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Islam, Women and Feminism ( 5 Nov 2023, NewAgeIslam.Com)

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Kohistan Clerics Say Pakistan NGO Women Won't Be Allowed To Mingle With 'Na Mahram' Men

New Age Islam News Bureau

05 November 2023

• Kohistan Clerics Say Pakistan NGO Women Won't Be Allowed To Mingle With 'Na Mahram' Men

• Two Iran Women Taekwondokas Bag Medals In Pakistan

• Anti-Hijab Protests 'Changed Iran's Society, Prisons', Says Fariba Adelkhah, Freed Academic

• More Australian Young Women Are Choosing A Career In Agriculture

• ‘The Noble Guardian’ Documentary on Afghan Activist, Mahbouba Seraj, Eyes Oscar Chances

Compiled by New Age Islam News Bureau

URL:   https://newageislam.com/islam-women-feminism/kohistan-clerics-pakistan-ngo-namahram-mahram/d/131048

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Kohistan Clerics Say Pakistan NGO Women Won't Be Allowed To Mingle With 'Na Mahram' Men

 

Photo: Pakistan Today

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Nov 5, 2023

KOHISTAN: A group of clerics in Pakistan's Kohistan on Saturday announced that women working with non-governmental organisations (NGOs) would not be allowed to mingle with "na mahram" men in public and that doing so would require them to follow specific directives, depending upon their marital status, Dawn reported.

In Islam "na mahram" stands for the women/men that you are allowed to marry. It includes all women/men other than mahram( including cousins).

The clerics, a group of 12, said that if a married woman was found accompanying a na mahram man, she would be expelled from the area. If a woman is single, the accompanying man must enter into a marriage with her.

Kohistan's Pattan area's Assistant Commissioner, Muhammad Bilal, dismissed the "announcement" and pledged that it would not be permitted to be enforced.

On the other hand, a cleric, calling himself Maulana Karimdad, also posted the same "decision" on his Facebook account and claimed that a local station house officer had also been informed about the decision, as per Dawn.

Karimdad on speaking to Dawn said, "We cannot endorse non-religious activities in Kohistan, and these NGO women are in breach of our customs by participating in such activities."

"If they were to operate under religious laws, we would safeguard and back them, but transgressing our customs, which are not permitted by Sharia, cannot be tolerated," he added.

"NGO women who disregard our directives should consider leaving Kohistan voluntarily; otherwise, we may take measures to either remove them or facilitate their marriages with the colleagues they are seen with."

He pointed out that the non-profits had been operating in the area for eight months and the clerics never complained. "It appears to be a form of blackmail and nothing else," he said, as per Dawn.

Source: Times Of India

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/pakistan/pakistan-kohistan-clerics-say-ngo-women-wont-be-allowed-to-mingle-with-na-mahram-men/articleshowprint/104981541.cms?val=3728

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Two Iran Women Taekwondokas Bag Medals In Pakistan

 

Photo: Mehr News Agency

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Nov 4, 2023

On the second day of the tournament being held in Islamabad, two female taekwondo practitioners from Iran stood on the winners' podium.

In the weight class of -53kg, two Iranian fighters met at the finals.

Nahid Kiani of Iran defeated her country woman to claim a gold medal while Mobina Ne'matzadeh ranked second.

Led by Mino Fallah, Iran's squad has started its fights from yesterday in Islamabad, Pakistan.

Source: En.Mehrnews

https://en.mehrnews.com/news/207938/Two-Iran-women-taekwondokas-bag-medals-in-Pakistan

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Anti-Hijab Protests 'Changed Iran's Society, Prisons', SaysFaribaAdelkhah, Freed Academic

November 04, 2023

Tehran, Iran: The protest movement that erupted in Iran last year has transformed the country both outside and also inside prison, a French-Iranian academic, who returned to Paris last month after being held in the country since 2019, told AFP.

FaribaAdelkhah was finally allowed to leave Iran in October after a four-and-a-half-year ordeal that began with her sudden arrest in 2019 and saw her spend years in Tehran's notorious Evin prison.

But there she was also able to witness the courage of her fellow women inmates, who included this year's Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi, amid the "Woman. Life. Freedom." protests. 

Female political prisoners have often sung together in a show of defiance, Adelkhah, who was released from prison in February but remained unable to leave Iran for months, told AFP in an interview in Paris.

The movement, calling for the end of Iran's imposition of a headscarf on all women and clerical rule, was sparked by the death in Iranian custody of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in September 2022.

Iranian security forces have cracked down on the protests in the country, killing hundreds, according to rights groups, and have executed seven men in cases connected to the protests.

Adelkhah said that in Evin the resistance movement brought together people from all walks of life -- including rights activists, environmentalists, political opponents, and representatives of religious minorities.

She herself was arrested on June 5, 2019, at Tehran's airport, where she was waiting for her companion Roland Marchal. Neatly-dressed security agents "very respectfully" asked her to follow them, she said.

The researcher was eventually sentenced to six years in prison. A five-year term was handed down for "colluding with foreigners" and one for "propaganda against the Islamic Republic," she said.

Marchal, a French sociologist specialising in sub-Saharan Africa, was arrested together with Adelkhah. He was released in March 2020 as part of a prisoner exchange between Tehran and Paris.

While in jail Adelkhah, along with another prisoner, Australian academic Kylie Moore-Gilbert, staged a hunger strike that lasted 50 days.

They were among some two dozen Western passport holders held in Iran in what activists and some governments have termed a deliberate strategy of hostage-taking.

Some have now been released, including all the American detainees, but around a dozen Europeans are still believed to be held, including four French nationals.

In the jail, located in the hills of northern Tehran, female prisoners are bareheaded when they are among themselves, but are required to cover themselves if a man enters or if they have to go to the hospital.

On Wednesday, Iranian prison authorities have blocked the jailed rights activist Mohammadi's hospital transfer for urgently needed care over her refusal to wear the compulsory hijab, according to her family.

Adelkhah praised the 51-year-old journalist and activist, seen as one of the women spearheading the uprising who has been repeatedly jailed and has been imprisoned again since 2021.

She said Mohammadi has turned prison into "a space of combat, of protest par excellence", adding that she was "more heard" in jail than when she is outside.

The researcher was still in Iran when Mohammadi was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in early October. She said she saw "smiles" in the streets.

While the government quashed the daily protests with its repression, the slogan "Woman. Life. Freedom." has become part of Iranian culture, she argued.

Today like-minded Iranian women greet each other when they go out without their headscarves. Before it was "unthinkable," said the researcher.

Source: Www.Ndtv.Com

Please click the following URL to read the full text of the original story:

https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/anti-hijab-protests-changed-irans-society-prisons-says-freed-academic-fariba-adelkhah-4545476

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More Australian Young Women Are Choosing A Career In Agriculture

November 5, 2023

It was an interest in food that first sparked TirzaWinarta’s love of agriculture, and now she’s gearing up for a career in the egg industry.

The 22-year-old university student from southern Sydney who is studying for her masters degree in food and agribusiness, was born in Indonesia.

Not only is she part of a growing number of young educated women choosing agriculture as a career, she’s also part of a more culturally diverse workforce.

It found there’s been a 42 per cent jump in young female workers aged 25 to 34 over that time, while nearly half of the women in that age group are university qualified.

More than half of the 20 to 39 age group come from a non-European background. That compares to less than 20 per cent in the 60 to 69 years age bracket.

“Agriculture is a significant contributor to our national economy and it is vital that we continue to grow and attract a pipeline of talent to this important industry.”

While the census shows 80 per cent of people who work in agriculture live in regional areas the Westpac researchers noticed that demographic is shifting.

“There are so many different career opportunities, which means that people from the cities or from the coast can certainly have a great career in ag.”

The 24-year-old is examining sustainability in the livestock industry for her PhD while working part-time in the soil carbon sector.

“Studying agriculture doesn’t just mean going and working on a property, which is still a great option, but there are a lot of other really exciting opportunities – from working in labs to working on policy.”

The two women have both been identified as potential agricultural leaders as past recipients of the Agrifutures Horizon Scholarship.

“I would encourage looking at the breadth of opportunities, and finding leaders and mentors that you can look up to within the industry,” Ms Ash says.

Source: Ozarab.Media

https://ozarab.media/more-young-women-are-choosing-a-career-in-agriculture/

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‘The Noble Guardian’ Documentary on Afghan Activist, MahboubaSeraj, Eyes Oscar Chances

By Jenelle Riley

05-11-2023

In August 2021, as the U.S. withdrew forces from Afghanistan and the Taliban took power, many people fled the country. But despite having U.S. citizenship, the then 73-year-old MahboubaSeraj stayed. The journalist, activist and co-founder of Afghan Women’s Network had been forced to leave her country once before, but this time she would remain.

“If you educate one woman, you educate her whole family,” Seraj explains. “And the women of Afghanistan are absolutely dying for education.”

Anna Coren, an Emmy-winning journalist for CNN, soon learned of Seraj and set out to tell her story in the documentary short “The Noble Guardian,” which recently won best documentary at the 2023 L.A. Shorts Intl. Film Festival and is eligible for the 2024 Oscars. Coren was there to capture the joy when the schools reopened to girls for the first time in months — and the devastation when they were shut down hours later.

Born into royal lineage, Seraj and her husband were imprisoned by the Communist Party in 1978 and eventually moved to the United States, before returning to Afghanistan in 2003.

The film marks Coren’s directorial debut, and she knew early on she wanted it to be a film rather than a news segment. She and her director of photography had covered Afghanistan for years and were looking for a way to tell the story. The first time she had a Zoom call with Seraj, she knew she had her way in. “It was just electric,” Coren recalls. “I just had goosebumps, the hair on the back of my neck was standing up and I knew: this woman was a documentary.”

Seraj admits she wasn’t initially comfortable being the center of attention, particularly as the film goes into private details of her life she hasn’t discussed publicly. But talking to Coren convinced her. “The way she talked to me, I realized that if there is any time in my life that I’m going to share this story with the people of Afghanistan and the women of the world, this is the time to do so.

Source: Variety.Com

https://variety.com/2023/awards/awards/the-noble-guardian-documentary-afghanistan-activist-1235775082/

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URL:   https://newageislam.com/islam-women-feminism/kohistan-clerics-pakistan-ngo-namahram-mahram/d/131048

 

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