all about women life

Friday, October 10, 2014

strong women who inspire us.

6:44 AM Posted by Unknown No comments
Today is International Women’s Day. It’s a day that calls our attention to what it means to advance women’s rights in the workforce, politics, and society. Through our work around the world, we meet strong women every day that inspire us. Women are seeking not only to feed their children but also give these children a better life than they knew. But we also are painfully aware that many women, no matter how hard they work, can never get ahead without a little assistance from their brothers and sisters in other parts of the world. Here’s one such story:
Matilda and goat
Matilda Nyasulu is 32 years old and mother of three daughters. She hails from a village in the Rumphi district in Malawi. Matilda has been married twice to men who did not financially support her family. She is currently single and caring for her two elderly parents as well as her daughters.
Matilda is dependent on her farming and piece work (a type of employment in which a worker is paid a fixed piece rate for each unit produced or action performed regardless of time) to make ends meet for her children. Her parents are unable to work.
Four years ago, her situation was dire. Matilda said, “I really struggled to take care of my children and my parents. It was very difficult to find food and clothes for them. At one point, my oldest daughter did not go to school because I could not provide her with writing materials. It was also very difficult for me to find money to buy fertilizer as I was always experiencing food shortages.”
Matilda said she also finds it difficult to find money for transport to a nearest health center 20 kilometers (about 12 1/2 miles) away from her home.
In 2010, her children’s school, the Betere Community Based Child Care Centre (CBCC), identified Matilda’s as one of the households that could benefit from what they call the “Pass-On Goat Initiative.” Feed the Children gave her two female goats. After a few months, each of the goats birthed two goats. The project required that Matilda take two goats and pass them on to another family, which she did.
After some time, the goats multiplied to six. In 2012, Matilda sold one goat for around $75. With the money, she bought school uniforms, a pair of shoes, and writing materials for her two school-aged children. She used the remaining amount to pay the school fees for both children. Without the proceeds of the goat sale, her daughters would have lacked the clothes and supplies required to attend school.
“Selling the goat helped me to send my children to school,’’ she said.
Matilda in maize garden
In 2013, she slaughtered another goat and sold part of the meat for around $94 . Matilda kept part of it, to feed her children and family for a few days. She exchanged the remaining portion for fertilizer for her two acres of maize garden. She is also using goat droppings as manure in her maize garden.  This is a huge accomplishment and will assist her to feed her family on her own.
“This year I expect to harvest more maize than in the previous years, because for the first time I have applied enough fertilizer in my maize garden!’’ Matilda said.
Matilda is a strong mom. She is so glad to be independent, no longer burdened by the weight of supporting her children’s education. Furthermore, Matilda believes that the people in her community respect her because of the goats she is raising.
When we look at hunger and poverty around the world, it can look too big to solve. But stories like Matilda’s show us how simple it is when you focus on one family at a time. After all, her story transformed with just two goats!
source:feedthechildren.org

horrific injuries at the hands of own husband

6:37 AM Posted by Unknown No comments
Aisha, who appeared on the cover of "Time" magazine in 2010, was not the last Afghan woman to be so disfigured.
A
heroin addict was in need of a fix but had no money. So he ordered his wife to sell her jewelry and, when she refused, he hacked off her nose and lips. 

Thirty-year-old Sitara, who barely survived the brutal attack, says she suffered her horrific injuries at the hands of her husband, Azim.

It was hours before neighbors discovered Sitara in her home in the Anjil district of western Afghanistan's Herat Province. There they found her unconscious, covered with blood, and her nose and lips lying next to her on the floor.

Sitara was rushed to the hospital, where doctors were able to stabilize her condition. The incident created huge waves in the local and national media, prompting the Interior Ministry to launch a manhunt for Azim, who fled after the December 13 incident.

But while the authorities continue to search for Azim, hope for Sitara has grown.

On December 17, she was sent to Turkey to receive reconstructive surgery she could not get in Afghanistan. Dozens of Afghan women's rights activists accompanied her to Kabul's airport to show their support.

Violence Against Women Still Common

Sitara's story is all too common in Afghanistan, where violence against women is widespread.
Sitara's story is all too common in Afghanistan, where violence against women is widespread.

Despite women making significant inroads since the end of Taliban rule, domestic abuse remains routine, forced marriages are the norm, and women are discouraged from going to school or working outside the home. Suicide rates among women are among the highest in the world.Sitara's four young children witnessed the mutilation firsthand. It was their screams and sobbing that attracted the attention of their neighbors.

Fereshta, Sitara's 14-year-old daughter, says her father had a long history of drug abuse and would often beat her siblings and mother when money ran out. "Every time my mother refused to give money to my father, he would beat her," she told local media on December 15.

Sima Samar, the head of Afghanistan's Independent Human Rights Commission, described the incident as barbaric. "This act is against human dignity. The perpetrator must be arrested and charged," she told a press conference in Kabul on December 16. "It can't be an excuse that he has run away -- police must take this seriously."

Police have arrested two people in connection with the incident. But their identities have not been revealed. Sitara's children have been placed under the care of relatives while she receives treatment abroad.

Sitara's treatment is being funded by the Counternarcotics Ministry and through money raised by several Afghan NGOs. Herat Governor Sayed Fazlullah Wahidi has agreed to support her family until she returns home.


Only Getting Worse

People in Herat have staged several protests in the last few days to demand justice. Demonstrators have accused the government of failing to prosecute perpetrators of violence against women and criticized religious figures over their silence after the attack.

The provincial department for women's affairs recently disclosed that 180 cases of violence against women have been registered this year -- an increase of more than 30 percent over last year.

A new United Nations report released this month showed the number of cases increasing across the country. The UN reported an almost 30 percent increase in cases of violence against women compared to last year.

Afghanistan enacted a landmark Elimination of Violence Against Women law in August 2009. The law criminalizes child marriage, selling and buying women to settle disputes, assault, and other acts of violence and abuse against women.

But the UN report says prosecutions of such cases have increased by only 2 percent compared to last year. The report concludes that the implementation of the law has been "slow and uneven."

More Aishas To Come?

Those numbers will do little to calm fears that the gains achieved by women over the past decade could be lost once international forces depart at the end of 2014. Their presence, along with millions of dollars in foreign aid and assistance, were seen as supporting the reestablishment of women's rights.

Sitara's story is reminiscent of another case that exposed the abused faced by Afghan women to the world.

Aisha, an Afghan teenager, came to symbolize the problem after a photo of her nose-less face appeared on the cover of "Time" magazine in the United States in 2010.

Aisha's abusive husband had beaten her and then hacked off her nose after she attempted to run away from home. Aisha underwent reconstructive surgery in the United States, where she currently resides.

source:http://www.rferl.org/

Rocket women helped power India’s mission to Mars

6:25 AM Posted by Unknown No comments
The seven chairmen, including the incumbent, of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO)—India’s equivalent of NASA—have all been men, and it is typically male scientists who front the serious press conferences ISRO conducts after satellite launches.
But there’s a crucial band of women, working across the entire range of India’s space programme, that comprise about 20% of ISRO’s total workforce of 14,246 employees. About 10% of the total staff, or 1,654, are women engineers.
While smaller than other programmes—at NASA, for instance, about 20% of all engineers are women—Indian women space scientists have risen to prominence in recent years.In 2011, the launch and deployment of the GSAT-12, a communication satellite, washelmed by three women scientists at ISRO: Project director T.K. Anuradha, mission director Pramodha Hegde and operations director Anuradha Prakasham.

“The feeling is like delivering a baby,” Anuradha, perhaps the first woman to head such an ISRO project, told a newspaper after the launch.

Then, in 2012, N. Valarmathi led the launch of RISAT-1, a radar imaging satellite, sparking celebrations in a small Tamil Nadu town of Ariyalur, where she spent her childhood.

There’s also Tessy Thomas, the scientist who headed the Agni-V programme, an intercontinental ballistic missile. Thomas, though, works for the Defence Research and Development Organisation, not ISRO, but is among the most recognizable women scientists in the country.

And at ISRO, the 500 scientists who worked on the agency’s Mars Orbiter Mission also include women like Minal Sampath, a systems engineer.

“I forget I am a woman sometimes, working in such an organisation,” she told the BBC earlier this year. “Maybe it’s because we spend a lot of time working in clean rooms with full suits on, so you can’t tell who is male or female.”

Kurdish woman journalist killed covering story on ISIS

6:22 AM Posted by Unknown No comments
Before she was slain by ISIS operatives, Kurdish journalist Dinez Firat covered one of her many stories in the northern Iraqi region as a correspondent for Kurdish news media. Image: Firat news
(WNN) Denver, Colorado, U.S., AMERICAS: She was living in Ankara, Turkey and working as a news correspondent in the northern Iraqi region of conflict when she lost her life. Perhaps she would say she was doing what she love to do. But the death of Kurdish woman journalist Deniz Fırat is tragic regardless of her quest to ‘get the story’.
Known by her family and close friends as Leyla Yıldızhan, Firat was working for the Firat News Agency (FNA) as a correspondent covering recent conflict in the region, as well as life in the Makhmour refugee camp, when an armed militia attack by extremist insurgents known as the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) killed her. During the attack she died quickly from a piece of shrapnel that had entered her heart.
It is uncertain whether Firat had a chance to say anything to colleagues who were there with her after she was mortally injured.
Embedded earlier as a reporter on-the-ground with members of the Kurdish Worker’s Party (PKK), Firat was known for her dedicated work in Kurdish media. Her news briefs were picked up by Kurdish media including Ronahi TB, Sterk TV and Med Nuce. The PKK has a long history of conflict in the fight that began as a militia that was formed to gain independence from Turkey. The hope in 1977 was to build an independent Kurdish region that also gave dignity for Kurdish identity, culture and language.
While current U.S. military operations inside Iraq are working today with the PKK, where women fight alongside men, to fight against ISIS as the organization remains to be classified by the U.S. State Department as aForeign Terrorist Organization.
Regardless of this the PKK has also been coming to the protective aid of northern Iraqi religious minority members, the Yazidis, who have a long history of discrimination and have been facing genocide annihilation and severe human rights atrocities from ISIS insurgent attacks. PKK operations have been working in tandem with U.S. military troop actions in the region.
When Firkat recently visited the Makhmour refugee camp, near the town of Maxmur, those who personally knew her have conveyed that she also visited some relatives who have their own years-long history of living in the camp.
Kurdish media has released that these same relatives of Deniz Ferat were not allowed to follow her funeral march because they were blocked and unable to cross the Habur Border that is the gateway to eastern Turkey in the Van Province where Ferat is set to be buried.
recent emotional plea by Yazidi parliamentary member Ms. Vian Dakhil during an Iraqi Parliamentary meeting has brought the urgency in the needs for an immediate rescue of the Yazidi people, many who have been stranded on a mountain top during ISIS military operations in the northern Iraqi region, to the attention of the public. While some Yazidi members have been rescued others continue to remain stranded.
“She was exceptional, a brave activist woman. She had already lost two sisters in the struggle for the liberation of the Kurdish people. . .The Kurdish press agency Firat has condemned this attack conducted by the enemies of humanity who have taken the life of a journalist,” said a spokesperson from Firat News following the release on the killing of journalist Deniz Ferat.
source:-(WNN) 

World’s shortest woman Jyoti Amge

6:17 AM Posted by Unknown No comments
Amge, 20, is the world's smallest living woman, according to the Guinness Book of World Records. She earned the title on her 18th birthday with a height of 2 feet, 0.6 inches, said the Hollywood Reporter. 
Jyoti Amge was born on December 16, 1993 in Nagpur, India. She is an actress, known for American Horror Story (2011), Susana Giménez (1998) and Bigg Boss (2006).She is 6.2 cm shorter than the former world's Shortest woman, 22-year old AmericanBridgette Jordan who stands at 69cm (2 ft 3 in). But despite her tiny stature, Jyoti is not the shortest woman in history. This title continues to be held by Pauline Musters (Netherlands, 1876-1895) who measured just 61cm (24in).
Has a form of dwarfism called achondroplasia and will not grow any taller than her current height. She weighs 11lb (5 kg).
Due to her size, all of Jyoti's clothes and jewelry are custom made. Even plates and utensils are specially made, as normal-sized silverware is too big.
Has attended regular school since she was 4 and, other than a small desk and chair, she is treated like any other.