CRY FREEDOM.net
formerly known as
Women's Liberation Front
'Insight is the first step of resistance against any ideologic form of dictatorial and misogynistic oppression'
and
'Freedom is like a bird that nests in ones' soul'
Welcome to cryfreedom.net, formerly known as Womens Liberation Front.  A website that hopes to draw and keeps your attention for  both the global 21th. century 3rd. feminist revolution as well as especially for the Zan, Zendegi, Azadi uprising in Iran and the struggles of our sisters in other parts of the Middle East. This online magazine that started December 2019 will be published every week. Thank you for your time and interest. 
Gino d'Artali
indept investigative journalist
radical feminist and women's rights activist 

'WOMEN, LIFE, FREEDOM'
You are now at the section on what is happening in the rest of the Middle east
(Updates Feb 22, 2025)

For the Iran 'Woman, Life, Freedom' Iran actual news            
February 21, 2025

For the 'Women's Arab Spring 1.2 Revolt news       
February 19, 2025

Special reports about the Afghanistan Women Revolt
and more
Feb 15, 2025

CLICK HERE ON HOW TO READ ALL ON THIS PAGE 
 

 

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SPECIAL REPORTS

2025 Feb wk3P2 -- Feb wk3 -- Feb wk2P3 -- Feb wk2P2 -- Feb wk2 -- Feb wk1 -- Jan wk5P2 -- Jan wk5 --
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2024 Dec wk5 -- Dec wk4 P2 -- Dec wk4 -- Dec Wk3 P3 -- Dec Wk3 P2 -- Dec Wk 3 -- Dec Wk 2 P3 -- WK2 P 2 -- wk2 -- wk1 P 3 -- wk1 P 2 -- wk1 -- Nov wk5 P3 -- wk5 P2 -- wk5 -- wk4 P3 -- wk4 P2 -- Nwk4
 Click here for an overview by week in 2024

Special reports:
Updates February and earlier, 2025-'24
:
Actual:
ADDED:
Punishing pro-Palestine protests
&
  Gaza urgently needs a more effective humanitarian approach
and More than $50bn needed to rebuild Gaza after Israel’s war on enclave

& No, Mr Trump, we will not be “happy” and “safe” elsewhere.
& Returning to Gaza, a stranger in my own city
Earlier:
& Stories about nazis and medic-aid heroes and the PA betraying the people
earlier stories:
& Our ‘return’ to northern Gaza is not the end of exile
and
On idle talk and genocide in Gaza
  
&
Earlier: 
A thousand days of Israeli impunity, still no justice for Shireen Abu Akleh
& Trump must not be allowed to torpedo the Palestinian right to remain Palestine students
&
Overview special reports


November 28 - 24 and earler stories, 2024
Is Netanyahu immune from ICC arrest warrant-NO!
 


TRIBUTES TO MOTHERS AND CHILDREN


Shireen Abu Akleh
In commemoration of Shireen Abu Akleh,
the 'voice of Al Jazeera'
killed while revealing the true face of israel

Updated:

December 6, 2024:
Attacks, arrests, threats, censorship: The high risks of reporting the Israel-Gaza war
 
Click here for earlier stories/news

February 19 - 16, 2025
Unchilding Palestine’s children...
Read more and decide for yourself

February 15 - 12, 2025
more fact-finding news

 

February 13 - 12, 2025
Opinion: Western democracy
has lost her tongue.
just read the actual and fact-finding news

February 11 - 5, 2025
<<Does Israel violate the Gaza ceasefire?
Yes! Together with their western allies.
just read the actual and fact-finding news

February 7 - 1, 2025
Fact: Gaza is not for sale...
despite the continues suffering
and betrayals on netanyahus'
Western allies side.
And more fact-finding news

January 31 - 28, 2025
In pictures and words: Bittersweet homecoming for Palestinians returning to Gaza City...
Read more and decide for yourself


 

January 28 - 24, 2025
"Now it's time to grief"
If the ones guilty
of the genocide
let us and it doesn't look like it.
By the way, did you know that
during WW2 the american allies
knew all about the transportation
routes that brought the jews to
the gaschambers but simply
let the trains roll.
And now there was this so-called
'holocaust remembrance day'
but...
too many haven't learned
anything from history...
Read more and decide for yourself
 Pre-ceasefire & Post-Ceasefire
December 30 - 26, 2024
'Betrayed' and 'abandoned' Sixth baby dies from severe cold
 
 

 When one hurts or kills a women
one hurts or kills hummanity and is an antrocitie.
Gino d'Artali
and: My mother (1931-1997) always said to me <Mi figlio, non esistono notizie <vecchie> perche puoi imparare qualcosa da qualsiasi notizia.> Translated: <My son, there is no such thing as so called 'old' news because you can learn something from any news.>
Gianna d'Artali.


Al Jazeera - Feb 19, 2025 - By Alice Speri
<<Punishing pro-Palestine protests
New York, United States – It was December, and the end of the quarter was fast approaching at the University of Chicago.
Mamayan Jabateh, a fourth-year student, was working on a final paper about the politics of the "carceral state", inside a dorm on campus, when a knock came at the door. Four Chicago police officers were standing on the other side. They presented Jabateh, who uses the pronoun "they", with a printed photograph. It showed them at a pro-Palestinian campus protest two months earlier, on October 11. Jabateh was immediately handcuffed and hauled away. They were detained for 30 hours. But the arrest was only the beginning: Jabateh was also indefinitely suspended and banned from campus. Free-speech advocates are warning that, with attention on the protests waning and national politics in the United States swinging rightward, university punishments against pro-Palestinian protesters have grown harsher — something Jabateh knows firsthand. "It’s a really extreme reaction," says Megan Porter, a lawyer who is supporting Jabateh during the disciplinary process on a pro bono basis. "But it seems to be a tactic that a lot of universities are starting to take."
An individual approach to punishment
Since Israel launched its war on Gaza in October 2023, thousands of students flooded onto campus lawns and other common areas to denounce Israel's actions and US support for them. At the height of the protests, in April and May, tent encampments cropped up at many universities across the country, including the University of Chicago. Amid political pressure and accusations of anti-Semitism, many university leaders responded by calling in the police. Campus protesters were arrested en masse, sometimes more than 100 at a time. As many as 3,100 had been arrested by July.
But as the demonstrations have shrunk in number and size this academic year, advocates say universities have instead switched to targeting individual students with severe disciplinary actions, including months or in some cases years of suspension. That was the case for Jabateh. In October, on the first anniversary of the Gaza war, Jabateh had taken part in the "Week of Rage", a series of protests planned by Students for Justice in Palestine, the country’s largest pro-Palestine student organisation. Tensions simmered over on October 11, as the week drew to a close. Protesters tried to lock the gates to the campus. Police responded with pepper spray and batons. The campus newspaper, The Chicago Maroon, claimed that the protest "morphed into a brawl". One photo from the protest appears to show Jabateh holding back the hand of a police officer who is swinging a baton. Another shows Jabateh pulling away from an officer who grabs their wrist. Jabateh was ultimately charged with two felonies: for the aggravated battery of a peace officer and for resisting or obstructing a peace officer at the protest. Citing the charges, which remain pending, the University of Chicago declared Jabateh a "threat" to campus safety and barred them from the school grounds. That included Jabateh's dorm, where they had served as a resident adviser for university housing. Jabateh was also placed on "involuntary leave" — effectively an indefinite suspension. Such leaves can only be lifted at the discretion of the dean.
A 'threat' to campus life
While university administrations had previously accused student protesters of being "disruptive", Porter says labelling students like Jabateh as a "threat" marked a significant escalation. "They are just jumping to kicking someone off campus, and they're doing it with less and less evidence," Porter says. "Instead of just being labelled as disruptive to campus life — which is also a problem — now they’re targeting Palestine speech as a threat. And adopting language like that justifies their ability to take more drastic action." A total of two students were arrested and banned from campus in connection to the October protest, Jabateh included. It is not clear whether the university has banned other students in the past after they were charged but before they were convicted of a crime. But for Porter, this represents a collapse of due process. "The crackdown on pro-Palestine advocacy has gotten just more and more intense over the last year," Porter says. "And it seems like schools are taking more and more drastic action."
In response to questions from Al Jazeera, a spokesperson for The University of Chicago declined to comment on Jabateh's case, saying that the university "does not release information about individual student disciplinary matters, in keeping with federal privacy laws". "As part of our commitment to free expression, the University of Chicago is fundamentally committed to upholding the rights of speakers and protesters to express a wide range of views," the spokesperson said. "At the same time, University policies make it clear that protests and demonstrations cannot jeopardize public safety, disrupt the University’s operations, or involve unlawful activity." Jabateh, a Black student organiser who hails from Chicago’s South Side neighbourhood, believes the university was "looking for targets" for disciplinary action. "We're doing this for the safety of our students," Jabateh remembers university officials saying. Upon hearing that, Jabateh thought, "What about my safety?" To Jabateh, the October protest was a perfect example of "what police brutality looks like". "People think it's normal for the police to be beating up students at protests, for police to be pepper-spraying students at protests, for police to try to drive a car through a sea of students," Jabateh says. "And people look at that and think it's just normal."
Stifling protest
The University of Chicago is not the only campus imposing harsh punishments on student protesters. At the University of Minnesota, seven students face up to two-and-a-half years of suspension and $5,000 in alleged damages, months after being arrested during an October protest. The students had occupied a campus building they renamed ​​"Halimy Hall", after a 19-year-old Palestinian TikTok personality killed in an Israeli strike in Gaza last year. In January, 11 students at New York University were issued one-year suspensions after they staged a nonviolent sit-in at a library last December. The university also declared two tenured faculty members "personae non gratae" for joining the sit-in, which prevents them from accessing certain school buildings. The heavy-handed punishments have come as universities have rushed to pass stricter rules for campus protests following last year's encampments, including restrictions on the use of tents and time limits on demonstrations at some universities. Rifqa Falaneh, a fellow at Palestine Legal, an advocacy group defending pro-Palestine speech, says the cumulative effect has been a silencing of the protests. "There are so many people who are saying the protests have died down, but I would say students are reacting to what the university administrations have imposed on them," Falaneh says. "We're seeing so many new policies put in place, so many different restrictions that limit the ability to speak on campuses." But the pressure on the universities to tamp down campus protests has come from the highest levels of government. In January, President Donald Trump, a Republican, was sworn in for a second term. Less than two weeks later, on January 29, he signed an executive order denouncing an "unprecedented wave of vile anti-Semitic discrimination, vandalism, and violence" on US campuses. In an accompanying fact sheet, Trump pledged to take "immediate action" to "investigate and punish anti-Jewish racism in leftist, anti-American colleges and universities", including by cancelling student visas. "Come 2025, we will find you, and we will deport you," Trump said, addressing the foreign students involved in the protests. "I will also quickly cancel the student visas of all Hamas sympathisers on college campuses, which have been infested with radicalism like never before."
Palestine Legal has begun to train lawyers volunteering to help students navigate the maze of university policies and procedures that have been implemented in recent months. But Falaneh notes that the high stakes and heavy punishments already account for a muted response to Trump's policies, with few campus protests erupting against his immigration crackdown or his attacks on the US education system. "Schools tried so hard to silence student advocacy for Palestine, and they've inadvertently also silenced student speech when it comes to vocalising opposition to Trump," Falaneh says. "It’s kind of biting them back."
Long-term activism
Unable to return to class, Jabateh is not sure whether they will be able to graduate. "This is a really big thing you are doing to me. You are restricting me from having my education," Jabateh remembers telling administrators in meetings about the ongoing disciplinary process. "It’s been heartbreaking," Jabateh tells Al Jazeera. But they stress that the experience will not turn them off activism. "This is something that I'm long-term committed to. This is going to be my life’s work." Other student activists said the disciplinary measures might impact their short-term ability to participate in protests, but the situation has ultimately made them more resolved to take action. Rowan Lange was one of the seven students arrested at the University of Minnesota over the “Halimy Hall” occupation. They face charges of trespassing, property damage and rioting. Though the charges remain pending, the university has threatened the seven protesters with suspensions ranging from one to five semesters. Lange adds that the school also demanded they pay damages and write a five- to 10-page essay "about the difference between protesting and vandalism". The students turned down the request, demanding instead a formal disciplinary hearing, scheduled for later this month. They have asked for the hearing be open to the public — a request the university refused. "They don't want us to have an open trial. They didn't want us to record the meetings or anything like that," Lange tells Al Jazeera. "We want to basically put the university on trial as well." A spokesperson for the University of Minnesota declined to comment on the individual students' cases, citing privacy laws, but pointed to a statement issued by the university's president, Rebecca Cunningham, after the incident. "What happened in Morrill Hall yesterday was not a form of legitimate protest," Cunningham said in the statement. "Threatening behavior and destruction of property have absolutely no place within our community." But Lange believes the university is seeking to use punishment to send a message to other students who may want to participate in future protests. "I've definitely noticed a lot less people coming out to protests," Lange says, noting that some students are nonetheless continuing to organise pro-Palestine actions. "I think there are a lot of factors that are playing into this. I've definitely heard from a lot of my friends being fearful that they're going to get arrested or get suspended."
After being released from jail following the October protest, Lange quickly returned to protesting.
"It's definitely something I am going to keep doing.">>
SOURCE: AL JAZEERA: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/longform/2025/2/19/us-universities-target-pro-palestine-students-with-suspensions-campus-bans


The Gazanan Thinker

"It is easier
to make small people stronger
than to stop
big people
do stupid things"

"Western democracy
has lost its tongue"

"We have to proof
to be human"

"In this world
nobody is happy
anymore
whether because of pain
or joy
NOBODY!"
 
"The question is not
how one dies
but what one did
with life."

"When a rose dies
a thorn
is left behind
to eternally sting
the skins
of the genocide-baby killers."

Read here all the Gazanan Thinker knows for sure:

 

Gino d'Artali
ghost-poet/writer of The Thinker - Gaza
 


Women's Liberation Front 2019/cryfreedom.net 2025