Government Starts Demanding
Women Wear Headscarves. [Chechnya]
The pro-Moscow Chechen government has started to
demand that female state workers wear headscarves, women in the turbulent Muslim region
said on Friday. "I received a verbal warning that if I did not wear a headscarf, I
would lose my job. I had to wear it the next day so as not to bring trouble on my
head," said one woman who works in the regional administration and asked not to be
named. A spokesman for the region's new prime minister, Ramzan Kadyrov, who has pushed
through a series of Islamic decrees, denied the headscarves were compulsory and said women
were merely encouraged to cover their hair. But women used to the rough tactics of
Kadyrov's government, which is accused of mass abduction and torture in its hunt for
separatist rebels, took the suggestion as law. |
Women's
'Constant' Body Worries. [England] Almost a third of women worry constantly about the
way their body looks, according to a new survey. The poll of over 5,000 women for Grazia
magazine found just one in 50 was happy with her body, with women wanting to lose an
average of about nine kilos. Seven out of 10 women said life would improve if they had
"better" bodies. The survey concluded the average British woman worries about
her body every 15 minutes. Women had tried a range of extreme measures, such as laxative
use and fasting in order to lose weight. Actress and TV presenter Kelly Brook, famed for
her curves, was considered to have the best British female body in the survey. The Eating
Disorders Association says body concerns are not illness - but warns anorexia and bulimia
begin with a "distorted" body image. Virtually all those who completed the
magazine and website survey said they had dieted at some point in their life - with 41%
saying they constantly watched what they ate. Half admitted to lying about their weight. |
Harry Potter
Author Criticises Women's Obsession With Weight. [England] Harry Potter author Joanne
"J.K." Rowling has launched an attack on waif-like models in the fashion
industry, criticising them as "empty-headed, self-obsessed, emaciated clones".
The best-selling writer said she was prompted to write about the subject on her website
after reading a magazine featuring photographs of a thin woman who was "either
seriously ill or suffering from an eating disorder". Her horror at seeing the woman
on the front cover of the magazine was then exacerbated by a number of conversations with
other women on the subject of weight, which all centred around the "insult" of
being called "fat". Rowling, who entitled her online "rant" "For
Girls Only, Probably...", said she was concerned her daughters Mackenzie, aged one,
and 12-year-old Jessica would be forced to follow the same line of thinking. "I've
got two daughters who will have to make their way in this skinny-obsessed world, and it
worries me, because I don't want them to be empty-headed, self-obsessed, emaciated
clones," she stated. "I'd rather they were independent, interesting, idealistic,
kind, opinionated, original, funny -- a thousand things, before 'thin'. |
Court Overturns Bar on
Cancer Drug. [England]
An appeals court declared Wednesday that a local health service
had acted illegally in withholding a potentially lifesaving drug from a woman with breast
cancer. The decision by the Court of Appeal overturned a lower court's ruling and meant
that the woman, Ann Marie Rogers, 54, would receive a full course of the drug Herceptin
from her local health service in Swindon. The ruling
has potentially wide implications for
breast cancer treatment throughout the taxpayer-financed National Health Service, under
which the availability of medicines can depend on where people live. "It's pretty
clear that the judgment provides guidance to all NHS authorities," Yogi Amin, a
lawyer for Rogers,
said in an interview. For patients, he said,
it means that "if a
doctor properly prescribes the drug, the local health authority can't issue a blanket
refusal on the grounds of cost or regulatory reasons." Rogers went to court when her
local health service, Swindon Primary Care Trust, refused to treat her breast cancer with
Herceptin even after her doctor prescribed the drug. The drug, made by Roche, is licensed
in Britain for use in late-stage
breast cancer, but some studies have shown that it is
effective in treating HER-2 early-stage breast cancer, the kind Rogers has. |
Aluko Out of Women Squad.
[England] England Women striker Eniola Aluko has withdrawn from England's squad to face
Austria in the World Cup qualifying tie against Austria on 20 April. The 19-year-old
Charlton forward is preparing for exams at the end of the first year of her law degree.
Her withdrawal has enabled coach Hope Powell to call up Birmingham City defender Laura
Bassett. "Eni's education is important to her. By notifying us, we've been able to
prepare," Powell told thefa.com. England play Austria at Priestfield hoping to
maintain their place at the top of their qualifying group. |
International
Women's Day Kicks-Off Campaign Against Forced Prostitution. [EU] The EU must show the
red card to forced prostitution and fight trafficking in human beings for sexual purposes,
said participants in a seminar organised by the European Parliament's Committee on Women's
Rights on the occasion of the International Women's Day on 8 March. In the light of
alarming reports of a sharp increase in forced prostitution during big events, such as the
upcoming football world cup in Germany,
the
Committee wanted to exchange views and discuss
strategies and ways forward to combat forced prostitution. As Anna Záborská, chairwoman
of the Committee said, "this is not the end of the debate, the debate will continue
until the end of forced prostitution". A modern form of slavery. European
Vice-President of the Commission Margot Wallström voiced deep concern and outrage about
this "modern form of slavery" where women may be sold "for a price lower
than that of the ticket to the football arena". Fellow Vice-President Franco
Frattini outlined some proposals to tackle the problem, including stronger external border
control and the introduction of a short-term visa during the world cup for citizens from
countries seen as the origin of trafficking. He couldn't give a concrete list, but
mentioned "countries of Latin America, Sub-Saharan countries, Asia and the East of
Europe". He also proposed a study on how different legislation on prostitution
influences the scope of trafficking, and said it is necessary to look at demand as well as
supply. Speaking for the governing body of European football, UEFA, Vice-President Per
Ravn Omdal, said "UEFA supports the EU's efforts to fight all forms of human
trafficking and exploitation". But he and FIFA President Joseph Blatter note that the
football associations can't control what goes on outside the stadium. |
Is France Ready to be Led by
a Woman? [France]
Can this woman save France? Can
Ségolène Royal, the politician
with the elegant profile and stratospheric poll ratings, drive the Socialists to victory
in next year's presidential election? Certainly, in the political confusion that has
gripped France in
recent months - riots by immigrant youths followed by massive protests
that turned violent - Royal, 52, is the only politician who looks good these days. On
Thursday, she was on the cover of four French weekly magazines. "The Mystery
Royal," announced Le Point. Le Nouvel Observateur asked "What Is in Her
Head?" The news and entertainment weekly VSD wondered, "President Ségolène: Is
She Ready?" "For the first time, the French say they are ready to vote for a
woman. This is a historic event," she told Paris-Match in its cover story that
proclaimed "The Irresistible Ascension." The media's interest in Royal is not
accidental. Voters here are both disillusioned with President Jacques Chirac, who has been
in office since 1995, and less than enthused by the gray-haired white men who have long
run the opposition Socialist Party. With the government thrown into disarray by the
student protests against a disputed youth jobs law and the Socialists doing little more
than scoring points, Royal, a member of Parliament, regional president and former
minister, and her image-makers have moved quickly to fill the vacuum. In poll after poll
she is by far the most popular potential Socialist candidate for president. She even edged
past Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, the law- and-order front-runner on the right, in
two polls that were hypothetical runoffs for the presidency. For her, the new jobs law,
which would allow younger workers to be hired and fired more easily, is "a
scandal" and "a form of violence" against the youth of France. Asked in an
interview late last month what she would do differently if she were in Chirac's shoes, she
exclaimed, "I would be intelligent! Between the revolt in the suburbs last fall and
the youth in the streets today, what a beautiful image of France we are giving to the
world!" |
Man Who
Burned Woman Alive Jailed. [France] A French court sentenced a man to 25 years
in prison on Saturday for burning to death a teenage girl in a garbage depot in a Parisian
suburb. Outrage over the death of 17-year-old Sohane Benziane in October 2002 produced a
wave of feminist protest across France,
with
women rallying against an atmosphere of fear
and violence haunting many girls in poor suburbs. In the trial, Jamal Derrar, 22, admitted
having led Benziane into the garbage depot, dousing her with petrol and threatening her
with a lighter, but he said he only wanted to scare her. "It's an accident,"
Derrar said during the trial. "I thought I'd control the situation, having fun
threatening her ... I saw the fire starting all of a sudden," he said. Derrar said he
had wanted to talk to Benziane about restarting their relationship, which she had refused.
But witnesses said the two had never had a relationship. Derrar had argued with Benziane's
boyfriend and wanted to unleash his anger on her, they said. "The image of a woman
being burnt alive is sending us several centuries back," prosecutor Jean-Paul Content
told the court on Friday. "Her death has become the symbol of the most extreme
violence against women." The tragedy, which left Benziane rolling in agony on a patch
of grass to try to extinguish the flames before she later died in hospital, sparked large
rallies by women across France.
|
Just
Call Us Madame, Say Women. [France] It's
one of the first distinctions visitors to France
learn to make: the title "Mademoiselle" for young unmarried women, and
"Madame" for other women. But now a feminist group is trying to scrap the
traditional French equivalent of the English "Miss" - and is promoting an online
petition for it to be outlawed, leaving only "Madame" for all adult French
women. "The United States
and Great Britain are
more advanced than us on this
subject," says the petition, launched this month by a 40-year-old psychoanalyst and
supported by the group Les Chiennes de Garde (literally "The Female Guard Dogs",
or "The Guard Bitches"). They argue that France is now ready for a linguistic
gender reform on the same scale as the "Ms" trend introduced into English a
couple of decades ago. |
German Fights Stigma
Against Working Mothers. [Germany] Surely Germany, cradle of the kindergarten and home
to some of the world's most generous maternity-leave policies, would do everything it
could to make life easier for mothers who work, right? Well, no. Few developed countries
are more resistant to the idea of working mothers, and the hostility can be summed up in
one word: Rabenmutter. It means raven mother, and refers to women who leave their children
in an empty nest while they fly away to pursue a career. The phrase, which sounds like
something out of the Brothers Grimm, has been used by Germans for centuries as a synonym
for bad parent. Today, it is at the center of a new debate on the future of the German
working woman, prompted by the first woman to lead the country, Chancellor Angela Merkel.
"The question is not whether women will work," she said in an interview.
"They will work. The question is whether they will have kids."
Germany, she
said, must make it easier for women to do both, because it now has one of the lowest birth
rates in the world. The number of children born here in 2005 was the lowest in a single
year since 1945. If the trend holds, the population will decline 17 percent by 2050 -
hobbling the economy and an already-strained social system. Kindergartens and child-care
centers close at noon, and most state-run schools by 1 p.m. Mothers without helpful
parents or the budget for a nanny are stuck. The French government, by contrast, supports
an extensive network of day-care and after-school centers, many open until 6 p.m. Social
attitudes only deepen the problems. While the law entitles men to paid family leave, few
take it, fearing it will cripple their careers. Yet women who work while rearing children
meet disapproval from colleagues and bosses. "The thinking that mothers should look
after children and men should go out and support the family is a product of our dark
past," said Reiner Klingholz, director of the Berlin Institute for Population and
Development. "It's still in the minds of people, even if they sound liberal or
progressive." |
Viennot
Could be First Female World Cup Linesman. [Germany] Nelly Viennot of
France could
become the first female linesman at a World Cup if she passes fitness and skills tests,
FIFA officials said on Wednesday. The 44-year-old, who became the first woman to run the
line in France's first division
in 1996, is one of 82 candidates for 60 places at the
tournament in Germany. "There
is certainly excitement about the possibility she could
be the first female referee's assistant in the World Cup," said FIFA spokesman
Andreas Werz. "But we want to underscore the fact that she is not going to be at the
workshop because she's a woman and we want to have a woman," he said by telephone
from Zurich. "Rather, she
is coming because of the fact that she is good enough to be
among the best assistants in the world." Viennot has long worked as a linesman in a
team led by compatriot Eric Poulat. Poulat was named last month as one of the 23 referees
for the World Cup. Also on his team are Lionel Dagorne and Vincent Texier. At least two of
the three assistants have to pass the tests later this month or else the entire quartet is
ruled out. Viennot, from the town of Flers in
northern France, has had experience as a
linesman in Champions League matches as well as at the Olympics in 1996 and 2004. She was
a referee at the 2003 women's World Cup. |
Female
Referee's World Cup Gig Dashed. [Germany] Frenchwoman Nelly Viennot failed a sprint
test Friday, ending her hopes of becoming the first female World Cup official. The
44-year-old Viennot was among 80 candidates tested on physical fitness and knowledge of
rules at a four-day FIFA workshop for assistant referees. Eight failed, including Viennot.
Sixty officials will be selected early May for World Cup duty in Germany. FIFA has already
announced the names of the 23 referees who will officiate at soccer's premier event. |
'Honor Killer' of Sister
Sentenced. [Germany] A
German court sentenced a man of Turkish origin Thursday to more
than nine years in prison for the so-called honor killing of his sister, but it found two
of his brothers not guilty of conspiring in the murder. The murder of 23-year-old Hatun
Surucu, who was shot Feb. 7, 2005, while standing at a bus stop in a Berlin suburb,
shocked Germany and
began intense debate about a conservative Muslim immigrant community
at odds with mainstream society. Forced to marry a cousin
in Turkey as a young girl, Hatun
Surucu later broke with her Turkish-Kurdish family in Berlin and lived independently with
her 5-year-old son, to the intense disapproval of her relatives, prosecutors said. Ayhan
Surucu, 20, who confessed to having pulled the trigger, was sentenced to nine years and
three months in prison. The maximum allowable sentence was 10 years, because he was a
minor at the time of the killing. He will begin his sentence in a youth detention center
but must transfer to a standard prison by the age of 24. "This young woman, who loved
life, was a victim because she lived life as she saw fit, and that's why she was shot by
her brother, right here among us," Judge Michael Degreif said. The older brothers,
Mutlu, 26, and Alpaslan, 25, had been accused of aiding him in the murder but denied any
involvement. They were found not guilty after the court ruled that prosecutors had not
proved they had conspired to organize the killing. They cheered briefly on hearing the
judgment, while their brother, who said he had acted alone, laughed. Prosecutors said they
would appeal the decision. Public outrage over the murder was exacerbated when boys at a
nearby school with many pupils from immigrant families were reported to have applauded the
killing shortly afterward because the victim had lived "like a German,"
abandoning her head scarf, wearing makeup and studying to become an electrical engineer. |
Brothel
Made to Remove Saudi, Iran Flags. [Germany] A brothel in Cologne was forced to black
out the flags of Saudi Arabia and
Iran from a
huge World Cup soccer-themed advertising
banner after angry Muslims complained and threatened violence. The 24-metre-high by
8-metre-wide (78 by 26 ft) banner displayed on the side of the building features a
scantily-clad woman and the slogan: "The world as a guest of female friends," a
variation on the World Cup slogan: "The world as a guest of friends." The flags
of the 32 nations taking part in the month-long soccer tournament which kicks off in June
are shown below. Those of Saudi Arabia
and Iran have been covered with black paint,
according to a worker at the brothel who would only give his name as Peter. "They
didn't want these two flags to be associated with this go-go girl on the banner as it's a
brothel and it offended their religious feelings," said a
spokeswoman for the Cologne
police. "The owner removed the flags even though he wasn't legally obliged to as no
crime had been committed." |
Women Quicker to Pick Partners.
[Scotland] Women are quicker than men at making up their minds about a potential partner,
a study found. A speed-dating experiment showed men have only seconds to impress a woman -
and can stand or fall by their opening chat-up lines. Psychologist Professor Richard
Wiseman recruited 100 visitors to the Edinburgh International Science Festival to take
part in 500 speed dates. |
Why Tracey's Riding to the Aid of
Women. [Scotland]
Midwife Tracey Slack is getting on her bike later this year to raise
funds which will help improve the care of pregnant and infertile women. Ms Slack, who
works at the Simpsons maternity unit at the ERI, hopes to raise £2700 by travel to
Rajastan in India where
she will spend five
days cycling 425 kilometres. The November
event has been organised by the Institute of Obstetrics
and Gynaecology Trust and cash
raised will go towards their Women for Women appeal. She said: "The appeal was set up
to train women scientists and clinicians to work to improve prevention, diagnosis and
treatment of a range of conditions which cause miscarriage, genetic diseases, infertility
and cancer." |