Friday, 4 November 2011

The_European_Right] Re: [1WORLD2011] A lack of surveillance cameras at the centre of Norway's capital is hampering police efforts to combat rape.

Almost like its normal behaviour, and not a crime as the perpetrators see it.


Police Report: All Assault Rapists in Oslo Follow Muhammad

Norway’s police issues report with amazing statistic: all assault rapes in Oslo in 2010 were perpetrated by Muslims
By Gil Ronen
First Publish: 6/23/2011, 8:20 PM / Last Update: 6/23/2011, 9:43 PM

Israel news photo: Flash 90

Defenders of Islam call it a "religion of peace" but many Norwegian women are learning that Islam is the religion of rape. According to an amazing police report released there this month, every single solved case of assault-rape in the country in 2010 was carried out by a Muslim immigrant.

The report was cited by an official Norwegian television station, which interviewed a victim who said that her rapist explained to her that his religion permits him to rape her.
According to the police report there was a total of 186 of known rape cases in 2010. These fall into various categories, the largest one of which is assault-rape, carried out by sheer physical force, of which there were 86 cases. In 83 of these cases the perpetrator could be identified by the victim. In all 83, the attacker was described as having "non-western appearance," a laundered euphemism for Muslim immigrants from Africa, the Middle East, or Asia.
In other categories of rape there were Norwegian attackers as well, but they were still in the minority (Note: the translation of the Norwegian TV report embedded here does not make a distiction between "assault rape" and other forms of rape, and appears to confuse the statistics for 2010 with those for 2006-2010).
A female police officer who commented on the report explained that “Many of the perpetrators who commit these rapes are on the edge of society often unemployed, arriving from traumatized countries. In the past five years it has often been asylum seekers.”
The problem is not new. A report in Aftenposten in 2001 said: “While 65 percent of those charged with rape are classed as coming from a non-western background, this segment makes up only 14.3 percent of Oslo's population. Norwegian women were the victims in 80 percent of the cases.”
“In other words,” says the New American, “Muslims from Africa and other benighted Third World places are targeting Western women for rape.” It elaborates:
“In 2005, the blogger Fjordman reported on a similar rape wave in Sweden. A crime prevention study that year reported that Algerians, Libyans, Moroccans, and Tunisians ‘dominate the group of rape suspects,’ he reported. The same year, the newspaper Aftonbladet reported that nearly half of all rapists were immigrants.”
Yehuda Bello, an Israeli blogger who is well-acquainted with Norwegian culture, noted the report and claimed that Norwegians are a culture that suffers from “extreme boredom” due to the presence of huge oil reserves, and are thus inordinately interested in multiculturalism and assorted “human rights” campaigns.
They are also traditionally anti-Semitic, he believes. As a result their politicians and press are focused on Israel’s actions in Shechem (Nablus) and Hevron and choose to ignore Muslim misdeeds – be they in Iran, Syria, or in Norway itself.
Despite this, he reports, the Muslim rape campaign has become so terrible that even Norwegians have begun to recognize the reality around them, and in recent months there have been protests where the slogan was “Muslims out!”.





What might be the explanation behind this? Some one needs to be castrated.


1 in 10 Women in Norway Has Been Raped

220 comments 1 in 10 Women in Norway Has Been Raped

Norway has the reputation of being one of the most gender-egalitarian countries in the world. But a recent report about sexual violence against women in Norway — where one in 10 women over the age of 15 has been raped — sadly suggests that gender equality and an extensive infrastructure to address rape cases are not sufficient to prevent violence against women.

The Norwegian Justice Ministry says that at least 80 percent of those cases of rape are never officially reported while only ten percent end in a conviction. Furthermore, 9 percent of women experience sexual assault in a relationship, says a 2005 survey by the Norwegian Institute for Urban and Regional Research. Indeed, Norway is one of 127 countries in the world in which rape within marriage is not explicitly criminalized.

Laura Turquet, chief author of the U.N. 2011 Progress of the World’s Women report, says that explicit criminalization of spousal rape is necessary because

“Explicit legislation accompanied by clear protocols send a very clear message to the police and the courts that sexual violence is never a private matter.”

A 2009 study of 11 European countries conducted by Liz Kelly, director of the Child and Women Abuse Studies Unit at London Metropolitan University, found that rapists are often “well known” to their victims and that most rapes occur in a private location:

According to a 2009 study of 11 European countries co-authored by Ms. Kelly, one of the rare international comparisons so far undertaken, 61 percent of rapes took place in a private space, most frequently the home of the victim or perpetrator. Two-thirds of suspects were known to the victim, and 25 percent were current or former partners.

Injury rates in rapes appear to be far higher in victims of former and current partners. The 2009 European study found severe injuries in 50 percent and 40 percent of those cases respectively, against 24 percent in stranger rape.

However, only 14 percent of suspects in partner rape have been convicted. In contrast, forty percent of rapes in which the accused did not know the victim but was successfully identified were prosecuted and more than 70 percent convicted. Moreover, suspects who were immigrants were “particularly likely to be punished” — suggesting, in the case of Norway, that those who do not appear to be “stereotypical racists” are rarely charged.

Helle Nesvold, a doctor at Norway’s oldest rape assault center, notes that the majority of women who have been sexually assaulted by a partner do not come to the center for a forensic exam and only 60 percent of those who do wish to report the assault to the police.

Police as well as prosecutors bear some responsibility for this:

In 25 years at the center, Ms. Nesvold has seen several cases of what appeared to her evidence of forced sexual intercourse excluded from the criminal case because the police and prosecutors did not believe it would stand up in court, and they preferred to focus on evidence of nonsexual violence. She also said that many sexually abused women simply refuse to talk about their experience.

“What we ultimately need is a much more comprehensive structure where women exposed to domestic violence are systematically asked about sexual abuse,” she said. Nurses, teachers, midwives should routinely ask the question, she added, to get victims to open up

Kelly of London Metropolitan University suggests that “as a society moves to redistribute power between genders, there might be a transitional period where violence rises as the last expression of male domination.”

Even as women gain in status and gain more economic clout, men “may resort to their physical strength,” out of fears of emasculation, of feeling threatened. Could the continued high rate of sexual violence against women in Norway be in some way related to the country’s gender equality? If this is the case, what — despite its elaborate system — is Norway not doing to ensure that women not only have equal rights, but live in a society in which they can speak out about the violence that too often occurs to them?



Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/1-in-10-women-in-norway-has-been-raped.html#ixzz1ciZUEZMl