UNGRATEFUL FEMALE-DOGS



President Bush liberating Afghans women from oppressions and from barbaric
Islamic Sharia Laws in Afghanistan under one-eyed Mullah Omar has been seen
as an unwelcome move. "Women must be in subjection to the strict Laws of
Islamic Sharia, where International Women's right Charter is affront to
Islamic Rights and Rules". It was a clash of civilizations.

"It is not appropriate for women to show their faces, and not wear
headscarf, but should be covered from head to toes except two eyes to be
left bare. Their man is allowed to marry four women." The oppressions and in
real practice against Muslim and non-Muslim women in Islamic countries has
been condone and welcome by the silencing- voices of Islamic women.

The cruel and barbaric circumcision of little girls in so many Islamic
Countries, however, their evil deeds was exposed and was confronted by
decent people of the World. The unfair treatment of women in Islamic circles
had prompted good fellows proposing UN women's rights Charter.

When US President liberates women from oppression in Iraq, together with
approval over 100 over countries of this world, and it was the largest
coalitions to fight against wicked Dictator Saddam's regimes, closing Rape
Rooms and Torture Chambers, some Turk's women challenge the legitimacies.
They prefer the status quo of Saddam's Regimes, and his two sons' wild and
wicked behaviour, raping and abusing women as usual.

The Turkish women felt insulted that Iraqis women were freed from human
rights abuses; and obtained freedom; and democracies has been exported to
Iraq. The alternative to Democracies in Iraq is Dictatorship, which they
obviously prefer to see their neighbors in that condition rather than be
free people. But of course they have to rationalize it by saying the effects
of war which caused casualties.

When a surgery is needed to remove cancers, they would say it should not be
done because in the process, some innocent cells will be destroyed, and they
harp on the innocent cells, deliberately ignoring the cures for cancers by
surgery which the Doctor had suggested.

""She said countries should not try to impose democracy through war, adding
that "we can never, ever export democracy and freedom from one country to
another."...

But USA and UK have exported Democracies to the world and was welcome by all
over the world except fanatics Islamists, and Insurgents in Iraq and
Osama.The freedom of the West is unwelcome by the people of Oppressions, for
too long they have lived under oppressions. They prefer to see their
neighboring Iraq oppressed by Saddam Hussein. The truths were, Iraq has Oil,
and may become the powerful economic giants in the near future after
Democracies, like Japan where USA export Democracies to them; and also
India, and now also China.

These democratic systems in our world today, instead of Dictatorships, were
the benevolent idea of USA leadership, UK and EU.

Human rights, and Women's rights are improving in Iraq as Coalition Forces
work for it, and it did not come by Chance.

Bush has wisely said, either you are with us, or you are with the
Terrorists. Those who choose to oppose Bush benevolent efforts in Iraq and
Afghans, has made themselves as USA enemy.

Frankie Lee
========================================
Turks Challenge Hughes on Iraq
Envoy Faces Angry Audience of Women's Rights Activists

By Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, September 29, 2005; A01



ISTANBUL, Sept. 28 -- A group of Turkish women's rights activists confronted
Undersecretary of State Karen Hughes on Wednesday with emotional and heated
complaints about the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, turning a session designed
to highlight the empowering of women into a raw display of the anger at U.S.
policy in the region.

"This war is really, really bringing your positive efforts to the level of
zero," said Hidayet Sefkatli Tuksal, an activist with the Capital City
Women's Forum. She said it was difficult to talk about cooperation between
women in the United States and Turkey as long as Iraq was under occupation.

Hughes, a longtime confidante of President Bush tasked with burnishing the
U.S. image overseas, has generally met with polite audiences -- many of
which consisted of former exchange students or people who have received U.S.
funding -- during a tour of Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Turkey this week.

In this case, the U.S. Embassy asked an umbrella group known as Ka-Der,
which supports women running for office, to assemble the guest list. None of
the activists currently receives U.S. funds or had any apparent desire to
mince words. Six of the eight women who spoke at the session, held in
Ankara, Turkey's capital, focused on the Iraq war.

"War makes the rights of women completely erased, and poverty comes after
war -- and women pay the price," said Fatma Nevin Vargun, a Kurdish women's
rights activist. Vargun denounced the arrest of Cindy Sheehan, the mother of
an American soldier killed in Iraq, in front of the White House this week.

Hughes, who became increasingly subdued during the session, defended the
decision to invade Iraq as a difficult and wrenching moment for Bush, but
necessary to protect the United States.

"You're concerned about war, and no one likes war," Hughes said. But "to
preserve the peace, sometimes my country believes war is necessary," she
said. She also asserted that women are faring much better in Iraq than they
had under the rule of deposed president Saddam Hussein.

"War is not necessary for peace," shot back Feray Salman, a human rights
defender. She said countries should not try to impose democracy through war,
adding that "we can never, ever export democracy and freedom from one
country to another."

Tuksal said she was "feeling myself wounded, feeling myself insulted here"
by Hughes's response. "In every photograph that comes from Iraq, there is
that look of fear in the eyes of women and children. . . . This needs to be
resolved as soon as possible."

Turkey, a member of NATO, has long been a close U.S. ally, but relations
have soured during the Bush administration, especially after the Turkish
parliament blocked a request to allow U.S. troops to use its territory to
invade Iraq from the north. National security adviser Stephen J. Hadley
visited Ankara last week as part of a new effort by the White House to mend
ties.

The Turkish public has also been rattled by an increase in attacks by the
Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, an armed separatist group of Turkish Kurds
operating out of northern Iraq. The United States has faced accusations that
it has not done enough to rein in the group.

Nurdan Bernard, a journalist participating in the panel, raised concerns
about the PKK, prompting Hughes to say it was "somewhat an irony." She
added: "Sometimes you have to engage in combat in order to confront
terrorists who want to kill you."

Hughes later flew to Istanbul for meetings with religious leaders -- part of
an effort to promote interfaith dialogue -- and with Turks who have
participated in U.S. exchange programs. She returns to Washington on
Thursday.

© 2005 The Washington Post Company



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