Fed up with Islam Yet???

davesmom

Council Member
Oct 11, 2015
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What difference does it make why she did it? That poor little 4 year old girl had no guilt about anything and she's just as dead whether it was for religion, revenge or because the woman was crazy!
The bottom line is, a person who would do a thing like that has no place in the human race or even in the animal kingdom! She needs to be executed!
When a horrendous crime like this is committed it's always played up as a case of mental illness, the murderer gets treatment and eventual release into society again where they relapse and commit more crimes. It happens right here in Canada and it's a disgrace!
 

spaminator

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Nanny accused of beheading girl charged with murder
The Associated Press
First posted: Friday, March 04, 2016 01:17 PM EST | Updated: Friday, March 04, 2016 01:25 PM EST
MOSCOW -- A nanny accused of decapitating a four-year-old girl and brandishing her head outside a Moscow subway station has been formally charged with murder.
Vladimir Markin, spokesman for Russia's Investigative Committee, announced the charge on Friday. Under Russian law, a conviction carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment or the death penalty, although Russia placed a moratorium on capital punishment in 1999.
Gulchekhra Bobokulova, 38, was detained in Moscow on Monday after she was seen with the child's head.
Officials have suggested the woman, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia in 2003, could have been incited to kill as an act of terrorism, but Markin said investigation into the motive is continuing.
Nanny accused of beheading girl charged with murder | World | News | Toronto Sun
 

spaminator

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Police say 15-year-old raped, set on fire outside New Delhi
Katy Daigle, The Associated Press
First posted: Tuesday, March 08, 2016 11:37 AM EST | Updated: Wednesday, March 09, 2016 01:36 AM EST
NEW DELHI -- Police say a 15-year-old girl who was raped and set on fire this week has died in the New Delhi hospital where she was being treated for severe burns.
Uttar Pradesh state police constable Yadram Singh says the girl succumbed to her burns early Wednesday.
The attack is just one of several recently reported cases of rapes of women or children in India -- underlining the persistence of such violence despite a public outcry three years ago that led to stronger laws against sexual assault.
In the latest case, police have arrested a 20-year-old man suspected of raping and attempting to burn the girl to death Monday in Tigri village, near the New Delhi suburb of Noida in the state of Uttar Pradesh, according to constable Yadram Singh of the Bisrakh police station.
Singh said the man "had burns on his hands" and was charged with several offences, including rape, attempted murder, assault of a minor and causing grievous injury.
The girl was in critical condition with severe burns over most of her body, Singh said. Indian newspapers said she had burns on 95% of her body.
Singh's police report on the case describes how the girl's parents found her after hearing her screaming from the rooftop terrace a few hours before dawn Monday.
The girl later told police that she was raped, beaten and then set on fire by a man who she said had been stalking her for months, Singh said.
India's women and children are considered particularly vulnerable to sexual violence and harassment because of widespread social taboos against speaking about sexual assault. The stigma is enough to keep many from even reporting crimes, while many others face police resistance in filing complaints.
Experts say that has started to change since the fatal gang rape of a 23-year-old woman on a New Delhi bus in 2012 triggered national anger and demands that more be done for women's safety. The government rushed through legislation to double prison terms for rape, and to criminalize voyeurism, stalking and the trafficking of women. But activists say more action is needed, including better educating youths and adding basic safety infrastructure such as street lights and public bathrooms.
The public debate has also increased Indian newspaper reports of rape and assault, including several in just the last few days.
On Monday, police in the financial capital of Mumbai said they were investigating whether a four-year-old girl whose body was dumped in the bushes on the city's outskirts had been raped before being killed, according to the Press Trust of India news agency. The girl reportedly went missing after being separated from her mother at a railway station Sunday night.
In other cases in Uttar Pradesh, police arrested a 20-year-old man suspected of raping a six-year-old Sunday night, and were separately investigating nine people for allegedly gang raping a woman when she went into the fields to go to the bathroom last month, PTI reported.
And last week, three boys reportedly kidnapped a teenage girl from her home and raped her repeatedly in a field in the northern state of Haryana and later in New Delhi before she escaped, the news agency cited police as saying.
Relatives stand on the terrace of a house where a 15-year-old girl was set on fire after being raped at Tigri village, near Noida, a suburb of New Delhi, India, on March 8, 2016. The girl is fighting for her life in a New Delhi hospital. (AP Photo/Saurabh Das)

Police say 15-year-old raped, set on fire outside New Delhi | World | News | Tor
 

spaminator

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Afghan president reopens case of woman lynched by mob
Lynne O'Donnell, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Thursday, March 10, 2016 01:30 PM EST | Updated: Thursday, March 10, 2016 01:34 PM EST
KABUL -- The Afghan president has ordered his government to reopen the case of a woman beaten to death last year by a frenzied mob outside a Kabul shrine, just days after the country's highest court reduced the sentences of the 13 men convicted of her murder.
Ashraf Ghani's move comes ahead of the first anniversary of Farkhunda Malikzada's killing and as a leading international rights group issued a report slamming Afghanistan's judicial system over its failure to deliver justice in the high-profile case.
In its statement, Human Rights Watch called it a "bitter irony" that the Supreme Court in Kabul had confirmed the reduced sentences on March 8, the International Women's Day.
The 27-year-old Malikzada was attacked and lynched on March 19 last year outside a shrine in the Afghan capital after one of the men in the group shouted that she had burned a Qur'an, the Muslim holy book -- an accusation that was later found to be false.
The brutal slaying stunned the country and led to calls for reform of the judicial system, long plagued by corruption, partisanship and incompetence, and stronger protection for women from violence.
A spokesman for Ghani, Zafar Hashemi, said the newly-appointed attorney general had been instructed by the president to "make justice for Farkhunda his top priority and reopen the case."
"The president has assigned a senior and dedicated adviser from his legal team to follow up and provide support to Farkhunda's family lawyers," Hashemi told The Associated Press. "He asks for regular reporting on her case and puts significant pressure on law enforcement authorities to make sure that justice is delivered."
Four men were originally sentenced to death for Malikzada's murder and another nine were handed long prison sentences. However, the Supreme Court this week upheld a lower court's decision to reduce the sentences for all convicted.
Three of the death sentences were commuted to 20 years in prison and the fourth to 10 years. The other nine men convicted in the case also had their prison terms slashed. Initially, 30 men were charged with Malikzada's murder.
Footage taken on cellphones of the attack showed Malikzada being punched, kicked and beaten with wooden planks, after which the crowd threw her from a roof, ran over her with a car and crushed her with a block of concrete. They then set her body ablaze on the bank of the Kabul River.
The incident triggered widespread demonstrations, across Afghanistan and internationally, demanding justice for women in a country where they are widely treated with contempt and where they have their constitutional right to protection from violence routinely breached. An Afghan civil rights group has erected a memorial to her on the river bank.
The New York-based rights group said that by commuting the death sentences, the Afghan justice system "averts the further cruelty of capital punishment," but added that justice had not been done for Malikzada.
"At every stage of this case, the Afghan criminal justice system failed to adequately investigate, hold to account or appropriately punish those responsible," HRW said.
Shukria Jalalzay, the director of the Afghan Women's Coordination and Promotion Organization, said rights groups continued to exert pressure on Ghani to keep his word on ensuring justice for Malikzada.
"It has been almost a year and slowly the punishments for those convicted of her murder are decreasing," she said. Like many activists, Jalalzay said she believes the police's role in the attack resulted in the politicization of the case.
The cellphone footage from the attack has shown police stood by watching while Malikzada was being beaten to death. A total of 19 police were prosecuted for their failure to prevent her death. HRW noted that "the court lightly disciplined only 11" policemen. Those hearings were separate from the trials of the attackers.
"Justice has not been served," Jalalzay said.
Hashemi, the president's spokesman, said that under the Afghan constitution Ghani "cannot interfere in affairs of the judiciary." He added that the president "personally follows on support" provided to Malikzada's family.
In the year that has passed since the lynching, most of Malikzada's family has left Afghanistan for Tajikistan, after her father, Mohammad, told the AP that they had received death threats during the early stages of the court cases. He said the children in the family could not go to school and the adults could no longer go to work, and that they felt abandoned by the government and the justice system.
Najib Malikzada, brother of Farkhunda, who was beaten to death by a mob after being falsely accused of burning a Quran, speaks during an interview at his home, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, July 2, 2015. (AP Photo/Massoud Hossaini)

Afghan president reopens case of woman lynched by mob | World | News | Toronto S
 

spaminator

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Pakistan woman beaten, burned to death for refusing proposal
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, June 01, 2016 01:06 PM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, June 01, 2016 01:35 PM EDT
ISLAMABAD -- A Pakistani police official says a female teacher has died after being beaten and set on fire for refusing a marriage proposal from a man twice her age.
Mohammad Ali said Wednesday that the woman, who was around 19 years old, was attacked two days earlier near the hilltop town of Murree, just outside the capital, Islamabad.
He says that after being brought to a hospital in Islamabad, the woman told police that relatives of the school principal attacked her for refusing the proposal from his son.
Such attacks are not uncommon in Pakistan, where nearly 1,000 women are killed each year in so-called "honour killings" for allegedly violating conservative norms on love and marriage.
Pakistan woman beaten, burned to death for refusing proposal | World | News | To
 

spaminator

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Suspects arrested after teacher tortured, set on fire
Munir Ahmed, The Associated Press
First posted: Friday, June 03, 2016 11:26 AM EDT | Updated: Friday, June 03, 2016 11:44 AM EDT
ISLAMABAD -- Pakistani police announced Friday that all five suspects in the brutal killing of a 19-year-old schoolteacher who was tortured, doused with gasoline and set on fire earlier this week for refusing to marry a man twice her age are now in custody.
Before she died, Maria Bibi had given a statement to police, saying five attackers had stormed her house in the town of Upper Dewal on Monday, dragged her to an open area and kicked her as though she were a "football."
She was brought to Islamabad hospital in critical condition and later died. The attackers fled after the assault. Bibi's family has maintained that she was killed for rejecting a marriage proposal from a man who owned a school and wanted her to marry his son.
The case has shocked the nation though violence against women is not uncommon in Pakistan, where nearly 1,000 women are killed each year in so-called "honour killings" for allegedly violating conservative norms on love and marriage.
Police official Waheed Ahmed said Friday that three more suspects in the case were arrested early in the morning, following the two arrests made the day before.
He identified the prime suspect in the case as Shaukat, the owner of the school who is nearly 60 years old and whose son, a man about 40 years old and already married, was the intended groom.
"The unfortunate woman Maria Bibi in her statement insisted that Shaukat and four other men dragged her from the door of her home and tortured and burned her. We have arrested all the five men," Ahmed said.
Bibi's father Sadaqat Hussain Abbas praised the police for the arrests and asked the government in an emotional plea on Friday to execute the men in his family's presence in the same way they had killed Bibi.
Demands like this are common but Pakistani law doesn't allow for such punishment.
Zohra Yusuf, who heads the independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, condemned the incident and warned of an increase in assaults on women.
"As women are increasingly fighting for their rights, the reaction from the male-dominated society has been extreme, and we have witnessed an increase in violence against women," she told The Associated Press.
Last month, police arrested 13 members of a local tribal council who allegedly strangled a local girl and set her body on fire for helping one of her friends elope.
The charred body of 17-year-old Ambreen Riasat was found in a burned van in the tourist resort of Donga Gali on April 29.
And in 2012, Pakistani teenage activist and later Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai was shot in the head by the Pakistani Taliban on her way home from school. The militants targeted her because she advocated education for women.
In this picture taken on Wednesday, June 1, 2016, the grandmother of a female teacher who was beaten and set on fire, prepares to sit near the body in an ambulance, outside a local hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan. (AP Photo/M. Farid)

Suspects arrested after teacher tortured, set on fire | World | News | Toronto S
 

Colpy

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Any more than the old testament which is still quoted by many and still use it to keep others down? It talks about stoning women prostitutes, or witches, how to treat one's slaves, killing unbelievers etc. Women were not to speak in church and were simply chattel. Most religions are hate filled, mainly because they were formed for those that existed at the time and needed to feel special.

You mention not keeping up with modern ways......just who do you feel are the winners in society?? I have a hard time dealing with all those who treat those of other races, or sexes as less than human. Western society is not so far out of age of slavery and many so called modern ones still keep & use sex slaves. All terrorists are as secretive as those so called "Muslims" who use religion as an excuse to feel more like winners. Modern western criminals no longer bother to use religion as an excuse, they simply feel entitled!!

 

Colpy

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You know Colpy. I'm not an Atheist although I do not believe in the Abrahamic religions. That being said I'm starting to feel like the world would be better off, religion free.

Although not a church going individual, I am not an atheist either.

However, I'll let an atheist handle the question from her perspective. :)

 

spaminator

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Newlywed's mom allegedly burns her alive for marrying for love
Zaheer Babar, The Associated Press
First posted: Wednesday, June 08, 2016 09:36 AM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, June 08, 2016 10:00 AM EDT
LAHORE, Pakistan -- A Pakistani woman was arrested Wednesday after dousing her daughter with kerosene and burning her alive, allegedly because the girl had defied her family to marry a man she was in love with, police said.
Police official Sheikh Hammad said the killing took place in the eastern city of Lahore, the country's cultural hub, and that the mother was arrested the same day.
The suspect, Parveen Rafiq, has confessed to tying up her 18-year-old daughter Zeenat Rafiq to a cot after which, with the help of her son, Ahmar Rafiq, she poured the oil on the girl and set her ablaze, Hammad said.
Nearly 1,000 women are killed each year in so-called "honour killings" in Pakistan for allegedly violating conservative norms on love and marriage.
A schoolteacher, Maria Bibi, was assaulted and set on fire last week for refusing to marry a man twice her age. Before she died, she managed to give a statement to the police, testifying that five attackers had broken into her home, dragged her out to an open area, beat her and set her ablaze.
The prime suspect in the case -- the father of the man she refused to marry -- and the other four are all in custody.
A month earlier, police arrested 13 members of a local tribal council who allegedly strangled a girl and set her on fire for helping a friend elope. The charred body of 17-year-old Ambreen Riasat was found in a burned van.
The daughter killed in Lahore, Zeenat Rafiq, had gotten married last month before a court magistrate to a motorcycle mechanic, Hasan Khan, said Hammad.
Three days ago, he said, the girl's mother and an uncle visited her to try to persuade her to return home and have the marriage ceremony repeated in a traditional family function, instead of being labelled her whole life as someone who had "eloped."
Khan, her husband, told the local Geo News TV station that his bride had feared the worst.
"Don't let me go, they will kill me," Khan recounted his wife telling him.
Hassan Khan shows the picture of his wife Zeenat Rafiq, who was burned alive, allegedly by her mother, on a cellphone at his home in Lahore, Pakistan, on June 8, 2016. (AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary)

Newlywed's mom allegedly burns her alive for marrying for love | World | News |
 

spaminator

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5 Indians get life for knifepoint rape of lost tourist
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Friday, June 10, 2016 01:40 PM EDT | Updated: Friday, June 10, 2016 01:46 PM EDT
DELHI -- Five Indians who raped a Danish tourist after she asked for directions in New Delhi were sentenced to life in prison Friday for the attack two years ago that highlighted the plague of sexual violence in the country.
Judge Ramesh Kumar said the convicts, aged 23 to 30, were guilty of gang rape, kidnapping, wrongful confinement and criminal intimidation. Dinesh Sharma, the attorney for the defendants, sought leniency, saying the convicts came from poor backgrounds. The men had pleaded not guilty and can appeal the verdict.
Police said the 51-year-old woman approached several vagabonds on the night of Jan. 14, 2014, to ask for directions back to her hotel near Connaught Place, a popular shopping area in the capital. Nine attackers took her to a secluded spot, robbed her and raped her repeatedly at knifepoint. One of the convicts was found with the victim's glasses case and 1,000 rupees ($19) in cash.
One of the accused men died during trial in February. Three who were younger than 18 at the time of the attack were handed to the Juvenile Justice Board to remain in custody until they are 18 and reformed.
Violence against women in India has caused increasing alarm since the fatal gang rape of a 23-year-old Indian physiotherapy student in New Delhi in 2012. Several foreign tourists also have been targeted in attacks that often get international attention, although Indian women are assaulted far more frequently.
Public fury over the 2012 rape case led to more stringent laws that doubled prison terms for rape to 20 years and criminalized voyeurism and stalking. But many women say daily indignities and abuse continue unabated and that the new laws have not made the streets any safer.
In this Thursday, June 9, 2016, photo, three of the five convicts in the gang rape of a 51-year-old Danish tourist in 2014, are escorted by the police for a hearing at a city court, in New Delhi, India. (AP Photo/Manish Swarup)

5 Indians get life for knifepoint rape of lost tourist | World | News | Toronto
 

spaminator

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Woman allegedly throws acid on boyfriend for refusing to marry her
Monil Mai, 32, wanted to marry Sadaqat Ali so she could divorce her current husband
Munir Ahmed, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Friday, June 17, 2016 11:10 AM EDT | Updated: Friday, June 17, 2016 11:28 AM EDT
ISLAMABAD -- A woman in Pakistan was arrested for allegedly throwing acid on a man who refused to marry her, police said Friday, marking an unusual case in a country where rates of violence against women are high.
Local police official Bashir Ahmed said the 32-year-old woman, Monil Mai, was arrested Thursday, hours after she attacked her boyfriend Sadaqat Ali when he went to her home in the Mukhdoom Rashid neighbourhood of Multan, a city in central Pakistan.
Ahmed said that Mai had been having an affair with Ali for several years. She wanted him to marry her so that she could divorce her husband, he said.
Ali was being treated at a hospital in Multan, in the eastern Punjab province, Ali said.
Acid attacks and other so-called honour crimes against women are not unusual in Pakistan, but women are rarely the perpetrators of such attacks.
"It is a rare incident in which a woman has been accused of throwing acid on a man," said Zohra Yusuf, who heads the independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan. She urged the government to take steps to stop the sale of acid to unauthorized persons.
"There is a need to make checks on the availability of acid to common people to prevent such future attacks against men or women," Yusuf said. Acid is easily available at markets in many parts of Pakistan, although the government says it was tightening controls to stop illegal sale of chemicals.
Woman allegedly throws acid on boyfriend for refusing to marry her | World | New
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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If you are a Native Indian then all sorts of bad sh*t can (and will) happen to you and not 1 Canadian will lift a finger to eliminate the abuse. Time to talk about a lot of things or does it get promoted that Canadians were never prejudiced a single living soul before Muslims came along. They are the last in a long list. Not so odd that this recent persecution started about 1947 and it was in support of stealing land from some of them. Rather than it being about how Muslims should act here it should be about how 'we' act when 'we' are over in their lands, that would include Israel and the whole Mid-East. Fact are 'we' are clearly the bigger as*holes when the lists are compared, probably by at least a 100 fold.
 

spaminator

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Woman charged with murder after boyfriend dies from alleged acid attack
The Associated Press
First posted: Tuesday, June 21, 2016 11:33 AM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, June 21, 2016 11:50 AM EDT
ISLAMABAD -- Pakistani police say a man whose girlfriend threw acid on him for refusing to marry her has died of his wounds at a hospital.
Local police official Bashir Ahmed says the 22-year-old Sadaqat Ali died at a government hospital in the city of Multan in central Punjab province on Tuesday.
Ali was brought to the hospital last week after 32-year-old Monil Mai threw acid on him when he was visiting her home in the city's Mukhdoom Rashid neighbourhood. She had been having an affair with Ali for several years.
Mai was arrested by police hours after the attack and authorities have now registered a murder case against her.
Acid attacks and other so-called honour crimes against women are not unusual in Pakistan, though women are rarely perpetrators of such attacks.
Woman charged with murder after boyfriend dies from alleged acid attack | World