The sad state of Sudan

Greco

Registered Senior Member
Abok Alfa Akok, 18, whose death sentence was overturned by a Sudanese appeals court, contends that she was raped while her husband was away for six months. However, she was unable to produce the four male witnesses required by Islamic law to validate her statement


http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=37672

I just can not believe what is going on in Sudan. Further articles

Islamists burn to death Christian pastor, family

U.S. to forgive Sudan for 2 million deaths?

Report lists names of 10,000 in slavery

U.N. eases scrutiny on Sudan

Islamists leave 'killing field' of civilians

Bombs continue as activists pray for Sudan

Midland rocks desert for Sudan

U.S. ignoring Sudan's al-Qaida links?

Ex-cop champions persecuted in Sudan

Sudan jihad forces Islam on Christians

Sudan Islamists kill more women, children


How come other Islamic countries dont intervene?
 
Yeah!... How come Bush doesn’t intervene?
How come the Vatican doesn’t intervene?
How come the civilized world doesn’t intervene?
…how come YOU don’t intervene?
 
Microzoft said:
Yeah!... How come Bush doesn’t intervene?
How come the Vatican doesn’t intervene?
How come the civilized world doesn’t intervene?
…how come YOU don’t intervene?


US can not be the worlds policeman, it doesnt have the assets.US will engage if it deems it's in its interests. UN can intervene but the internal politics of the UN have made the organization rather weak and ineffective. What about other Islamic countries? Well it seems to me they're either apathetic or intentionally staying out the frey. Me? I'm doing what I can by commenting on the issue and spreading the word. Or do you prefer that I strap some dyno on my chest and blow up some innocent people?
 
WOMEN ABUSE STATISTIC IN 'CIVILIZED' AMERICA:

Sexual Assault Facts

NOTE: Numbers in parentheses indicate citations

One out of every three American women will be raped in her lifetime. (6,13, 17)

According to the Surgeon General, violence is the leading cause of injury to women age 15-44. (8)

One out of four girls and one out of six boys are sexually abused before age 18. (11)

84% of rapes go unreported; 46% of survivors of acquaintance rape and 27% of stranger rape survivors never tell anyone. (9, 14, 15)

77% of rape survivors know their attacker. These include rapes committed by relatives, neighbors, acquaintances and boyfriends. 57% of rapes occur on a date. (10, 15)

90% of children under the age of 12 knew their assailants. (18)

51-60% of college men report they would rape a woman if they were certain that they would get away with it. One out of twelve college men surveyed had committed acts that met the legal definition of rape; 84% of these men said what they did was DEFINITELY not rape. (12, 15, 16)

Alchohol may act for the assailant as a disinhibitor, as an excuse following the assault, or as a strategy to reduce victim resistance. At least 45% of rapists were under the influence of alcohol or drugs at the time of the assault. (20)

One in every seven married women will be sexually assaulted by her husband. (6, 12)

Of women who are killed, 55% are killed by a relative, spouse, or other intimate partner. Of men who are killed, only 20% are killed by a relative, spouse, or other intimate partner. (3)

71% of rapes are planned in advance. (10)

98% of all sexual assault survivors will never see their attacker caught, tried and imprisoned. Of the rape cases brought to prosecution, over one half will be dismissed before trial or acquitted. One half of convicted rapists serve less than one year in prison. (9, 18)

A survivor of sexual assault is nine times more likely to attempt suicide than a person not assaulted. (16)

39% of women in state prisons report being sexually abused prior to being in jail. (21)

67% of women who were raped and/or physically assaulted since age 18 were assaulted by a current or former husband, cohabitating partner or date. (19)

Survivors of sexual assault have higher rates of drug and alcohol consumption and related problems (10):

- Survivors are 5.3 times more likely than non-survivors to use prescription drugs for non-medical purposes
- 3.4 times more likely to use marijuana
- 6.4 times more likely to use cocaine
- Ten times more likely to use hard drugs other than cocaine
- 79% of survivors who drink alcohol became intoxicated for the first time after the assault
- 89% of survivors who use cocaine used it for the first time after the assault.

More than 80% of women who are raped try to physically resist (5).

Studies show that women whose response to an assault is to kick, hit, scream, scratch or run away are half as likely to be raped as those who do not - and are not injured more often. Conversely, begging, pleading and reasoning are related to a greater severity of sexual abuse (1, 13).

50-85% of women in the U.S. can expect to be sexually harrassed during their academic or working life (7).

90% of people who encounter sexual harrassment are unwilling to report for two primary reasons: fear of retaliation and fear of loss of privacy (4, 16).

Sexual harrassment costs the government approximately $100 million a year in actual and productivity costs (4, 16).

---------------------------
CITATIONS

1. Brink, S., 1993. The Case for Fighting off a Rapist. U.S. News and World Report, December, 74-75.

2. Burgess, A.W., 1991. Rape and Sexual Assault III New York and London: Garland Publishing, Inc.

3. Colburn, D., 1994. When Violence Begins at Home: AMA Conference Addresses "Problem of Shocking Dimension." Washington Post, Health, March 15.

4. Fitzgerald, L.F., 1993. Sexual Harassment: Violence Against Women in the Workplace. American Psychologist, 48 (10), 1070-1076.

5. Koss, M.P., 1992. Date Rape: Victimization By Acquaintance. The Harvard Mental Health Letter 9 (3), 5-6.

6. Koss, M.P. & Harvey, M.R., 1991. The Rape Victim New York, London, New Delhi: Sage Publications.

7. Langelan, M.J., 1993. Back Off! How to Confront and Stop Sexual Harassment and Harassers New York: Simon and Schuster.

8. Majority Staff of the Senate Judiciary Committee, 1992. Violence Against Women: A Week in the Life of America.

9. Majority Staff of the Senate Judiciary Committee, 1993. The Response to Rape: Detours on the Road to Equal Justice.

10. Kilpatrick DJ, Edmunds CN, Seymour A, 1992. Rape in America: a Report to the Nation, Arlington, VA: National Victim Center.

11. Staff, August 24, 1984. 22% In Survey Were Child Abuse Victims. Los Angeles Times p.1.

12. Tavris, C. & Wade, C., 1984. The Longest War: Sex Differences in Perspective, Second Edition San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Publishers.

13. Ullman, S.E. & Knight, R.A., 1992. Fighting Back: Women's Resistance to Rape. Journal of Interpersonal Violence 7 (1) , 31-42.

14. U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics Special Report, 1992. Women in Jail 1989.

15. Warshaw, R., 1994. I Never Called it Rape: The Ms. Report On Recognizing, Fighting and Surviving Date and Acquaintance Rape. New York: Harper and Row Publishers.

16. Women's Action Coalition (no date given) WAC Stats: The Facts About Women New York: WAC.

17. Randall, Melanie and Haskell, Lori, 1995. “Sexual Violence in Women’s Lives: Findings from the Women’s Safety Project, A Community-Based Survey.” Violence Against Women 1 (2): 6-31.

18. Greenfield, Lawrence, 1997. Sex Offenses and Offenders: An Analysis of Data on Rape and Sexual Assault. Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice.

19. Tjaden, Patricia and Thoennes, Nancy, November 1998. Prevalence, Incident, and Consequences of Violence Against Women: Findings from the National Violence Against Women Survey. Washington, D.C.: National Institute of Justice, Office of the Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice.

20. U.S. Department of Justice, 1994. Violence Against Women. Rockville, Maryland: Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice.

21. Wolf, Harlow, C., 1999. Prior Abuse Reported by Inmates. Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice.

It is the time for the ''civilized'' world to interfere and SAVE the Abused American 'civilized' women !!!!! :rolleyes:
 
US does have problems PM. It's rather a free country and its justice system suck. Rape happens because most criminals get away with it and even if caught and jailed they'll repeat their crime after being released.
If I agree with anything about Islam is its eye for an eye swift justice system. The US system sucks unless you're the criminal. US justice needs a serious referbishment.

On the other hand crime will never be eradicated. It goes back to Caine and Abel.
 
No, the U.S. cannot be the world's policeman. And in fact, if I recall, everytime they've tried to police something (geez Vietnam war, Cuba, Korean War, Russia, mexico, AUSTRALIA, WW2...) they've majorly screwed up before before shifting the blame or simply lying about what happened. However it seems perhaps that they like policing as it makes them feel big and important-eg. claiming they did something for WW2 other than make a feeble attempt to save their own skins when Japan threw a rock at Pearl Harbor, and believing that they won the Vietnam War... and that they should stop communism. Why not just leave everyone alone? What do you care if we all become Icelandic-ruled Commie countries who love the kill and sodomise? WHY DO YOU CARE?!!
 
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