recent months across the North African area began to blow the wind of protest, starting from Tunisia, has invested as a cyclone unstoppable Egypt, Libya, Morocco, Iran, Bahrain , Algeria, Cameroon, Kuwait, Yemen and the rebellion could push many other Middle Eastern countries with the cry: "Look at Egypt, we will win." The uprising has succeeded in dismissing the President Zin El Abidin Ben Ali in Tunisia, in just 18 days to overturn the regime of Hosni Mubarak that lasted 30 years and give a lot of conviction other Muslim peoples. In short, each of the countries in protest thinks that if they made it Tunisians and Egyptians, they too can succeed. These countries are torn by an unemployment rate of between ten and thirteen percent are private and even minimum forms of democracy. This is proof that democracy is not imposed and not to be exported, but the conquest of a people who, when ready, is willing to sacrifice their lives to grab it. We often have misconceptions on behalf of these people, we believe we are very distant, perhaps backward, and yet they call the people to the streets by facebook, as has happened in Bahrain or via the internet, as happens for students in Libya and Algeria. The religion of this time was not a good deterrent to dissuade them from protesting .. Theirs is a civil protest to demand more rights and political and social reforms, but unfortunately must deal with repressive regimes that often force to sacrifice dozens of lives every day. Gaddafi called on Libyans to make vain the young square against the infidel West, but they have finally realized that one can not remain forever isolated from the rest of the world. The ideas run from country to country, they mature and eventually erupt in the form of protest. From February 10 the insurgency has taken the road of Yemen under the leadership of a woman, thirty-two Tawakkol Karman , amazing thing for an Arab country, where women count for little more than nothing. It seems extraordinary that its February 13, when our women were demonstrating, shouting: "If not now, when?" Other women in a state far from the Red Sea were non-violent revolt in a rematch of the women, as well as a request for all democratic forms. In few expected it was just a woman to lead the rebellion in Yemen, where most of the demonstrators is made up of men in a country where the rights civilian women often are violated: women can not drive, run for office, vote and even go to sleep alone in a hotel . Most of them are not free to marry whom he wants and many are forced girls for marriage yet. If you are repudiated by her husband can not divorce themselves if not through a man, the father or older brother. Do you remember the case of Amina, the child bride who fled from the prison where her husband had forced her and her father? " I got married at age 14. He had 20 more. My family has sold. The price? Poor thing: six hundred euro, equal to three months salary for my father. In Italy I was locked up, beaten, forced to wear a veil, made her pregnant and humiliated: in Milan I was expecting a 'the other spouse. My husband was polygamous. " In the courts, their testimonies are worth half that of men. If you are killed, their families entitled to a compensation halved compared to that for men. In addition, women are treated differently when it comes to inheritance and we could continue. Maybe one day we will stop the men consider women just a detail, a pair of boobs or, to put Dario For, "a belly that has been discovered our father and for us. " Will we perhaps looking at women over the legs and finally see them as people, but in the meantime we cheer for the young in a Karman Yemen finally fit for women.
Good Life!
maestrocastello
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