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Possibility of prison sentence of up to 5 years not a deterrent for some Muslim men
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Zaib's life began to unravel with an unexpected phone call from her husband in early He told her he had married a second wife, an announcement that took the Toronto woman by surprise. I was in a state of denial, saying no, no, this can't be happening. Zaib, whose last name CBC has agreed to withhold, said she got so sick her doctor recommended an extended leave of absence from work. Zaib and other Canadian Muslim women in a similar predicament believe this could be their own MeToo moment, an opportunity to speak out and demand an end to the practice of polygamy in Canada's Muslim community. Maybe if I say a thing or two, that will bring attention to this issue because this is the law and men are breaking it right, left and centre and nobody's saying anything to them," said Zaib. Zaib's husband tried to reassure her that he had no intention of abandoning her or their three adult children. Zaib said he told her: "I am going to still provide for you, take care of you and the kids. You can continue living the way you're living and it's just going to be one extended family. As the weeks went by, Zaib said she became increasingly convinced that her year marriage was over.
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Former foreign secretary Boris Johnson has been criticised for saying Muslim women wearing burkas "look like letter boxes" and for comparing them to "bank robbers" - prompting calls for him to apologise and be expelled from the Conservative Party. But Mr Johnson's comments, which some believe will aggravate Islamophobic tensions in the UK, have also highlighted some confusion about what a burka is - as the veil revealing just the eyes is, in fact, known as a niqab. So what actually are the differences between the various types of Islamic dress for women and what governs their choices? The Koran, Islam's holy book, tells Muslims - men and women - to dress modestly. Male modesty has been interpreted to be covering the area from the navel to the knee. For women it is generally seen as covering everything except their face, hands and feet when in the presence of men they are not related or married to.
Miriam hid her sexuality from her strict Muslim parents for years. When she eventually did come out to them, she found it impossible to translate "lesbian" into Punjabi or Urdu. She explains how the conversation put an end to her double life "playing the straight woman" but caused a rift so deep that her father disowned her. We got the internet at home and there was a dial-up computer in my brother's room - it had a lock on the door. Then from 18, 19, I [thought], 'maybe I need to look for lesbian women'. Despite knowing from a young age she was gay, she knew telling her parents would cause a rift that might prove insurmountable. She went to great lengths to hide it but found an outlet in which to explore her sexuality by speaking to women in chat rooms. It was only when she went to university that she built up the courage to meet other women in person, travelling hundreds of miles so she wouldn't be seen by anyone she knew.