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Kelly adds that the discovery of hunting tools at a gravesite does not necessarily indicate that the person buried there was a hunter. In fact, he says, two of the burials found at Upward Sun River in Alaska contained female infants. In some cases, male hunters may have buried loved ones with their own hunting tools as an expression of grief.
According to the Ministry of Culture, the pre-Hispanic relic was a \"mummified adult male individual, presumably from the eastern area of Puno\", a region in the Peruvian Andes some 1,300 kilometers (more than 800 miles) southeast of Lima.
In addition, there is evidence that the gender gap in total work hours is far larger for those with lower educational attainments. It falls from 11 hours among those with primary education to three hours among those with a tertiary degree (Figure 1.14). Women with a university degree on average work 11 hours less than women who at most completed primary school (Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Informatica, n.d.[47]).
This document, as well as any data and map included herein, are without prejudice to the status of or sovereignty over any territory, to the delimitation of international frontiers and boundaries and to the name of any territory, city or area. Extracts from publications may be subject to additional disclaimers, which are set out in the complete version of the publication, available at the link provided.
Across Peru, cervical cancer kills more women each year than AIDS, complications of child birth or any other form of cancer. One in every 4,000 Peruvian women dies from the disease each year, more than breast cancer and lung cancer combined.
Between 1997 and 2001 the country did have a program that provided free screening, and during that period, the percentage of women who were tested went up from 5 percent to 30 percent, Mayuri said. Since the program ended, data has not been reliably collected, but she suspects the rate of women screened has fallen again, well below 30 percent.
Approximately 135 female prison inmates (along with about 450 male inmates) were subjected to violent attacks by guards and other state agents over the course of three days at the Castro-Castro maximum security prison. Some female inmates were humiliated, stripped-down and subjected to further physical and psychological abuse. Many inmates were held in solitary confinement, were denied medical care, and were kept from communicating with their families or their attorneys. The Court found Peru to have violated Articles 4, 5(1), 5(2), 8(1) and 25 of the American Convention on Human Rights, Articles 1, 6 and 8 of the Inter-American Convention to Prevent and Punish Torture, and Article 7(b) of the Inter-American Convention to Prevent, Punish and Eradicate Violence against Women. The Court ordered Peru to investigate and punish those responsible for these violations, to return the bodies of any inmates killed to their next of kin, to publicly acknowledge and apologize for these violations, to provide at no cost medical and psychological treatment to the victimized inmates and next of kin, and to pay reparations to the victims or their next of kin.
HRC held that Peruvian government violated Article 7 (the right to be free from cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment), Article 17 (the right to privacy) and Article 24 (special protection of the rights of a minor) when it denied 17 year-old the right to a legal therapeutic abortion.
A male schoolteacher was accused of sexually abusing one of his female students, a third-grader, and was removed from his job pending the outcome of his trial. He filed a constitutional challenge to his removal, arguing that it violated his due process right to a presumption of innocence, as enumerated in Article 2 of the Peruvian Political Constitution. The court of first instance agreed with the teacher, ordering the school system to reinstate him. The school system argued that the Law of Teachers (\"Ley de Profesorado\") allows for termination of a teacher without a conviction. The Constitutional Tribunal held that while professionals normally cannot be removed from a job until proven guilty, the interest of protecting minor children outweighed the interest of the teacher in this case. The Court held that the teacher's removal was consistent with Article 34 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and Article 2 of the Interamerican Convention on the Prevention, Punishment and Eradication of Violence Against Women, as well as numerous other Peruvian laws.
Carrera was born in Elmwood Park, New Jersey.[6][7][8] In 2011, she appeared in the third season of the reality television competition show, RuPaul's Drag Race. Carrera is the second contestant in the history of the show (after season three castmate, Shangela) to rejoin the cast after being eliminated, and along with Raja, Manila Luzon, and Delta Work, was part of the clique known as the \"Heathers\", which took its name from the 1988 film, Heathers.[9] In episode 10, \"RuPaul-a-Palooza\", Carrera was eliminated for her performance while lip-syncing to a reggae-inspired cover of RuPaul's song \"Superstar\".[10] Judges Michelle Visage, Santino Rice, and Billy Brasfield voted to re-invite Carrera to the competition in episode 12, \"Jocks in Frocks\". Subsequently, Carrera was eliminated in that episode after styling a muscular male athlete in her own signature \"nude\"-style of drag.
Carrera has also been active in AIDS awareness and activism. After being featured in a Gilead Sciences ad titled \"Red Ribbon Runway\" with fellow Drag Race co-stars Manila Luzon, Delta Work, Shangela Laquifa Wadley, and Alexis Mateo,[13] the dress she wore was auctioned by Logo in commemoration of World AIDS Day. Proceeds from the auction were donated to the National Association of People with AIDS.[14]
In an episode of the ABC news program Primetime: What Would You Do that aired on May 4, 2012, Carrera portrayed the role of a transgender server working in a New Jersey diner. An actor playing a customer berates Carrera's character regarding his past experience of being served by her when she had presented as male, prompting other customers to come to Carrera's defense. This program also marked the first occasion in which Carrera publicly revealed herself to be transgender.[17]
By calling me a 'MAN' promotes ignorance and makes it ok to call transgender women, men. PEOPLE GET BULLIED, BEAT UP, AND KILLED FOR BEING TRANS BECAUSE OF THIS IGNORANCE! ... I made it VERY clear to the producers on how to use the correct wording before agreeing to filming this but instead they chose to poke fun and be disrespectful. That's not what Im [sic] about! ... I may not have been born a woman, but im [sic] NOT a man. I told them I wouldn't mind if they said 'born male' or 'was a male'. After taking this journey it's not fair at all to be lied to by the producers.[18][19]
I owe an apology to the entire LGBT community. It was absolutely not my intention to upset or offend her, or anyone within the community, and I was wrong to use the words I did. I am a supporter of gay rights and equality, and while I regret this situation and my choice of words, I am thankful to have received this feedback and the opportunity to learn from this mistake. I hope that Carmen accepts my sincere regrets.[18][20]
The following day, on June 12, 2012, TLC announced that \"Bar Mitzvah, Beads & Oh Baby!\" had been pulled from rotation indefinitely, with the network planning to re-edit the episode for future broadcasts.[21]
In March 2014, Carrera openly criticized RuPaul for use of the pejorative \"she-male\" on a RuPaul's Drag Race episode.[23] She continued to be critical of RuPaul when the issue arose again in 2015, after Logo pulled the \"Female or SheMale\"[24] game from DragRace, which prompted RuPaul to defend the use of the word \"tranny\".[25] Carrera's continued protests led to accusations by others that she was biting the hand that fed her.[25] Carrera responded that, while she appreciates the opportunity to compete on DragRace, she ultimately earned her status through her efforts and those of her agent, friends, fans, and family, and that she was not beholden to support RuPaul's use of transphobic language.[25]
Carrera was in a domestic partnership with Adrian Torres from 2009, but she announced in 2013 that they had separated.[30] By 2015, the two had reunited, receiving relationship counseling while being filmed for the Couples Therapy television show. They wed on June 10, 2015, during filming for the show, which aired as the season finale on December 9, 2015.[31]
Fausta looks down to her body and finds the potato she has put inside her vagina--a way to protect herself from rape and harm. She seldom speaks, especially to men--only talking to male relatives. She prefers to sing, and her sweet, soft voice embodies her sadness. Fausta suffers from a syndrome known as \"the milk of sorrow.\" The illness was transmitted from her mother who was sexually abused during the early stages of her pregnancy, and produces fear and difficulty in establishing relationships with other human beings.
Fausta, the main character of the Berlin Bear awarded film The Milk of Sorrow (2009), is inspired by a narration that appears in Kimberly Theidon's book Entre Projimos (2004). In Intimate Enemies (inspired by Entre Projimos), Theidon talks to Salome Baldeon from Accomarca whose testimony speaks to the Milk of Sorrow syndrome. Salome describes the suffering she felt as soldiers came into her community and the massacre in nearby Lloqllepampa occurred. She says that her husband escaped to avoid being killed. She was pregnant and had to deliver the baby on her own. She tried to leave her baby in the mountains to die, but her cries were so loud that she returned to get her. Salome continues: \"That's why I say my daughter is damaged because of everything what happened, and because of my milk, my blood, my pensamientos\" (43). Salome feels pain in her body for transmitting sadness and sorrow to her baby. 59ce067264
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