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martes, 11 de junio de 2013

MUJERES CONVERTIDAS EN ESCLAVAS. CAMPOS DE REGUGIADOS SIRIOS.

SIRIA, LOS ISLAMISTAS TORTURAN A LAS MUJERES SIRIAS:


Syrie: Les islamistes torturent des femmes syriennes - YouTube

www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAkZIvkqWYg
10/02/2013 - Subido por Contre terorristes
Regardez et partager pour que tout le monde regarde ce que font les islamistes au nom de Allah. Algerie ...




MUJERES VENDIDAS EN SUBASTA EN LOS CAMPOS DE REFUGIADOS SIRIOS: INFORMACIÓN DE A
RGELIA.


TESTIMONIOS DE UNA VENDEDORA DE ESCLAVAS SIRIAS:


HABLA UNA VENDIDA



1.

Les femmes syriennes mises aux enchères en Jordanie et en Turquie

 
Par Mourad Arbani | 01/03/2013 | 0:14
La Syrie n’en fini plus d’être martyrisée par les hordes barbares d’intégristes qui ont afflué et continuent de le faire de la plupart des pays musulmans. Des dizaines de milliers de mercenaires aux idées d’un autre âge enrôlés, aidés, financés, armés par la Turquie, le Qatar, l’Arabie Saoudite et l’Occident qui le fait pour le grand bien d’Israël, n’en finissent pas de détruire la Syrie, son peuple, ses communautés, son patrimoine scientifique, son histoire, ses industries, ses infrastructures civiles et militaires, ses vestiges, son agriculture, son intelligentsia… afin de l’expédier au moyen âge.
Cette guerre sert aussi à humilier le vaillant peuple syrien, à se servir de ses femmes et de ses filles pour assouvir les bas instincts de la secte des assassins. Ces femmes et ces filles sont kidnappées, violées et ensuite égorgées.
Dans les camps de réfugiés de Jordanie et de Turquie, peuplés selon l’ONU de 75% de femmes et d’enfants, ce sont les cheikhs arabes des pays du Golfe qui viennent acheter des femmes syriennes aux enchères.
Il n’y a pas de mots assez durs pour qualifier cette ignominie, il n’y a pas de mots assez durs pour qualifier ces hommes infâmes et sans honneur, soit disant musulmans, se déplaçant  dans les camps pour profiter de la grande et incommensurable détresse humaine de ces innocentes vendues pour quelques dollars par des réseaux de mafieux ne reculant devant rien pour quelque profits.
Tout le monde savait cela mais un sorte de voile pudique est jeté sur cette pratique abominable, criminelle, ignoble par les occidentaux où ces sujets sont tabous dans les médias.
Aujourd’hui, le numéro deux du principal parti d’opposition turc “République populaire” le confirme et le dénonce.
“Les droits de l’homme sont bafoués dans les camps des réfugiés en Turquie où se rendent les cheikhs arabes et achètent pour une somme médiocre les êtres humains” précise t-il.
Le responsable turc a également dénoncé le fait que le gouvernement turc autorise les “enfants de ces camps à s’entraîner aux armes et à combattre “.

2.
May 14, 2013 7:19 PM

Syrian refugees sell daughters in bid to survive

By
Clarissa Ward
(CBS News) AMMAN, Jordan -- Um Majed's cell phone rarely stops ringing these days. She calls herself a marriage broker; in reality, she sells Syrian girls to men looking for brides at bargain prices.
"Of course she's thin," she tells one client. "She's been in a camp for a month."
Um Majed she sells Syrian girls to men looking for brides at bargain prices.
Um Majed she sells Syrian girls to men looking for brides at bargain prices.
 / CBS News
For many families living in Jordan's refugee camps, selling their daughters into marriage is the only way to survive. Across the Middle East, it is the custom for the groom to pay the bride's family, but their desperation is being exploited. Often the marriages are a sham, just a way to have sex. Some last only weeks.
Um Majed gets a cut for every match she makes. Young virgins fetch up to $5,000.
"You want me to get a younger one?" she asks one caller. "Thirteen, fourteen?"
Asked how it feels to marry off a 13-year-old girl, she replies, "Don't ask me, ask the families. It's the parents who feel it like a knife to their heart. ... But what can they do? We're in a state of war."
Seventeen-year-old Aya was sold to a 70-year-old man from Saudi Arabia for $3,500.
Syrian refugee Aya, who was sold to a Saudi man for $3,500.
 / CBS
Seventeen-year-old Aya fled Syria with her family just under a year ago. She was sold to a 70-year-old man from Saudi Arabia for $3,500. He left her after a month.
"This month was like a nightmare," she says. "I spent half of it crying. He didn't let me talk to my family much. But I had no choice."
Um Majed makes no apologies for her business.
"This is the only way for me to make a living," she says. "Syrians can't work in Jordan. What are we supposed to do? Steal? Kill?"
Asked if she would marry off her daughters at 13, she replies, "Impossible."
Below: Refugee camps strain resources on Jordan-Syria border.
"I would die for them. I would sell my eyes before I sold my kids. But everyone's drowning."
It's a high price to pay in a society that places such high value on a woman's honor.
Aya says she feels ashamed by what's happened to her.
"This feeling really never leaves me," she says. "If I could go back in time just one month."
But for Aya, her innocence lost and her country at war, there is no going back.


3

Syrian refugees 'sold for marriage' in Jordan

Syrian women collecting food and supplies from the UNHCR at Jordan's Zaatari refugee camp on 30 January 2013Long queues of Syrian refugees wind around the UNHCR's building in Amman, Jordan
Before the war began, Kazal was in love with her neighbour in Homs. "He was 20 years old and I dreamed of marrying him one day," she says. "I never thought I would marry someone I didn't love, but my family and I have been through some hard times since coming to Amman."
Kazal says she is 18 but looks much younger. She has just got divorced from a 50-year-old man from Saudi Arabia who paid her family about US $3,100 (UK £2,000) to marry her. The marriage lasted one week.
"I lived with my husband in Amman, but we weren't happily married. He treated me like a servant, and didn't respect me as a wife. He was very strict with me. I'm happy that we're divorced."
Her huge, blue eyes fill with tears when she talks about the marriage.

Start Quote

Andrew Harper
You can call it rape, you can call it prostitution, you can call it what you want, but it's preying on the weakest”
Andrew HarperUNHCR
"I agreed to it so I could help my family. When I got engaged I cried a lot. I won't get married for money again. In the future I hope to marry a Syrian boy who's my own age."
'Survival sex'
Andrew Harper, the Representative of the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Jordan, is concerned that some of the 500,000 Syrian refugees in the country are increasingly turning to such desperate measures.
"We don't have enough resources to give aid to all those who need it. The vast majority of refugees are women and children. Many of them are not used to going out to work, so survival sex becomes an option."
His office in central Amman is surrounded by hundreds of newly arrived refugees, waiting in long lines to register for aid. He says the UNHCR has intervened with some families who have been offering their daughters up for early marriage.
"I can't think of anything more disgusting than people targeting refugee women… You can call it rape, you can call it prostitution, you can call it what you want but it's preying on the weakest.
"The government and people of Jordan are doing what they can but people are poor and we have to get more resources into the community so families aren't forced into something that deep down I believe they don't want to do."
18-year-old KazalKazal's agreed to the marriage to help her family
Short-term marriages between men from the Gulf and Syrian girls reportedly happened before the war began. But Kazal's mother Manal, who dresses conservatively like her daughter in an abaya and headscarf, says she would have never considered such an arrangement in the past.
"Life here is very hard and we receive very little aid. We have a baby who needs lots of milk every day, and we can't afford to pay the rent. So I had to sacrifice Kazal to help the other members of the family."
She says that the marriage was arranged by an Amman-based NGO called Kitab al-Sunna, which gives cash, food and medicines to refugees. It is funded by donations from individuals across the Arab world.
"When I went for help at the NGO they asked to see my daughter. They said they would find a husband for her."
Syrian matchmaker
The director of Kitab al-Sunna, Zayed Hamad, says that he is sometimes approached by men who want to marry Syrian women.

Start Quote

It's not prostitution because there's a contract between the groom and bride... How are we supposed to live when the NGOs give us so little help? ”
Um MazedMatchmaker
"They ask for girls who are over 18. They're motivated by helping these women, especially those whose husbands died as martyrs in Syria. Arab men see Syrian women as good housewives, and they find them very pretty, so traditionally it is desirable to marry one."
Um Mazed is a 28-year-old Syrian refugee from Homs who has started earning money by arranging marriages between Syrian girls and Arab men.
In a grubby room covered with mould, she fields phone calls from prospective brides and grooms.
"The men are usually between 50 and 80, and they ask for girls who have white skin and blue or green eyes. They want them very young, no older than 16."
She says she has presented more than a hundred Syrian girls to these men, who pay her a fee of US $70 for an introduction, and about US $310 if it results in a marriage.
"If these marriages end in divorce after a short time, that's not my issue, I'm just the matchmaker. As far as I'm concerned it's not prostitution because there's a contract between the groom and bride."
Um Mazed means "Mother of Mazed", one of her three children. She doesn't want her identity known because she's ashamed of what she is doing for a living, but claims she has no choice.
"How are we supposed to live when the NGOs give us so little help? How are we supposed to pay our rent? We're not getting enough help to live decently, that's why I'm doing this - so my family and I can survive."


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