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WMC News & Features
May 22, 2009 | Gail McGowan Mellor | International, Violence against women
The Death of Abeer in Iraq: One Former Soldier Is Sentenced—What of Those in Command?
A civilian jury has deliberated long hours over the fate of a former Army private in the March 12, 2006 assault and murder of Abeer al-Janabi and her family. His guilt has been determined in federal court. The author argues that it is up to us as citizens to prevent future crimes and protect our soldiers. This is the second of a two-part report on the Paducah, Kentucky trial.
WMC News & Features
May 19, 2009 | Gail McGowan Mellor | International, Violence against women
The Death of Abeer in Iraq—What We Know Now
Four U.S. soldiers have been tried and convicted in military court for the March 12, 2006 assault and murder of Abeer al-Janabi and her family. Now, in the federal court trial of the last man accused, former Pvt. 1st Class Steven Green, information has surfaced that explains more fully what happened that day. This is the first of a two-part report on the Paducah, Kentucky trial.
WMC FBomb
April 29, 2009 | Julie Zeilinger | Feminism, LGBTQIA, Media, Violence against women
Angie Zapata Conviction
Some good news emerged last week from the awful murder case of Angie Zapata, a transgendered young woman who was murdered by Allen Andrade in a terrible hate crime. The conviction-- first-degree murde...
WMC News & Features
April 27, 2009 | Melissa Silverstein | Arts and culture, Violence against women
Reflections on the Observe and Report Date-Rape Controversy
Just in time for Sexual Assault Awareness and Prevention month, a comedy provokes argument—if not box office success. Rarely does a film incite responses as diametrically opposed as the new "dark...
WMC News & Features
April 21, 2009 | Gudrún Jónsdóttir | International, Politics, Violence against women
In Iceland, Our Long-Sought Victory in Battling Human Trafficking
On April 17, the last day before Iceland’s parliament adjourned to prepare for elections on April 25, members passed a bill criminalizing the act of buying individuals for purposes of prostitution. Patterned on the Swedish law that addresses the demand fueling the commercial sex industry, the action was hailed as an historic moment in the international struggle against human trafficking. Via Equality Now, here is a dispatch describing the campaign from Gudrún Jónsdóttir, spokeswoman for Stigamot, a women's rights organization in Iceland.
WMC News & Features
April 20, 2009 | Shazia Z. Rafi | International, Politics, Violence against women
Democracy and Pandora’s Box: Family Laws in Afghanistan
For women in Afghanistan, the promise of democracy seems not to include equality, nor protection from the potential of domestic violence. Here, the secretary general of Parliamentarians for Global Action explains the politics behind the proposed oppressive law regulating Shia marriages.
WMC News & Features
April 16, 2009 | Courtney Martin | Violence against women
New Report Indicates that Rape Kit Backlog Likely a National Crisis
A study of crime labs in Los Angeles indicates that many sexual assault victims wait in vain for prosecution of rapists. The lead investigator for Human Rights Watch, Sarah Tofte, now wants to study backlogs at labs in cities across the country.
WMC FBomb
April 15, 2009 | Julie Zeilinger | Feminism, Gender-based violence, International, Violence against women
The 50 Million Missing Campaign
For a few years now, I’ve been tracking the practice of female feticide in rural India. I’ve always been incredibly interested in Indian culture- I even speak a little bit of Hindi (not well) and foll...
WMC FBomb
April 15, 2009 | Julie Zeilinger | Feminism, Media, Violence against women
Rihanna and Chris Brown
Let’s talk about dating violence! No, seriously. I don’t think I have to recap the Rihanna / Chris Brown debacle but just in case, here’s what allegedly happened in 15 seconds or less: There was a tx...
WMC News & Features
March 16, 2009 | Shazia Z. Rafi | International, Politics, Violence against women
New U.S. Policy in AfPak: Looking for Mr. Moderate Taliban
To those who advocate making peace with certain elements of the Taliban, the author, who has worked to secure human rights with Pakistani legislators across the ideological spectrum, argues against any prospective deal that sacrifices women’s empowerment.
WMC News & Features
March 13, 2009 | Helen Zia | International, Violence against women
Why We Must Still Remember
Beginning in 2006, the Women’s Media Center began a series of articles to alert the public about violence against women involving U.S. soldiers in Iraq. Helen Zia, a WMC board member, explains why we must continue to demand justice.
WMC News & Features
February 02, 2009 | Marianne Schnall | Arts and culture, Feminism, Health, International, Politics, Violence against women
Turning Pain to Power
Women and girls in eastern Congo suffer sexual atrocities that are tactics of war in the region. Playwright Eve Ensler has joined with Dr. Denis Mukwege to ask us to imagine the unimaginable, to empathize and join together to end the terror.
WMC News & Features
January 27, 2009 | Yasmeen Hassan | Education, Girls, International, Violence against women
A War on Pakistan's Schoolgirls
In a remarkably beautiful area of Pakistan, the Taliban is making a nightmare of girls’ lives. The author, a Pakistani lawyer and staff member of Equality Now, tells us how the Obama Administration can avoid the mistakes of its predecessor.
WMC News & Features
December 15, 2008 | Marie Tessier | Violence against women
The DNA of Violence
A jury has convicted Atlanta courthouse killer Brian Gene Nichols, and Atlanta has heaved a sigh of relief. Nichols was sentenced Saturday to seven life sentences and four sentences of life without ...
WMC News & Features
September 17, 2008 | Melissa Silverstein | Arts and culture, Media, Violence against women
Keeping Hold of Your Vision—the Making of Hounddog
One of the dirty secrets of the film business is that it takes women directors a long time to get their films made. The Women, which opened recently, took Diane English 14 years to bring to the screen; other examples include Tamara Jenkins award-winning The Savagesand Kimberly Peirce's Stop-Loss, which took 10 years each. Writer/director Deborah Kampmeier joins this illustrious club with her own decade long trek to see her filmHounddog starring Dakota Fanning finally released in theatres.
WMC News & Features
August 04, 2008 | Robin Morgan | Feminism, International, Violence against women
Finally! The UN Gets One Right
Last week, the United Nations General Assembly unanimously confirmed Secretary General BanKi-Moon’s appointment for\the post of UN high commissioner for human rights: the distinguished South African jurist Navanethem (“Navi”) Pillay. Women’s rights activists around the world can celebrate.
WMC News & Features
July 25, 2008 | Peggy Simpson | Feminism, Politics, Violence against women
A Reflective NOW Looks to the Future
Jehmu Greene, a legendary grass roots organizer, plans next to “look laser-like at organizing young women.
WMC News & Features
December 21, 2007 | Marie Tessier | International, Violence against women
Sexual Violence as Occupational Hazard—In Iraq and at Home in the U.S.A.
Jamie Leigh Jones was just 20 in 2005 when she took a leap of faith to work in Iraq for her employer, military contractor Kellogg, Brown & Root, then a subsidiary of Halliburton. She went on a mission she believed in. Shortly after her arrival in Iraq, however, Jones’ ambitions were dashed in an alleged gang rape by co-workers.
WMC News & Features
December 20, 2007 | Robin Morgan | Feminism, Violence against women
The Four Solstice Miracles
The last year I sent Christmas cards was 1968: a plain, black-bordered card, mourning the Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert Kennedy assassinations and the ongoing Vietnam War, urging friends to don...
WMC News & Features
September 10, 2007 | Carol Jenkins | Girls, International, Violence against women
Uganda’s Warrior Girls
Yes, this slight, shy girl talking with me in the schoolyard killed four people. The rebel soldiers had given her the dictum so many warrior Ugandan children live under: “Kill, or we will kill you.” She tells her story in a rapid-fire, hushed monotone—as if rushing to deliver a memorized passage from a tale too awful to really think about. And that it is. She is only now 16 years old: as an 11-year-old soldier she killed grown men. I don’t give her name because life is still too dangerous for her. Abducted from her school by the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) as a small child, she is now rebuilding her life in northern Uganda—a student at a boarding school for girls in Kitgum, near the Sudanese border. In the run of her life, she managed to escape from the brutality of the rebel army only to return to her village to find her parents dead.
WMC News & Features
September 04, 2007 | Kristal Brent Zook | International, Violence against women
Murders in Mexico Continue
The brutal killings of 400 women began mysteriously in 1993 and continued until about 2005. Or so we thought. In early 2007, National Public Radio’s Lourdes Garcia-Navarro found still more recent ...
WMC News & Features
August 09, 2007 | Rebecca Hayden | International, Violence against women
Abeer's Courage
During the long days of the rape and murder court-martial of Sgt. Jesse Spielman at Fort Campbell where I was reporting a story for the Women’s Media Center website—I was struck by the language I was hearing and the apparent meaning of the words.
WMC News & Features
August 06, 2007 | Rebecca Hayden | International, Violence against women
Update—Spielman Convicted and Sentenced for the Murder and Rape of Abeer
A third soldier, Private Jesse Spielman, 23, was sentenced Saturday night to 110 years in prison after being convicted Friday of the rape and murder of 14-year-old Abeer Qassim Rasheed Al-Janabi. However, like Sergeant Paul Cortez and Specialist James Barker, who were also convicted in the case, Spielman will, says the Associated Press, be eligible for parole after only 10 years in prison.
WMC News & Features
August 03, 2007 | Rebecca Hayden | International, Violence against women
Spielman Court-Martial Underway in Murder and Rape of Abeer
According to testimony at his court-martial, which began Monday at Fort Campbell, Private Jesse Spielman went with Sergeant Paul Cortez, Specialist James Barker and Private Steven Green on March 12, 2006, to the home of the Al-Janabi family in a village south of Baghdad. He watched while they raped 14-year-old Abeer Qassim Rasheed Al-Janabi and murdered her and her family.
WMC News & Features
June 07, 2007 | Milon Nagi | Feminism, International, Media, Violence against women
Jordanian Journalist Breaks Taboos Campaigning Against Violence
Dua Khalil is stoned to death in Iraq for being seen with a man of another religion. A woman is shot dead in Jordan after her photo appears on her brother’s friend’s cellphone. Muqadas Bibi’s throat...
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