Acid attack on woman shocks Ethiopia

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May 13, 2002
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www.socialistworld.net
#1
Kamilat Mehdi, 21, had a bright future ahead of her. She dreamt about doing a degree and becoming an air hostess.



All that changed one night when she was walking home from work with her two sisters and a stalker threw sulphuric acid in her face.

She is now lying in hospital disfigured beyond recognition.

Her skin is red raw, her eyelids have almost been entirely destroyed and her hairline has been burnt back.

"I feel very sick now. Every day they need to do something without anaesthetic so it is hard to accept and it is very painful," says Kamilat.

Her sisters, Zeyneba and Zubyeda, escaped with lesser injuries but their faces were also burnt by the acid.

Shockwaves

"We were on our way home from our parents' shop. I was with my sisters," Kamilat says.

"One guy came and he looked like a drunkard but he wasn't drunk. He forced us to go down a dark alley and then someone came and threw acid in our faces."

Kamilat fell to the floor unconscious while her sisters tried to get help. She lay there until her brother Ismael arrived.

Ismael says his sister knew her attacker.

"He bothered her for a long time - at least four years," he says.

"He gave her a hard time but she didn't tell the family for fear that something would happen to them. He was always saying he would use a gun on them."

This incident has sent shockwaves through the community in the capital, Addis Ababa, and amongst Ethiopians abroad.

Ismael says he has received calls from Ethiopians living around the world saying how angry and shocked they were about the attack.

Two men have appeared in court in Addis Ababa in connection with the attack.

Sexual harassment

"I hope the court will impose a proportional penalty within a short period of time," Justice Minister Assefa Kiseto says.

"That could make others learn from this and refrain from committing this crime. I think this kind of crime is a crime against the whole nation not just a crime against Kamilat."

Attacks like this are rare in Ethiopia but women's groups in Addis Ababa say that stalking and sexual harassment are common problems.

The Ending Violence Against Women report published by the United Nations at the end of last year said almost 60% of Ethiopian women were subjected to sexual violence at some point in their lives.

Mahdere Paulos from the Ethiopian Women Lawyers Association says they would like to see a specific provision in Ethiopian law that tackles stalking and harassment so that there is better protection for young girls like Kamilat in the future.

"The problem starts with stalking - the end result is something else," she says.

"It might end in grave bodily injury, it might end in death and it might end in different difficult situations and that's why we want it to be taken seriously."

Following the uproar at Kamilat's attack, the Supreme Court announced that it has put in place procedures to help pass verdicts on such cases within two days.

And Ms Mahdere says some progress has been made by the government over the last few years in tackling violence against women.

There is a newly established ministry of women's affairs; there was a push before the 2005 election to get more women into parliament and there has been a complete overhaul of the penal code to beef up laws to protect women.

But in some rural areas, the traditional practice of abducting young girls and forcibly marrying them remains common - in one region it accounts for some 92% of all marriages, according to the most recent figures from 2003.

Kamilat and her sister have now flown to Paris for medical treatment, which is being financed by businessman Sheikh Mohammed Al Amoudi.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6498641.stm
 

Gas One

Moderator
May 24, 2006
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Downtown, Pittsburg. Southeast Dago.
#3
mutha fuckas been gettin hit with acid in seirra leone for quite some time now...i got a picture of a african kid with acid wounds all over his face and body on my wall...looks way worse than that.im not suprised it spilled over to ethiopia.

drugs and fucked up conditions make you do weird things, sometimes.
 
May 7, 2002
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#8
Gas One said:
its a reminder of the things some children go through in seirra leone (and around the world) and that i made it to 27, intact.

i'm lucky and when i'm in a bad mood about some dumb shit, things like that help to remind me.

I feel you. But isn't it kind of like getting pleasure from someone's pain and suffering? You need a poster of some poor deformed kid with acid burns who has to suffer for the rest of his life, to remind you that your life is in tact? Thats bad karma bro.
 

Gas One

Moderator
May 24, 2006
39,741
12,147
113
45
Downtown, Pittsburg. Southeast Dago.
#9
5ive1en said:
I feel you. But isn't it kind of like getting pleasure from someone's pain and suffering? You need a poster of some poor deformed kid with acid burns who has to suffer for the rest of his life, to remind you that your life is in tact? Thats bad karma bro.
i don't need it. i like looking at it, too.
thats why its on my wall.

i never said i was an angel...

i'll take a picture of it when im home.
came from bizarre magazine. oh and i dont get pleasure from it man..its just a picture.
 

I AM

Some Random Asshole
Apr 25, 2002
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#11
that is FUCKED UP...i hope the person that did it gets castrated. i wouldn't even wish that on someone that i hated...
 

I AM

Some Random Asshole
Apr 25, 2002
21,002
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#13
They should pour acid on that fool's dick. He fucked off that woman's face and life, so I'd say it's fair to fuck off his life completely so he can't have kids...or worse, rape someone or pour acid on someone else.
 
Feb 1, 2006
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#20
Nothing new unfortunately:

"Acid attacks are most common in Bangladesh and have in recent years multiplied in frequency. Selling for about 60 cents a bottle, acid has become an increasingly common weapon used against women in what appears to have become a socially acceptable way to get even (Shil, 1999). While the first documented acid violence case occurred in 1967 (bicn, 1999), the recent trend of acid throwing at women began in 1992 in Bangladesh. The Dhaka office of UNICEF reported that there were 200 cases of acid attacks in 1999, but they realize that many cases go unreported and that the actual count is much higher (BBC, 1999).


The Acid Survivors' Foundation - ASF, was established in May, 1999 to coordinate ongoing assistance in the treatment, rehabilitation and reintegration of acid attack victims into society (bicn, 1999). The ASF was founded by retired British historian John Morrison after he saw a British television documentary on the subject of acid attacks (WIN News, 1999).

Free treatment has been offered by Spanish surgeons in conjunction with ASF, and The Society for Humanitarian Aid and Relief Efforts - SHARE (BBC, 1999). SHARE also is seeking more sponsors willing to help finance their efforts in the surgeries and post-operative rehabilitation of acid survivors (SHARE, 1999).

Dr. Sen, one of only eight plastic surgeons in Bangladesh (a country of 127 million people), sees the need for more facilities: "We cannot send all the girls to Spain, America, Australia or Italy. We must do the treatment here in Bangladesh. And we have got the skill. If we get the facilities, we will be able to do this surgery here" (Chung, 1999).

A team of Italian plastic surgeons from the Italian branch of INTERPLASTIC, a worldwide group of Good Samaritans went to Dhaka in 1998 for two weeks with all their equipment and worked on some of Dr. Sen's patients (Schmetzer, 1999).

The women's right organization in Bangladesh, Naripakkho, understands that the physical wounds can be treated but the emotional scars will remain with the victims for their entire lives. Nasrin Hoque of Naripakkho says: "No one can give back the girls their lost beauty, but we can at least give them a face back and tell them they are not neglected" (BBC, 1999).

The Dhaka-based Bangladesh National Women's Lawyers' Association provides legal aid to the victims of acid attacks (Hossain, 1999).

from:
http://www.webster.edu/~woolflm/acidattacks.html