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Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East
#1

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Saudi 18-year-old girl created an international stir when she flew to Thailand en route to Australia to escape her "oppressive" Saudi family (they were living in Kuwait). The first thing she did after she was granted asylum was post a picture of her cleavage using a Snapchat filter.

[Image: attachment.jpg41053]   

She provided absolutely no evidence that her family abused her or she was treated inhumanely at home. Of course, the Western media views her as a hero.

Quote:Quote:

On the evening of Saturday, 5 January, a desperate situation began to unravel on a newly created Twitter account.

Fleeing her Saudi family in Kuwait, Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun, 18, sent out a series of tweets pleading for help from an airport hotel room in Bangkok.

At the time she had 24 followers.

"I'm the girl who ran away to Thailand. I'm now in real danger because the Saudi embassy is trying to force me to return," her first-ever tweet in Arabic read.

Then she said something that would be hard to ignore: "I'm afraid. My family will kill me."

People noticed and the first tweet with the hashtag #SaveRahaf was sent out.

Within minutes of that, Egyptian-American activist Mona Eltahawy translated the Arabic tweets into English and sent it to her hundreds of thousands of followers.

A few hours later that tweet caught the attention of Human Rights Watch and eventually Phil Robertson, its Bangkok-based Asia deputy director, who sent this out.‏

By the early hours of Sunday he was engaged in a direct Twitter message exchange with Ms Mohammed al-Qunun, guiding the young woman in her dealings with authorities at the airport.

#SaveRahaf
Despite that she kept up her barrage, live tweeting every minute of her ordeal and putting out videos that showed everything that was happening to her at the airport. Over the course of Sunday, her posts became more and more fevered.

The fear and desperation she conveyed through the tweets drew sympathy and support from the Twitter community.

Tweets carrying the #SaveRahaf hashtag continued to gain momentum and by mid-Sunday afternoon, it was in more than half a million tweets, according to Twitter.

An unknown teenager from Saudi Arabia that no-one had ever heard of had gone from 24 followers to more than 27,000 in the span of less than 24 hours.


"When I heard Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun's public statement that she renounced her religion, I knew things would go very bad for her if she was sent back to Saudi Arabia," Human Rights Watch's Phil Robertson told BBC News.

"At that point, there was no question in my mind - she needed our help."

Renouncing Islam, or apostasy, is a crime punishable by death in Saudi Arabia.

The movement to help Ms Mohammed al-Qunun's life gathered huge momentum, particularly in Australia, where her case is now being referred to for possible resettlement.

"Twitter aims to provide a platform where marginalised voices can be seen and heard. This is fundamental to who we are and crucial to the effectiveness of our service," an official statement to the BBC read.

On Monday morning, the situation took a turn for the worse, with the arrival of Thai immigration authorities at Ms Mohammed al-Qunun's hotel room to deport her to Kuwait.

Following their direct message exchange on Twitter, Ms Mohammed al-Qunun heeded the advice of Human Rights Watch not to surrender her mobile phone under any circumstances.

And it proved to be a crucial piece of advice.

The frantic teenager barricaded herself in with Australian journalist Sophie McNeill, refusing to board the flight. Instead, she relentlessly continued documenting the ordeal on Twitter.

After that her followers doubled in number to more than 66,400.

The BBC's South East Asia correspondent Jonathan Head, who was part of a network of foreign journalists closely charting Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun's case, said the enormous publicity driven by social media was a big factor in what happened to her.

"Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun was a frightened, young woman. Interest in Rahaf's plight drove her own Twitter following up by the time Thai authorities planned to deport her on Monday morning.

"This was a very powerful human story happening in real time, whose ending was uncertain."

"In building support and response to crisis situations, Twitter was the perfect social media tool for Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun because it enabled the rapid sharing of information," Phil Robertson added.

"The surge of support on Twitter [not only] caught the attention of reporters and editors, it helped engage the mainstream Thai media.

"Her tweets also attracted attention from local diplomats as well as the highest levels of UNHCR and governments to the situation.

"This was all pivotal in prompting Thailand to re-think their approach once it was clear that Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun would not go quietly."

"As of Sunday night Thai officials were adamant she would be sent back and Thai media had still not reported the story, by Monday morning that had changed," said the BBC's Jonathan Head.

Today Ms Mohammed al-Qunun is safe, having been declared a legitimate refugee by the UN.


Young and social-savvy, Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun was able to take things into her own hands by successfully mobilising a solid online campaign to protect herself.

She has come out of this ordeal with 126,000 followers on Twitter in the five days her account has been active.

In another case where social media was used in a similar way a Syrian man stranded at a Malaysian airport for months managed to successfully seek asylum in Canada after campaigning for his cause on Twitter and Facebook.

But not everyone facing a threat to their life has been as lucky.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-46819199

Social control is so effective that globohomo organizations will jump to action to help female be "free" (i.e. a slut). That said, I volunteer to be her guide to help adjust her to Western life. It takes someone with a Middle Eastern background like me to understand her plight and acclimate her to living in a liberal society.

[Image: hump.gif]
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#2

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Irony.
The no. of older Australians willingly moving to Thailand due to cheaper living costs.
Yet Thailand is apparently not good enough for this proverbial & literal princess...
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#3

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Those eyebrows of hers sure as hell look oppressive.

I'm just waiting for her asking for donations to her Patreon because she can't find a job in her home of Thailand now.

She's gonna cash in on those 133K followers.
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#4

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

WB
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#5

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

She needs an older man to spank her nightly. Any volunteers?
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#6

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

She pretty much copied the same "please they will kill me!" game that the man in the Malaysia airport did a year ago. So this seems to be a loophole being used by the children of wealthier families as a way to bypass the immigration process of western countries.


Keep in mind these families are often so wealthy they could literally buy a residency visa in many2nd world countries (they probably spend more money each year on smuggled alcohol and cars).
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#7

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Not a good cleavage pic. Burkah level exposure.
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#8

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Quote: (01-10-2019 08:49 PM)godfather dust Wrote:  

WB

and really, isn't that what's important here? no uggo would get such a favorable portrayal from the Western media machine.
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#9

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Never understood why Muslim women defend Islam. Do they secretly like to be dominated and covered up?

Don't debate me.
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#10

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

We need asylum for all oppressed Muslim 18 year old women (of a healthy BMI). See, I welcome diversity!

Dr Johnson rumbles with the RawGod. And lives to regret it.
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#11

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

WB.

Delicious Tacos is the voice of my generation....
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#12

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Quote: (01-10-2019 11:34 PM)Pride male Wrote:  

Never understood why Muslim women defend Islam. Do they secretly like to be dominated and covered up?

All women like to be dominated and covered up.
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#13

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Quote: (01-10-2019 11:34 PM)Pride male Wrote:  

Never understood why Muslim women defend Islam. Do they secretly like to be dominated and covered up?

As a way to signal they are more virtuous (superior) to non-Muslim women.
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#14

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

She is trying to get to Australia, land of milk and honey and great welfare.

I'm happy to import 250,000 of these women than the scum and garbage we are currently importing.
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#15

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

A hero indeed. Release the tits!
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#16

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Quote: (01-10-2019 11:45 PM)RawGod Wrote:  

We need asylum for all oppressed Muslim 18 year old women (of a healthy BMI). See, I welcome diversity!

I heard Kuwaiti's and other Middle Eastern countries importing Western chains are seeing a rise in Obesity. Combine extremely hot conditions with a sedentary lifestyle and fattening western chainfood = what you'd expect.




Ultimately, we should care more about being effective than simply nobly intentioned. It is not enough to dream well: the true measure is what we achieve.
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#17

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Yup the Fastfood thing is definitely true. I saw a Shakeshack and tons of options in Dubai. It's like the only area of the world where you can find both American and Canadian fastfood options in the same place (so you could go to Diary Queen and a hour later pig out at Tim Hortons and then a hour later go to Chipotle). My blood pressure would be so freaking bad if I lived in one of the Persian Gulf countries.
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#18

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

I'm guessing that no-one remembers this:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_a_Princess

I, for one, will give this woman the benefit of the doubt.
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#19

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Quote: (01-11-2019 02:24 AM)Nordwand Wrote:  

I'm guessing that no-one remembers this:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_a_Princess

I, for one, will give this woman the benefit of the doubt.

There's 77 million people in the Arabian Peninsula. When you're talking about such big numbers of course there's going to be some people murdered / executed over adultery / slutting around. You know it probably happens at least once a month in an U.S. state like Florida and there's only 20 million people living there.
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#20

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Quote: (01-10-2019 08:33 PM)CynicalContrarian Wrote:  

Irony.
The no. of older Australians willingly moving to Thailand due to cheaper living costs.
Yet Thailand is apparently not good enough for this proverbial & literal princess...


Well, she is from Saudi. [Image: lol.gif]
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#21

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

I'm not kidding when I say that this is what will probably, within most of our lifetimes, destroy Islam as a force. Insha'allah
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#22

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

I stand with the oppressed and believe women. Due to the grave oppression faced by so many young women in the Middle East, we should make sure asylum and refugee status from the region is reserved for women 18-24 indefinitely.
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#23

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Hypothetical but true:

If masses of young women were to suddenly flee to the West from muslim countries in order to escape the oppression at home, then the women-dominated 'Refugees-Welcome' movement would suddenly find a thousand reasons to support Trump's wall and 'Fortress Europe' policies.

“The world is what it is; men who are nothing, who allow themselves to become nothing, have no place in it.”

- V.S Naipaul 'A Bend in the river'
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#24

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Quote: (01-10-2019 08:21 PM)Roosh Wrote:  

I volunteer to be her guide to help adjust her to Western life. It takes someone with a Middle Eastern background like me to understand her plight and acclimate her to living in a liberal society.

[Image: hump.gif]

Only a man like you can penetrate her psyche. Godspeed.

That's not how we do things in Russia, comrade.

http://inspiredentrepreneur.weebly.com/
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#25

Saudi girl posts picture of cleavage one day after escaping "oppressive" Middle East

Quote: (01-11-2019 07:52 AM)rockoman Wrote:  

Hypothetical but true:

If masses of young women were to suddenly flee to the West from muslim countries in order to escape the oppression at home, then the women-dominated 'Refugees-Welcome' movement would suddenly find a thousand reasons to support Trump's wall and 'Fortress Europe' policies.

Very true
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