¡Somos Sionistas no somos feministas!
2,mujeres del AS 1944.
Buenos dias a todas nuestras amigas progre nazis filo islamistas.
Oh la la. ¡Cuantas cosas sois!Es que sois unas buenas chicas,y para atraer a vuestros seres superiores, a ELLOS, a los elegidos del islám,etc..etc…haceis lo que sea preciso:
La competencia es dura, setenta vírgenes de lo más hermoso les pueden atraer mucho y hacer que no miren para vosotras…
Pues estabamos ahora leyendo la prensa y nos enteramos,maravilladas ,de cuantos esfuerzos hacen en Egipto los Hermanos Musulmanes por velar por nuestra femenil pureza.
Ya se sabe,lo ha dicho al profeta, somos unas descocadas y hay que vigilarnos constántemente . Se recomienda siempre el uso de una vara para «recomendarnos»más adecuadamente.
Bueno,ya nos estamos alejando del asunto,sigamos contando los esfuerzos de ELLOS por tenernos controladas -como debe ser- en the New Egipto democrático shariaco(de Sharia).
La noticia la da A.I.,por ello está algo deformada por estos malvados infieles que ala confunda,y dice:
«Al menos 18 mujeres han sido detenidas en cárceles militares,Amnesty International ha sido informada por manifestantes de plza. Tahir, que las han azotado,sometido a descargas elécticas , investigadas desnudas,fotografiadas,todo hecho por soldados de sexo masculino…LUEGO FORZADAS A REALIZAR EL TEST DE LA VIRGINIDAD y amenazadas de ser acusadas de prostitución»
Tales cosa,amigas filonazis islamistas progres etc…les parecen MAL a los de Amnisty(seguramente son sionistas judeos).
¿Por qué? No lo comprendemos.¿Qué tiene de malo que nuestros valientes soldados,del género superior islámico,velen por nuestra pureza y nos enseñen a comportarnos adecuádamente.Porque,preguntamos :¿Qué hacían estas atrevidas manifestandose en una plaza pública,pidiendo derechos en un llamado Dia Internacional de la Mujer, y no estándose en su casa pariendo niños ,y cocinando un buén cus cus, para su esposo y señor ?
¿Estareis de acuerdo con nosotras ,verdad?¡Hasta aquí se podía llegar !¡Seguro que ese «dia» es un invento Sionista!
La prueba de que obraban adecuadamente nuestros señores naturales es la siguiente:
«Una detenida que dió negativo en el test de la virginidad fué azotada y torturada con descargas eléctricas…»
Todas pensamos que han sido muy magnánimos,muy clementes,nuestros sabios militares:!SE MERECIA ESTA PERDIDA UNA BUENA LAPIDACION, O DOS SI ERA PRECISO!
Un saludo a todas vosotras ,amigas filonazis progres islamistas,etc…etc…
Seguiremos charlando, otro dia ,más.
Egyptian women protesters forced to take ‘virginity tests’
23 March 2011
Amnesty International has today called on the Egyptian authorities to investigate serious allegations of torture, including forced ‘virginity tests’, inflicted by the army on women protesters arrested in Tahrir Square earlier this month.
After army officers violently cleared the square of protesters on 9 March, at least 18 women were held in military detention. Amnesty International has been told by women protesters that they were beaten, given electric shocks, subjected to strip searches while being photographed by male soldiers, then forced to submit to ‘virginity checks’ and threatened with prostitution charges.
‘Virginity tests’ are a form of torture when they are forced or coerced.
«Forcing women to have ‘virginity tests’ is utterly unacceptable. Its purpose is to degrade women because they are women,» said Amnesty International. «All members of the medical profession must refuse to take part in such so-called ‘tests’.»
20-year-old Salwa Hosseini told Amnesty International that after she was arrested and taken to a military prison in Heikstep, she was made, with the other women, to take off all her clothes to be searched by a female prison guard, in a room with two open doors and a window. During the strip search, Salwa Hosseini said male soldiers were looking into the room and taking pictures of the naked women.
The women were then subjected to ‘virginity tests’ in a different room by a man in a white coat. They were threatened that “those not found to be virgins” would be charged with prostitution.
According to information received by Amnesty International, one woman who said she was a virgin but whose test supposedly proved otherwise was beaten and given electric shocks.
“Women and girls must be able to express their views on the future of Egypt and protest against the government without being detained, tortured, or subjected to profoundly degrading and discriminatory treatment,” said Amnesty International.
“The army officers tried to further humiliate the women by allowing men to watch and photograph what was happening, with the implicit threat that the women could be at further risk of harm if the photographs were made public.”
Journalist Rasha Azeb was also detained in Tahrir Square and told Amnesty International that she was handcuffed, beaten and insulted.
Following their arrest, the 18 women were initially taken to a Cairo Museum annex where they were reportedly handcuffed, beaten with sticks and hoses, given electric shocks in the chest and legs, and called “prostitutes”.
Rasha Azeb could see and hear the other detained women being tortured by being given electric shocks throughout their detention at the museum. She was released several hours later with four other men who were also journalists, but 17 other women were transferred to the military prison in Heikstep
Testimonies of other women detained at the same time collected by the El Nadeem Center for Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence are consistent with Rasha Azeb and Salwa Hosseini’s accounts of beatings, electrocution and ‘virginity tests’.
“The Egyptian authorities must halt the shocking and degrading treatment of women protesters. Women fully participated in bringing change in Egypt and should not be punished for their activism,” said Amnesty International.
“All security and army forces must be clearly instructed that torture and other ill-treatment, including forced ‘virginity tests’, will no longer be tolerated, and will be fully investigated. Those found responsible for such acts must be brought to justice and the courageous women who denounced such abuses be protected from reprisals.”
All 17 women detained in the military prison were brought before a military court on 11 March and released on 13 March. Several received one-year suspended prison sentences.
Salwa Hosseini was convicted of disorderly conduct, destroying private and public property, obstructing traffic and carrying weapons.
Amnesty International opposes the trial of civilians before military courts in Egypt, which have a track record of unfair trials and where the right to appeal is severely restricted.