|
Qnjj David Gauke: priority must be protecting women when placing transgender prisoners
How did you feel when it happened When they came to take away the rights to our bodily autonomy When they said 12-year-old girls would be forced to carry to full-term, and then go through excruciating labour to deliver, babies with the faces of their rapists. When they legalised paying bounty hunters to pursue us for living in our own flesh and blood and wombs. When they believed that those of us who had given our lives to be free, to walk our own paths and dream our most vital dreams, would easily and quietly surrender to their twisted cage, unable to see they were connected to other cages inside cages, each one taking more of our air and our light. I heard a shrieking, high-pitched laugh-scream coming out of my frothing, ancient mouth, m stanley quencher y white hair blazing with fury. I wanted to weep and howl, and I did, for the depth of their hatred for me, for women, for Black women and brown women and Indigenous women and Asian women and young victims of incest and poor women and trans men and non-binary birthers of babies and all the rest of us stanley thermos mug trying to get free.So I stanley flask wrote. I wrote and I wrote. I wrote piece after piece trying to say something smart. Something that hadnt been said. Something so revelatory and earth shattering it would unlock the story, solve the crime, catalyse the opening. Finding the words that would undo this nightmare. That would save the young women and people who would die trying not to give birth and the ones who would be forever emotionally, economically, sp Yyho Was it right to scrap the ContactPoint child database
Nearly six in 10 countries are seriously restricting peoples freedoms, according to a new report that warns of a growing repression around the world.According to the study, there is little or no space for activism in countries such as Eritrea and Syria, and also worrying signs in coun stanley cup tries where democracy is considered well established, such as France, the US, Hungary and India.The report by Civicus Monitor, an alliance of civil society groups, found that fundamental rights 鈥?such as freedom of expression and peaceful assembly 鈥?were under attack in 111 of 196 countries.Countries were also found to be passing repressive laws and using new technologies to control public debate. In China, censorship using new technologies had reached unprecedented levels since President Xi Jinping took power, the report warned.Cathal Gilbert, civic space resea stanley cup rch lead at Civicus, said such measures were only the tip of the iceberg, with states more frequently resorting to harassment and violence. Extra-legal measures, such as attacking journalists or beating up protestors, are much more common, he said. These tactics are cynically designed to create a chilling effect and deter others from speaking o stanley cup uk ut or becoming active citizens. Among the countries listed as a concern were the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where authorities have clamped down on dissenting voices following the political crisis that began in 2015, and Guatemala, where at least 21 human rights defenders were killed during 2 |
|