Women imprisoned during the Ba'ath regime was the title of a panel discussion at a joint event between the National Institute of Technology, Charmo University and the American University in Sulaimani
(Women in Prison) was the subject of a panel discussion on women imprisoned during the Ba'ath regime held in the Amnasuraka museum on the first day of Combat Violence Against Women week.
The panel, which was part of a field research, through experts and prison survivors of the fall of the Ba'ath regime, presented some information, experiences and in-depth analysis in this regard had done in that context.
The discussion presented a legal, philosophical, historical and personal perspective, and was presented by the following:
Panel Moderator: Danya Salam Mahmoud, Director of Quality Assurance, National Institute of Technology
Distinguished speakers:
Faryal Abdullah, a member of the leadership of the Kurdistan Union Party (PUK), to tell the stories of the prisons of the Ba'ath regime and the story of a survivor: From prison to politics world.
Dr. Tawana Abdulrahman, Co-Director of the Center for Gender and Development at American University Iraq-Sulaimani, on women's legal and political struggle during the Ba'ath regime.
Ms. Nariman Fatah, a researcher at Charmo University Research Center. talked about philosophical reflections on oppression and resistance,
Ms. Tanya Fuad, University of Minnesota, Insights from Archival Data: Women's Experiences in Kurdistan, to provide insights from archival data.
This activity was presented on the first day of the campaign against violence against women and several similar activities are scheduled to be held in the future.