this post was submitted on 06 Aug 2024
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The household was fast asleep when the six men broke in. They sought out Sobia Batool Shah, 22, and one of them attacked her with a hatchet, chopping at her limbs in an effort to sever her legs. “He was relentless and must have hit me at least 15 times,” she says.

“I screamed in pain and pleaded with him to stop, but he was like a man possessed,” she adds. “I even told him I will not seek a divorce.”

Shah was attacked by men from her own family – including her father, Syed Mustafa Shah, her uncle and cousins – who broke into the house, in Naushahro Feroze, in Pakistan’s Sindh province, as “punishment” for refusing to withdraw her application to divorce her husband.

Speaking to the Guardian by phone from the Peoples University of Medical and Health Sciences for Women, in the city of Nawabshah, where she is being treated, Shah says she is in “immense pain” and her legs are both in plaster.

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[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 month ago (1 children)

You really saying that all of them think this is acceptable?

That was a strawman. And yeah, I probably inadvertently used them myself in the past. And everyone has every right on calling me out on it. I'm pretty sure you did at least one bad thing in your life, does that mean all the good things about you should be ignored? I don't believe so.

I have every right to call out a strawman if it's used against me and will continue to do so.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

I agree that statement is formatted a lot like a straw man, but it was also a pretty decent reframing of the argument you made.

The case was made that Islam allows divorce and your reply was that "someone should tell the Muslims"