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Solutions

A Day of Peace | For 24 Hours, Give Peace a Chance

Wangari Maathai, 2004 Nobel Peace Prize Winner | Be A Hummingbird

Eve Ensler on Global Sexual Asssaults | Kristoff in Brothel Raid

Tostan Breakthrough | Empowering Women for 20 Years

Vagina Lady Eve Ensler Opens City of Joy Academy in Congo

World War Against Women

Femen, SlutWalks, Lysistrata | Body Politics Is On the Move

SlutGirl Marches Sweeping the World | Have Women Had Enough?

Hindu Shiv Sena Protests Swimsuits; How About Bride Burning?

India’s Sex Ratio Problem Deepens | Technology & Patriarchy

Bride Burning & Violence Aagainst Women in Kerala, India

Drawing a Line in Lubna’s Sand, Saying ‘No More’ to the Growing, Global Erosion of Women’s Rights in the Name of Any Man’s Religion

Beyond the Veil: The Intersection of Sensuality, Culturally Appropriate & Women’s Rights

Story by Opiyo OloyaFace the Facts: Men in Every Country Are Afraid of Liberated Women

Lubna Hussein, Chansa Kabwela, 20 Women Stripped to Their Underwear in Uganda: Are the World’s Male Morality Squads Coming Unhinged?

Controlling Women’s Bodies Is a Fight to the Finish

If Only We Could Have Lubna Hussein, Dr. Catherine Lim & My Dear Pixie for Tea

Jimmy Carter on Religion as Agent of Women’s Oppression

While the World Debates Burqas, Fashion Designers Show Beautiful Abayas at Paris’s George V Hotel

A Somewhat Decadent but Fundamentally Good Group of Lubna Hussein Lovers Hear Her Calm, Steady Voice: ‘I Want to Change This Law’

Key Lubna Hussein Posts

Mum’s the Word from American Women, in Supporting Lubna Hussein & Intl Women’s Rights

Original Lubna Dares the Tyrants of a False Islam’ to Flog Her, Leaving Me Confused About the Truth

Original Translated Lubna Ahmed Hussein Interview with New Details of Her Arrest

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Wednesday
May112011

Syria's First Lady Asma al-Assad Disappears From Vogue US Website

Anna Wintour’s Vogue team ‘lost’ the online version of their March 2011 lovefest profile of Syria’s first lady Asma al-Assad.

Joan Juliet Buck’s piece ‘Asma al-Assad: A Rose in the Desert’ which ran in Vogue’s March issue made no mention of Syria’s human rights record and asked no tough questions of either Asma al-Assad or her husband.

Gawker writes that the loving protrait of the Syrian dictator’s wife came down from the Vogue website. Checking our link from ‘Brand Anna by Joshua Levine for WSJ Magazine’, March 26, 2011, indeed the link is broken. Anne weighed in:

Even if Syria wasn’t killing protesters in the streets as we speak, we question the ‘soft-focus’ look at Syria’s ruling al-Assad family that landed in the March 2011 issue of Vogue.

Yes, conceded writer Joan Juliet Buck, “In Syria, power is hereditary,” and there are those “souvenir Hezbollah ashtrays” scattered around. But president Bashar al-Assad’s wife, Asma, is nonetheless “glamorous, young and very chic.”

Fashionista points out the The Atlantic weighed in with a major criticism of the Vogue interview and editorial on Feb. 28, 2001. Read Vogue Defends Profile of Syrian First Lady.

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