Comments by "gooldii1" (@gooldii1) on "How a Dome Makes Israel Almost Invulnerable" video.

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  2.  Uy Saq  Women’s rights Women continued to face discrimination in law and practice. Family law continued to discriminate against women, including by making it much harder for them to seek a divorce, severely disadvantaging them economically if they sought a divorce or their husband left them. In its report following its visit to Qatar, the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention noted that women under the age of 25 must obtain the permission of their male guardians to engage in daily activities such as signing contracts and leaving the country. As a result, it said, “women were prevented from leaving their family homes without the permission of their legal guardians, resulting in de facto deprivation of liberty by their families.” On 2 October, the Qatari authorities took a number of women off planes when they were travelling out of Doha’s airport in the capital and subjected them to forced, private medical examinations to determine if they had given birth; a baby girl had been found abandoned in a bin at the airport. The incident drew a public outcry prompting Qatar to issue an apology and launch an investigation into the incident. Right to privacy Qatar’s contact tracing app EHTERAZ, developed by the Ministry of Interior to contain the spread of COVID-19, had a serious security flaw that exposed sensitive personal details of over 1 million users. Once the authorities were alerted to the flaw, they quickly fixed it.9 The app, like many others, remained problematic due to its lack of privacy safeguards.10 Death penalty Executions resumed in April after a 20-year hiatus. Qatar: Migrant workers unpaid for months of work on FIFA World Cup stadium (Press release, 11 June) Qatar: New laws to protect migrant workers are a step in the right direction (Press release, 30 August) Qatar: “Why do you want to rest?”: Ongoing abuse of domestic workers in Qatar (MDE 22/3175/2020) Qatar: Migrant workers in labour camps at grave risk amid COVID-19 crisis (Press release, 20 March) COVID-19 makes Gulf countries’ abuse of migrant workers impossible to ignore (Campaigns, 30 April) Qatar: Migrant workers illegally expelled during COVID-19 pandemic (Press release, 15 April) Qatar: Repressive new law further curbs freedom of expression (Press release, 20 January) Qatar: Arbitrary executive action puts lives on hold (MDE 22/2772/2020) Qatar: Contact tracing app security flaw exposed sensitive personal details of more than one million (Press release, 26 May) Bahrain, Kuwait and Norway contact tracing apps among most dangerous for privacy (Press release, 16 June) GET THE AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL REPORT 2020/21     Choose language     فارسى     Indonesia     Ελληνικά     Tigrinya     čeština     Deutsch     português     한국어     română     español     Kirghiz     ქართული     English     Türkçe     українська     slovenščina     Turkmen     Тоҷикӣ     ไทย     русский     Kinyarwanda     አማርኛ     Brazilian Portuguese     नेपाली     Беларуская     azərbaycan dili     slovenčina     中文     Oromo     Հայերեն     magyar     Swahili     қазақ тілі     o‘zbek     français     polski     Rundi     العربية   DOWNLOAD PDF 20/21 ABOUT US RESOURCES GET INVOLVED LATEST WORK WITH US Like us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Subscribe to us on YouTube Follow us on Instagram Privacy Policy   |   Cookie Statement   |   Permissions   |   Refunds of donations © 2021 AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
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