25M
Plan To Keep Women Out of Jail. [Australia]
Special housing and a mental
health unit will be provided for female offenders under a $25 million State Government
plan to keep more women out of jail. The female prison population has more than
doubled over the past decade, with about 260 in custody today. Research shows that
many of the women have suffered sexual abuse and mental illness. Corrections
Minister Tim Holding said the Better Pathways program aimed to divert women from prison
and break the cycle of reoffending. "It is a strategy that looks at ways of
better rehabilitating women in prison and preventing them from entering the correctional
system in the first place," Mr. Holding said. |
Women
Not Mere 'Sexual Objects' in Porn Films.
[Australia] One of the most vocal
complaints in the campaign against pornography has been that it reduces women to mere sex
objects. However, a new Australian study has found that to the contrary, pornography
in Australia shows them
as 'sexually active' persons, who were fully in control of the
situation. The study, led by Professor Alan Mckee, was a part of a three year
government funded study in which 50 of the bestselling pornographic videos in Australia
were analyzed for such things as who initiated sex, which partner's pleasure was paid
attention to, whether people in the videos got to speak about what they wanted during sex,
and whose perspective the videos were presented from. The professor said that the
study suggested that mainstream pornography in Australia
does not represent women as
objects, but as partners in sex. It also found that the plots of most were not only
believable, but were actually empowering for women. |
Use
Your Heads, Greer Tells Graduates. [Australia]
Germaine Greer might well be one
of our most celebrated living intellectuals, an academic giant who has made her name
advocating sexual freedom for women and inspiring generations of her sisters and their
daughters in the process. But yesterday outside the august walls of the University
of Sydney's Great Hall, where her alma mater was awarding her an honorary doctorate, Greer
looked like an old woman in a silly hat on a very windy day. "My hair will be
all messy," she declared, pulling her academic's black velvet bonnet down past her
ears. Inside the hall, students graduating from the university were treated to a
rousing lecture on the value of the education they had just received. "Keep
that mind of yours fit - you wouldn't let your body fall to pieces," she warned.
"It is just as easy to let your mind go slack and feeble. Intellect is a
bit like sexual ability - use it or lose it. "In your daily lives you will find
that most information-media treat you as rather stupid. Governments in fact rely on
the supposition that you are extremely stupid and have no memory whatsoever." |
Taking China: Vera Wang's
Long March. [China]
Vera Wang is known for her American bridal empire. But
in Shanghai last weekend she achieved
recognition that her parents could never have
imagined when they left their native China
for a new life in 1947. Wang received the
China Fashion Award or CFA as International Fashion Designer of the Year. Born
in New
York in 1949, she has become the first designer with Chinese roots to be globally
recognized. |
'Second
Wives' Are Back. [China]
China's economic boom has led to a revival of the
2-millennium-old tradition of "golden canaries," so called because, like the
showcase birds, mistresses here are often pampered, housed in love nests and taken out at
the pleasure of their "masters." Concubines were status symbols in
imperial China. After the
Communists took power, they sought to root out such
bourgeois evils, even as Chairman Mao Tse-tung reportedly kept a harem of peasant women
into his old age. Now, mistresses have become a must-have for party officials,
bureaucrats and businessmen. "We are in a commodity economy," says retired
Shanghai University sociologist
Liu Dalin. "Work, technology, love, beauty,
power - it's all tradable." So-called concubine villages - places where
lotharios keep "second wives" in comfort and seclusion - are now spread across
the nation, in booming cities such as Dongguan, Chengdu and
Shanghai. |
Princess
Sayako Marries Commoner. [Japan]
Wearing a simple white dress and pearls, Japan's
Princess Sayako bid farewell to palace life Tuesday to wed a Tokyo
city employee in a
low-key ceremony marking the first time that an emperor's daughter has married a
commoner. Under Japanese law, Sayako, the daughter of Emperor Akihito and Empress
Michiko, lost her royal status by marrying, and will now live the life of a taxpaying
commoner, without her generous palace allowance. The wedding drew intense national
attention, with Cabinet ministers and lawmakers congratulating the couple. "As
an ordinary citizen, I express my heartfelt congratulations," said Gender Equality
Minister Kuniko Inoguchi. The wedding took place as the government is considering
changing the 1947 law that forbids women from ascending to the Chrysanthemum Throne.
The same law requires female royals to leave the palace upon marriage.
Japan's royal
family has not had a male baby since the 1960s, and there is no direct male heir to the
throne. Sayako's brother, Crown Prince Naruhito, and his wife, Princess Masako, have
one child, a 3-year-old daughter, Aiko. If the law is changed soon, Sayako would be
the last female royal to give up her palace rights upon marriage. With opinion polls
showing firm, widespread support for letting women reign,
Japan
is now on the verge of
reverting back to the pre-1947 system that allowed eight women to assume the throne over
the past 1,500 years. A high-powered government commission recently wrote a report
recommending consideration of allowing women back on the throne, and bills to make the
change could be sent to Parliament for approval as early as next year. |
Wie Mixes It With the
Men in Japan. [Japan]
Teenage sensation Michelle Wie takes on the men again at
the Casio World Open which starts in Japan
on Thursday The 16-year-old is on a
reported appearance fee of $1 million for the second last event of the Japanese men's tour
and her first since being disqualified on her professional debut at the LPGA Tour's
Samsung World Championship. |
UN Calls for
Elimination of Violence Against Women. [Nepal]
The United Nations system in Nepal
said that UN agencies are committed to fighting all forms of violence against all women
and girls as well as sexual minorities. In a joint message issued here on Friday on
the occasion of "International Day for the Elimination of Violence against
Women," the UN system in Nepal said,
"The UN's concerns extend to women of all
ethnic, caste and religious groups, especially combating sexual and domestic violence and
social practices that undermine women's integrity." "Addressing the
protection concerns of refugees and displaced women and above all violence against women
in the context of the ongoing armed conflict is a priority commitment," the statement
added. The statement further said that Nepal has reiterated its commitment to reduce
gender-based violence and the Constitution of Nepal also contains specific provisions to
safeguard the rights and interests of women and children, however many challenges still
remain in their effective enforcement within the national legislation. |
Violence Against
Women Increases. [Nepal] The
number of cases related to violence against women
is increasing by the year in Nepal, a
report submitted to the on-going campaign of
"Ensure zero tolerance for violence against women" disclosed here on Saturday.
According to the report released by the Forum for Women, Law and Development
(FWLD), a non-governmental organization, crime against women in
Nepal, especially domestic
violence, increased to922 in 2003-2004 from a total of 569 reported cases of domestic
violence in the year of 2002-2003. Similarly, trafficking and child marriage has
increased from the previous year, the report stated. |
North Korea
Urges Women to Wear Dresses. [North
Korea] North Korea's communist government is
urging women in the country to wear traditional Korean clothes instead of pants, according
to a North Korean monthly magazine. "Keeping alive our dress style is a very
important political issue to adhere to specific national cultural traditions at a time
when the U.S. imperialists are
maneuvering to spread the rotten bourgeois lifestyle inside
North Korea," the Joson
Yeosung (Woman) magazine said, according to South
Korea's
Yonhap news agency. The magazine said exotic dress dampens the revolutionary
atmosphere in society and blurs national sentiment and asked the public to reject clothes
that aren't North Korean style. Instead, it counsels women to wear Hanbok - the
brightly colored, loose-fitting dresses that are traditional in the
Koreas. |
U.S. Airman Gets Suspended Term for
Molesting 10-Year-Old Girl. [Okinawa] The Naha District Court sentenced a U.S.
Air Force sergeant to 18 months in prison, suspended for four years, on Thursday for
molesting a 10-year-old girl in the city of Okinawa
in July. Staff Sgt Armando
Valdez, 28, from the U.S. Kadena Air Base in Okinawa
Prefecture, molested the elementary
school pupil in a parking lot in the city, and took photos of the upper part of her body,
which had been stripped naked, with a cell phone camera on the morning of July 3,
according to the court. |
Alleged
Rape Triggers Widespread Outrage. [Phillipines] Lawmakers and Left-leaning
groups on Friday denounced the raping of a 22-year-old Filipina in Subic by
six US Marines
on November 1. We are shocked by the viciousness of the gang rape," Sen. Serge
Osmeņa said. He recalled having reservations about the Senate's ratification of the
Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) treaty in May 1999, fearing that American soldiers would
abuse it. "During the debates on the Senate's ratification of the VFA, the
Palace assured us that the members of the US Armed Forces would undergo rigorous training
on proper behavior and self-discipline. I voted against the treaty, because I did
not believe the US would make
a serious effort. Now we have been proved right,"
Osmeņa said in a text message. "The first crime is allowing foreign troops in
our soil. The second is allowing our women to be war victims for these foreign
marauders. Any way you look at it, the VFA legitimates the trampling down of our
sovereignty," Cristina Palabay, Gabriela Women's Party secretary-general, said in a
statement. |
Rape Complainant Not a Sex
Worker. [Philippines] Makati Rep. Teodoro Locsin Jr. on Monday said the
22-year-old woman who complained of being raped by six US servicemen came from a decent
family and not a sex worker as reported. "If anybody says that this girl is not
of the highest moral character, they will be so ashamed," Locsin said in a DZMM
interview Monday afternoon. The lawmaker said he was able to meet and talk with the
rape complainant's mother on Sunday. He described her as a "fine and decent
woman." |
Different
Ball Game for Filipino Women Cagers. [Philippines]
Philippines women's
basketball players may have been denied a once-in-a-lifetime chance to make an appearance
in front of their home crowd but they will very much remain a part of the Games.
They are serving as volunteers. When news broke two weeks ago that the SEA
Games Federation (SGF) Council have supported the decision of the Philippines Olympic
Council (POC) to drop the sport from the program, the players were crestfallen.
Our country is hosting the Games again after so long (14 years) and we know
we will never get the chance again to play at home. It's very sad but there is
nothing we can do, said centre Mary Ellyn Caasi. To remain in the Games, Caasi
and her teammates decided to offer their services as volunteers. |
Maid's Day Off.
[Singapore]
Stories of exploitation and abuse of migrant workers, especially women,
in the richer countries of East Asia are so common as to barely elicit comment. But
the Singapore
report set off a media debate about the wisdom of allowing maids any days
off. It emerged that it was common for maids not to be allowed out at all, for fear
that they might wind up pregnant. Currently, an employer must pay a government fee,
in addition to food, housing and medical care - and repatriate any maid who becomes
pregnant. Many employers regard these impositions as reason to deprive maids of the
normal rights of adults. A 2003 newspaper poll showed that 50 percent of maids got
no days off; a lucky 10 percent got one day a week. |
South Korea Cracks Down On
Illegal Human Egg Brokers. [South Korea] South Korean police have made their
first arrest under a new bioethics law, capturing a man they suspect illegally sold human
eggs to infertile couples in South Korea and Japan, a police spokesman said on Monday.
Police raided four Seoul area hospitals on Sunday following the arrest on Saturday
of a 28-year-old man identified by his family name Kim, who tried to entice women to sell
their ova to help them pay off debts such as massive credit card bills. Police also
charged, but did not detain, two university students and a housewife suspected of
illegally selling their ova through Kim. In addition, police are investigating cases
involving 10 other people suspected of using the Internet to act as brokers to sell ova
from South Korean women to infertile women in Japan. South Korea enacted a new
bioethics law in January that was aimed at bolstering its stem cell research while at the
same time raising the bioethical standards. The law allows for therapeutic cloning
for stem cell research and bans cloning to produce humans. It also prohibits the
commercial trade in ova or sperm, providing punishments of up to three years in jail for
brokers and up to two years in jail for donors. |
Stem-Cell Study Paid 20 Women
for Eggs. [South
Korea] South
Korea's groundbreaking stem-cell research program
was plunged deeper into an ethics controversy on Monday, with a scientist acknowledging
that he had paid 20 women for contributing their eggs. Speaking at a news
conference, Roh Sung Il, head of Miz Medi Hospital in Seoul, said he had worried that what
he was doing might be seen as controversial and kept his transactions from other
researchers, including Hwang Woo Suk, a cloning scientist who runs the world's most
successful human embryonic stem-cell laboratory. Despite repeated questions from
journalists, Roh refused to clarify another crucial question: whether junior scientists on
Hwang's team volunteered to donate eggs - an ethics violation, critics say, given a
hierarchical lab culture in South
Korea. "It was difficult to obtain enough
eggs for our research. It was inevitable to offer some compensation in return for egg
donations," Roh said. The doctor said he paid 1.5 million won, or $1,440, per
woman. |