شابة»، وذكرت أنها بعد التحري وُضعت هي وأخريات في الحبس ولم تستطع وأخريات الحصول على ضمانة إلا يوم السبت، حيث أفرج عنهن بعد أن قامت كل واحدة باستدعاء محاميها، وقالت إنها استدعت محامي قوات «يونمس» ليتم الإفراج عنها بالضمانة.
وحول كروت الدعوة التي وزعتها على نطاق واسع شمل الصحافيين والسياسيين ومحامين في الخرطوم لحضور محاكمتها قالت: «قمت بذلك حتى تتم محاكمتي علنا ويستطيع من حضر أن ينقل بأنني جُلدت بسبب ارتداء بنطلون لا بسبب أي شيء آخر»، وأضافت: «هذا الإجراء مني جاء تحوطا لأي شائعات قد تصدر بعد المحاكمة»، ومضت: «وزعت كروت الدعوة نزولا إلى المثل السوداني القائل: السمعة ولا طول العمر». وقالت: «منذ أن ألقي القبض عليّ وحتى هذه اللحظة ظللت أترتدي ذات البنطلون، الذي كان السبب في إلقاء القبض عليّ»، وبالسؤال عن سبب ذلك قالت: «لأنني أرى أن الزي عادي وليس فيه ما يجرّمني».
من جانبه قال الدكتور محيي الدين تيتاوي لـ«الشرق الأوسط» إن لبنى لم تتصل بهم بشأن القضية «ولكنني اتصلت بها وعرفت ما حدث منها وطلبت إمكانية تدخل اتحاد الصحافيين في القضية ووافقت، واتصلنا بالنيابة وعرفنا ما جرى من جانبهم وقالوا لنا إن القضية ستذهب إلى المحكمة ليقول القضاء كلمته»، باعتبار أن بعض من أُلقي القبض عليهن معها قد تعرضن للعقوبة.

Post: #48
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: كمال عباس
Date: 07-14-2009, 11:24 PM
Parent: #45

كتب الاخ المكاشفي خضر
Quote: حسبي الله ونعم الوكيل ولا حولة ولا قوة الا بالله العلي العظيم يقول الله تبارك وتعالى : {إِنَّ الدِّينَ عِندَ اللّهِ الإِسْلاَمُ وَمَا اخْتَلَفَ الَّذِينَ أُوْتُواْ الْكِتَابَ إِلاَّ مِن بَعْدِ مَا جَاءهُمُ الْعِلْمُ بَغْياً بَيْنَهُمْ وَمَن يَكْفُرْ بِآيَاتِ اللّهِ فَإِنَّ اللّهِ سَرِيعُ الْحِسَابِ }آل عمران19ويقول تعالى : {وَمَن يَبْتَغِ غَيْرَ الإِسْلاَمِ دِيناً فَلَن يُقْبَلَ مِنْهُ وَهُوَ فِي الآخِرَةِ مِنَ الْخَاسِرِينَ }آل عمران85
صدق الله العظيم الامر واضح جلي ولا يحتاج الى اي شرح

وهل فهمت نقطة الاخ جني يامكاشفي ? لا أعتقد !!
..الاثارة والتهييج لا يفيد بل سينقلب عليك يامكاشفي
ولكن مالنا وهذا ..دعني أبسط لك المسألة.... ماهو القاسم المشترك الذي يجمع السودانين
الأجابة .... هو المواطنة ..فالمواطنة تجمع بين السوداني المسلم والوثني
والمسيحي والملحد ومعتقد الديانات الافريقية
بينما الاسلام يجمع بين المسلمين فقط والمسيحية بين معتنقيها والوثنية بين
أتباعها.........والسؤال هل الأسلام - كاإنتماء -يجمع بين كل السودانين ?
الإجابة بالتأكيد لا .... أذا من يقول أن الأديان تفرقنا فهوصادق ومن يقول
أن رابطة المواطنة هي ما يجمعنا هو صادق ومن يقول أن دين واحد يجمعنا كسودانين فهو.........
كمال

Post: #49
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Raja
Date: 07-15-2009, 00:01 AM
Parent: #48

العزيز جني..

ســلام وإحترام..

شــكرا لهذاالجهد المشترك مع العزيز كوستاوي في عرض الصحافة العالمية للموقف السخيف الذي تواجهه زميلتنا الكريمة لبنى أحمد حسين..
المخجل ليس لبس لبنى ورفيقاتها. المخجل أن البشير وهارون وغيرهم يرددون شعارات حقوق الإنسان والديموقراطية والحريات وكأنهم يتحدثون عن سودان آخر لا تعيش فيه لبنى. يمكن يخدعوا بعض اصحاب العقول الخفيفة الذين لا يزالوا يدافعون عن الإنقاذ وثوابتها البلاء الذي حل ببلادنا وأهان أهلنا وأخرج الملايين من بيوتهم وأسكنهم معسكرات الذل والهوان. وتسلًط على نساءنا (وهذا هو تخصصهم الأكبر) وكسر أقلام كتًابنا ودفع بأطفالنا إلى محارق ما سمًي بالجهاد وقتها أو الموت في معسكرات التدريب التي يستثنون منها فلذات أكبادهم..

التحية للبنى وهي تفضح هذا النظام وتفضح ببغاويته في ترديد أشياء يجهل كنهها.. فما دخل القتلة السارقين بحقوق الإنسان..؟

رجــــا

Post: #50
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: ايهاب اسماعيل
Date: 07-15-2009, 00:09 AM
Parent: #48

Sudanesischer Journalistin drohen 40 Peitschenhiebe – weil sie Hosen trug


Im Sudan werden Frauen für «unschickliche Kleidung», die angeblich die öffentliche Moral verletzt, bestraft.


Hosentragen als Delikt: Lubna Ahmed al Hussein.
Im Sudan droht einer bekannten Journalistin wegen des Tragens einer Hose eine Strafe von 40 Peitschenhieben. Sie habe Anfang Juli in einem Restaurant gesessen, als Polizisten hineinkamen und alle Frauen in Hosen aufforderten mitzukommen, sagte die renommierte Journalistin Lubna Ahmed al Hussein am Sonntag in Khartum. Zehn der zwölf betroffenen Frauen seien zwei Tage später auf einer Polizeiwache in der sudanesischen Hauptstadt mit je zehn Peitschenhieben für ihre «unschickliche» Kleidung bestraft worden.

Die übrigen, darunter sie selbst, seien gemäss Paragraph 152 des sudanesischen Strafrechts angeklagt worden, sagte Hussein. Dieser Paragraph sieht 40 Peitschenhiebe für unschickliches Verhalten vor, das «die öffentliche Moral verletzt».

Die Journalistin, die regelmässig für die linksgerichtete Zeitung «El Sahafa» schreibt und ausserdem für die Uno-Mission im Sudan arbeitet, weiss nach eigenen Angaben noch nicht, wann ihre Anhörung zu der Anschuldigung stattfindet. Sie wolle aber schon jetzt die Öffentlichkeit auf ihre Lage aufmerksam machen, sagte Hussein


Tages Anzeiger

Switzerland




...................................

غايتو يا لبني لكن دي بالغت فيها مافي زول سبقك عليها...في داعي يمسحوا بينتا الارض كده في الصحف العالمية

Post: #51
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: ABDALLAH ABDALLAH
Date: 07-15-2009, 05:51 AM
Parent: #50

شـكرا الاخ جـنى وشـكرا الاخ نـصر الدين لتفاعلكما الصـادق
مـع هـذا الحـدث.

مـعظم وسـائل الاعـلام العـالميه تناقلت هـذه الواقعه باعتبارها
نـوع من انـواع اهـانة الـمراة فـى السـودان.

الاشـاده بموقف الصـحفيه لبنى الشـجاع, حيث لفتت انظار الاعلام
العـالمى للممارسـات الخـاطئه فـى حـق المـراه فـى السـودان.

Post: #52
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Ahmed Yousif Abu Harira
Date: 07-15-2009, 06:16 AM
Parent: #51

التحية للشجاعة لبنى أحمد حسين والخزي والعار للجلادين
بهذه الشجاعة والجسارة واجهت لبنى بمفردها السلطان وحاكمته بدلا من ان يحاكمها
هي خطوة غض النظر عن حجمها ، لكنها مهمة جدا واساسية في مشوار المطالبة بالحقوق ومواجهة الطغيان
وقديما قالوا في المثل الشعبي السوداني أن:
جبل الكحل هدنو (هدمته) المراويد

Post: #53
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: wadalzain
Date: 07-15-2009, 07:43 AM
Parent: #52

هذا عمل جميل وتوثيق مهم

شكرا لجنى وكوستاوى وكل من جاء بهذا التوثيق

اتمنى من الذين لهم حظ وافر فى البحث هنا أن يأتوا لنا بصور لبنات سودانيات يرتدين البناطلين كعادة ليس فيها ما يشين ولا يخدش ولا جريمة ، اعتقد أن الطالبات فى الثانوى والشرطيات وغيرها من النساء العاديات يلبسن البنطلون ولا حرج فى ذلك فمن اجل دعم قضية دفاع لبنى لنأتى بهذه الصور .

Post: #54
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Zakaria Joseph
Date: 07-15-2009, 02:49 PM
Parent: #53

Quote: Una docena de mujeres sudanesas, azotadas por vestir "indecentemente"
ELPAIS.COM 13/07/2009


Vota Resultado 317 votos
Un grupo de mujeres sudanesas ha sido condenado en la capital de Sudán, Jartúm, a penas de hasta 40 latigazos por llevar pantalones, según informó a la cadena BBC Lubna Ahmed al Husein, reportera sudanesa y una de las mujeres arrestadas.

Sudán
A FONDO
Capital: Jartum. Gobierno: Régimen Militar. Población: 40,218,456 (est. 2008)
La noticia en otros webs
webs en español
en otros idiomas
Husein denuncia haber sido detenida junto a otras 12 mujeres en un céntrico restaurante de Jartúm. Varias entre las detenidas se declararon culpables y recibieron así diez latigazos.

Husein, en cambio, se negó a admitir su culpabilidad, exigió hablar con un abogado, y se enfrenta ahora a hasta 40 latigazos, la pena ordinaria por vestirse de manera "indecente" según la interpretación de la sharia vigente en Jartúm.

Varias de las detenidas proceden del sur del país, mayoritariamente animista y cristiano, en donde no encuentra aplicación la ley islámica. En teoría, los ciudadanos sudaneses no musulmanes no están sometidos a la sharia en todo el territorio del país.

"Yo llevaba unos pantalones y una blusa, al igual que las otras chicas", dijo a la BBC Husein, que escribe una columna semanal publicada en medios sudaneses y que trabaja para Naciones Unidas en el país africano.



El Pais, Spain

Post: #55
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Zakaria Joseph
Date: 07-15-2009, 02:55 PM
Parent: #54

Quote: Trece mujeres de Sudán han sido condenadas a cuarenta latigazos por vestir de manera "indecente", según cuenta la cadena pública BBC. Al parecer, las mujeres se encontraban en un famoso restaurante de Khartoum, capital de Sudán, cuando varios policías entraron y les arrestaron por llevar pantalones.

BBC recoge el testimonio de una de las mujeres afectadas, Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein, que ha relatado los hechos. "Yo llevaba puestos unos pantalones y una blusa, y las otras diez chicas que fueron castigadas con el látigo vestían como yo, no había mucha diferencia", aseguró.

A la espera de la condena
Al-Hussein ha contado también que en el momento de la detención algunas mujeres reconocieron su culpa y suplicaron piedad, pero esta súplica sólo fue respondida con diez latigazos. Otras, entre las que se incluye ella, optaron por hablar con sus abogados y ahora esperan su destino con incertidumbre.

En Khartoum rige la Sharia, la ley musulmana, aunque en principio los que no defienden esta religión no deberían ser juzgados por ella. Según esta ley, el castigo por llevar ropa "indecente" es de cuarenta latigazos. Las mujeres como Al-Hussain, que hablaron con sus abogados, están a la espera de ver si se cumple esta condena.


El Publico, Spain.

و هاكم التعليقات و ما بترجمها لكم.

Quote: No creo que sea tanto un tema de religiones en si sino de la visión que se le da o la forma en que se practica esa religión.

Cualquier creencia religiosa, politica o (por que no ?) futbolera llevada al extremo es mala, muy mala.


totalmente de acuerdo contigo fil,pero a falta de "ESTADO LAICO YA"(no parece tan fácil)¿con qué te quedarías,con lo que tenemos o con la que se nos "cae" con esta gente? porque ninguna política,sociedad,costumbres,etc etc puede salirse de lo que dice el corán(ojo! que no es solo una religión sino una forma de vivir)y esto es en el siglo xxi y está pasando AHORA,deja un momento al lado la inquisición y a franco porque eso POR SUERTE,ya pasó y mira que no estoy ni con los unos ni con los otros como tú dices.

Elena, perdona, pero es muy difícil leerte, y por tanto comprender o siquiera entender tus razonamientos....

Por lo que se barrunta, se aprecia cierta incomodidad a la hora de evaluar otra característica que no te sea cercanamente reconocible, mostrando entonces el desdén que incapacita salvo para la soflama.

Está claro que la Sharia no es aplicable a occidente, por lo que no se puede evaluar desde occidente. Tu no eres ni partidaria ni víctima de la Sharia. Pero relativizas tu posición a la mantenida por quien sí la desea, o simplemente consiente, bien por temor o por tradición.

Tambien en occidente hay tradiciones. Algunas elevadas a leyes, pues éstas son fuentes del derecho. Algunas tradiciones son religiosas (ya dejamos para otro momento si judeocristianas o paganas). Como la de ser madre y esposa, como papel principal de la mujer, incluso hoy en dia. Recuerdo que tuve que "avalar" a mi madre para poder abrir una cuenta en la caja de ahorros de Madrid, pues ella, por ley (¿civil?), no podía disponer de facilidades para lograr la independencia económica. Ni siquiera una viuda. Esta es también la España de hoy, aunque no la quieras ver. Una buena parte de las gentes de los '40, '50, '60 y '70 siguen aún entre nosotros. Pregunta a alguien de entonces si ir a "tomar unas copas sola y con pantalones" era "normal". Cualquiera con uso de razón por edad, que haya vivido la década del 80 al 90 se dió cuenta que el cambio en la sociedad era vertiginoso. Demasiado, para mucha gente. Algunos siguen sin adaptarse. Parece ser que tu eres posterior a esto.

Reconocerse como seguidor de una religión, a la vez que se denuncian los métodos de otra, es tener la viga y el camello en el ojo propio, y más propio de una época que dices no representar.

Ya que hablas (graciosamente, sin duda) de edades medias y siglos catorces...en fin: los chinos van por el siglo 48, creo, y los vedas deben haber pasado el 90. Nuestro fenomenal siglo XXI no les debe parecer más que un arcaico y ridículo intento de "ponerles la pierna encima"...

Claro que, como ya has repetido antes, es posible que ninguno nos estemos enterando de nada...pero tu...sigues en tu iglesia.
4.0 | 16 | Albert | 14-07-2009 01:10:00
Aun estoy por leer un solo comentario defendiendo a los integristas islámicos.

En cambio hay unos cuantos de integristas católicos acusando a los progresistas de apoyar a los integristas islámicos...

Un claro ejemplo de que los fundamentalistas religiosos llevan las ganas de guerra en la sangre: si no tienen motivos para criminalizar a quien no sigue su fé, se los inventan.

El gobierno tiene que protegernos de esta gente y hacer leyes que impidan que puedan cortar la libertad de los ciudadanos que no queremos seguir ninguna religion
16.0 | 22 | Fil | 14-07-2009 00:55:35
Los integristas islámicos y católicos llevais siglos con el mismo cuento: o estais con nosotros, o con ellos, los herejes.

¿Cuantas veces hay que repetiros que no queremos soportaros más?

La izquierda es laica, por mucho que repitais vuestros bulos más que el rosario, no va a colar.

Por cierto Elena, si no queremos olvidar el franquismo es porque no queremos volver a vivir aquella situación. Ya se que a los nacionalcatólicos os molesta, pero es bueno saber hasta dónde sois capaces de llegar si os dan poder.

¿Cuando va a condenar la conferencia episcopal su complacencia y apoyo al régimen franquista? Si no lo ha hecho ya , es porque sueña conque se vuelva a repetir.

ESTADO LAICO YA.

Post: #56
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Zakaria Joseph
Date: 07-15-2009, 02:58 PM
Parent: #55

ESTADO LAICO YA.

ختم صاحب اخر تعليق بشعار: حان وقت دولة لا دينية.

Post: #57
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Zakaria Joseph
Date: 07-15-2009, 03:05 PM
Parent: #56

و الحكاية وصلت باراغواى


Quote: Indignante: condenan a mujeres por vestir pantalones


[13/07 | 13:35 ] Un grupo de mujeres sudanesas ha sido condenado en la capital de Sudán, Jartúm, a penas de hasta 40 latigazos por llevar pantalones, según informó a la cadena BBC Lubna Ahmed al Husein, reportera sudanesa y una de las mujeres arrestadas, según la página web del diario El País de España.





El informe señala que Husein denuncia haber sido detenida junto a otras 12 mujeres en un céntrico restaurante de Jartúm. Varias entre las detenidas se declararon culpables y recibieron así diez latigazos.

Husein, en cambio, se negó a admitir su culpabilidad, exigió hablar con un abogado, y se enfrenta ahora a hasta 40 latigazos, la pena ordinaria por vestirse de manera "indecente" según la interpretación de la sharia vigente en Jartúm.

Varias de las detenidas proceden del sur del país, mayoritariamente animista y cristiano, en donde no encuentra aplicación la ley islámica. En teoría, los ciudadanos sudaneses no musulmanes no están sometidos a la sharia en todo el territorio del país.

"Yo llevaba unos pantalones y una blusa, al igual que las otras chicas", dijo a la BBC Husein, que escribe una columna semanal publicada en medios sudaneses y que trabaja para Naciones Unidas en el país africano, concluye el artículo de EL PAÍS.



Somos Paraguay.

Post: #58
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Zakaria Joseph
Date: 07-15-2009, 03:15 PM
Parent: #57

Quote: AFP - Une journaliste soudanaise de renom, accusée de s'être habillée de façon "indécente", a indiqué dimanche qu'elle était passible de 40 coups de fouet en cas de condamnation pour un tel crime.

Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein, qui publie régulièrement des billets dans le journal de gauche al-Sahafa et travaille aussi pour la Mission des Nations unies au Soudan (Unmis), a été arrêtée la semaine dernière à Khartoum. Elle est accusée de s'être vêtue de manière contraire à l'ordre public.

"Le 3 juillet, j'étais au restaurant. Des policiers sont entrés et ont demandé aux filles qui portaient des pantalons de les suivre" au commissariat, a-t-elle dit à l'AFP.

"Ils m'ont emmenée ainsi que 12 autres filles, dont des +sudistes+ (...). Deux jours plus tard, 10 d'entre elles ont été convoquées au commissariat dans le centre de Khartoum et ont reçu 10 coups de fouet chacune", a ajouté la jeune femme, qui porte le foulard islamique.

Les trois autres femmes, dont elle fait donc partie, ont été accusées "en vertu de l'article 152 du code pénal soudanais", a-t-elle ajouté, soulignant que la date de son audience n'avait pas encore été fixée.

Cet article de loi prévoit une peine de 40 coups de fouet pour quiconque "commet un acte indécent ou un acte qui viole la moralité publique ou porte des vêtements indécents", selon le texte de loi.

"Je veux que les gens sachent ce qui s'est passé", a ajouté la journaliste.

Contrairement à d'autres pays de la région, les femmes sont très présentes dans la vie publique au Soudan, un pays majoritairement musulman. Mais certaines lois demeurent discriminatoires à leur égard, estiment des organisations de défense des droits de l'Homme.


France 24

Post: #59
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Zakaria Joseph
Date: 07-15-2009, 05:23 PM
Parent: #58

Quote: 13/07/2009 01:58 - ARRESTATA PERCHé INDOSSAVA PANTALONI
Sudan: giornalista rischia 40 frustate
KARTOUM - Una nota giornalista sudanese è stata arrestata con l'accusa di essersi vestita in modo "indecente" perché portava i pantaloni e potrebbe essere condannata a 40 colpi di frusta se fosse ritenuta responsabile di questo reato. Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein, che pubblica regolarmente dei corsivi sul giornale di sinistra al-Sahafa e lavora anche per la Missione delle Nazioni Unite in Sudan, è stata arrestata la scorsa settimana a Khartoum. È accusata di essersi vestita in modo contrario all'ordine pubblico.

"Il 3 luglio, ero al ristorante - ha raccontato la giornalista alla France Presse - Poliziotti sono entrati e hanno chiesto alle ragazze che portavano i pantaloni di seguirli in commissariato. Mi hanno portata via insieme ad altre 12 ragazze, alcune delle quali del sud. Due giorni più tardi, dieci di loro sono state convocate in un commissariato nel centro di Kartoum e hanno ricevuto dieci colpi di frusta ciascuna". Le altre tre donne, fra le quali la giornalista, sono state rinviate a giudizio in forza dell'articolo 152 del codice penale sudanese. L'articolo prevede una pena di 40 colpi di frusta per chiunque "commetta un atto indecente o un atto che violi la moralità pubblica o porti dei vestiti indecenti". La data dell'udienza non è ancora stata fissata. Contrariamente ad altri paesi della regione, le donne sono molto presenti nella vita pubblica in Sudan, paese a maggioranza musulmano. Alcune leggi tuttavia rimangono discriminatorie nei loro confronti, secondo le organizzazioni di difesa dei diritti dell'uomo.


Notiziaro italiano

Post: #60
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Zakaria Joseph
Date: 07-15-2009, 05:31 PM
Parent: #59

Quote: Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein é jornalista e foi condenada a receber 40 chicotadas.

O crime?

Vestir calças.

Onde?

No Sudão.

A justificativa?

Uma lei sudanesa de 1991 prevê punições a quem se veste de maneira que vai de encontro aos costumes do país.

O real motivo:

Ela é autora de uma coluna semanal para jornais do país, chamada Kalam Rijal, e

costuma desferir críticas ao governo local.

Na tradução, o título da seção significa “Conversa de Homem” – referência satírica a

uma expressão árabe pejorativa, utilizada para referir-se ao que as mulheres falam.

•••••••••••

*Com informações da BBC. Clique aqui e veja a notícia completa


Caminhos de Angola

Post: #61
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Zakaria Joseph
Date: 07-15-2009, 05:36 PM
Parent: #60

Jornalista arrisca 40 chicotadas pela maneira de vestir
Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein critica regime sudanês pela repressão que as mulheres sofrem
Por: /CP | 13-07-2009 08: 27


Quote: Uma jornalista sudanesa pode ser condenada a 40 chicotadas por se vestir de forma considerada «indecente» neste país, conta o LA Times.

Lubna Ahmed al-Hussein é acusada por crime contra a ordem e moral pública do Sudão, segundo uma lei de 1991 que proíbe as mulheres de se vestirem de uma maneira que provoca «desconforto público».

A jornalista é conhecida por criticar o regime sudanês e o fundamentalismo islâmica sobretudo pela repressão que as mulheres sofrem.

Al-Hussein foi presa no início de Julho em Cartum, a capital do Sudão, quando se encontrava no interior de um restaurante.

Os polícias pediram a todas as mulheres vestidas com calças para os acompanharem e, dois dias mais tarde, dez das 13 foram convocadas pela esquadra do centro da cidade, onde tiveram de se deslocar para levar 10 chicotadas cada uma, revelou a jornalista, que começou a enviar convites para os jornais para irem ao seu julgamento. Caso seja condenada, a sudanesa já avisou que vai enviar convites semelhantes para irem assistir ao castigo público.


Ultima Hora, Portugal.

Post: #62
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Sabri Elshareef
Date: 07-19-2009, 04:28 AM
Parent: #61

: الخضر: النظام العام يعمل وفق القانون
18 / 07 / 2009 10:37:00

في اطار تطبيق الشريعة الاسلامية بالبلاد


الخرطوم: الرائد

أكد والي ولاية الخرطوم د. عبد الرحمن الخضر اهتمام ولايته بدور العبادة في انشاء وتأهيل المساجد وتخصيص اوقاف لتنتفع المساجد من ريع الاوقاف. وقال الوالي لدى مخاطبته المصلين بمسجد الشيخ عبد الحي يوسف في صلاة الجمعة امس ان الولاية تدفع مبلغ 500 الف جنيه شهرياً لكهرباء المساجد التي زاد استهلاكها من الكهرباء بنسبة 100%، وتعمل على تحسين بيئة المساجد.

واشار الوالي الى ان القانون الجنائي وسائر القوانين المطبقة في الشمال مستمدة من الشريعة الإسلامية وان الجنوب يحكم بقانون آخر وفقاً لاتفاقية السلام وان الدولة جادة ومخلصة في تطبيق الشريعة الاسلامية.

واشار الى ان هناك قانونا ينظم عمل شرطة النظام العام وان الشرطة تعمل وفق القانون

Post: #63
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 09-08-2009, 09:10 PM
Parent: #62

.

Post: #64
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Kostawi
Date: 09-08-2009, 09:10 PM
Parent: #62

.

Post: #65
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: عبد الرحيم حسب الرسول
Date: 09-08-2009, 09:25 PM
Parent: #64

جني
كتر خيرك
لك التقدير على هذا الجهد الوافر

كامل الدعم

لقضايا الوطن


مودتي

Post: #66
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: محمد عمر الفكي
Date: 09-08-2009, 10:07 PM
Parent: #65

الاخ حيدر الاخ كوستاوي
والله ما عندكم شغلة، ما خليتوا جريدة في الدنيا دي ما جبتوا منها مقال وكمان زكريا جوزيف يغرف معاكم.

انتوا ما شفتوا صلاح غريبة قال ليكم شنو؟

قضية لبنى انتهت تماماً والصدق ما قالت غريبة

حيدر ومن معه
تحياتي لك ولكل الاخوة الذين اسهموا في هذا البوست التوثيقي ودمتم وعاش شعب السودان شعباً حراً كريماً يحفظ حرمة النساء ويعرف قدر الرجال في هذه العشرون العجاف التي نسال الله في هذا الشهر المبارك الا يطيلها اكثر مما طالت.

Post: #67
Title: Re: لبنى بت الرجال البتقول كلام الرجال عندما يصمت الرجال فى الصحافة العالمية
Author: Sabri Elshareef
Date: 09-14-2009, 04:53 PM
Parent: #66

فوق الي لبني بت الرجال ارفع البوست للاعلي