Swaziland country bare breasted women: YouTube lifts restriction on ‘bare-breasted Swazi dance’
Tech giant Google has lifted restrictions on YouTube from showing Swaziland’s famous reed dance which features bare-breasted women, South Africa’s Mail and Guardian reports.
According to The Whistler, the Mail and Guardian quotes a representative from Google as saying that they decided to remove the restriction on the videos because “it was not its policy to restrict nudity in such instances where it is culturally or traditionally appropriate”.
The move was in response to a campaign led by Lazi Dlamini, the head of TV Yabantu, an online video production company which produces content that “protects, preserves and restores African values”.
Its YouTube channel – which launched in 2016 – had been adding 3,000-4,000 new subscribers every month until the platform started to flag its content as inappropriate.
It also put a label on the channel advising advertisers that its content was “not suitable for most advertisers”.
According to Dlamini, he had contacted Google to say that he was simply reflecting the cultural values of his community but the company said that the content violated the platform’s standards.
He then organised a series of protests, working with more than 200 cultural groupings from Swaziland, with the first one taking place on Saturday in Durban.
It included at least a dozen women who posed bare-breasted with placards that read “Google are racist” and “my breasts are not inappropriate”.
Nobukhosi Mtshali who is a student at Witz University and a campaigner for the right to express her Swazi identity says that the restrictions were an attack on her heritage:
“I, as a South African, want to celebrate my culture. Having my photos labelled as inappropriate or regarded as porn, I take that as a direct attack on my cultural heritage.
“I take it as a sign of ignorance… If I’m posing in a sexually suggestive manner that is one thing, but if I’m posting pictures of me standing there in my traditional attire, that is a completely different context.”
Swaziland country bare breasted women: YouTube lifts restriction on ‘bare-breasted Swazi dance’
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PressTV-'Syria setting new rules of game for Israel'
ReplyDeletepresstv.com Oct 23, 2017 11:29 AM
A member of the Syrian government forces gestures to the camera from a tank in the Salamiyah city, some 33 kilometers southeast of Hama, on August 19, 2017, during an offensive against Daesh. (Photo by AFP)
A member of the Syrian government forces gestures to the camera from a tank in the Salamiyah city, some 33 kilometers southeast of Hama, on August 19, 2017, during an offensive against Daesh. (Photo by AFP)
Israeli media outlets suggest that currents of change flowing across the region could signal new equations under which Syria would be setting the new rules of the game for Israel thanks to its alliance with Iran and Russia.
Different-minded Israeli media have in recent days been interpreting the latest developments inside Syria — including the Syrian military’s move to intercept intruding Israeli warplanes on October 16 — as a “confident” or “defiant” message by Damascus to the Israeli regime.
An analysis piece published on the website of the Israeli daily Haaretz on Monday said the recent developments concerning Syria were “not encouraging.”
‘No more freedom of action for Israel’
It referred to several reported developments to conclude that the winds were shifting.
The interception of the Israeli fighter jets, a purported firing of projectiles from Syria into Israel on Saturday, and recent statements by Syrian and Iranian officials, the article said, were signs that Damascus and its allies were trying “to dictate new rules of the game to Israel.”
It said the Israeli regime had been conducting “attacks on arms convoys in… [Syrian] territory” seemingly with “freedom of action” since the Syrian conflict began in 2011.
“But, the circumstances have changed over the past few months,” it said, pointing to the Syrian government’s increasing wins against foreign-backed militants.
“Last week’s anti-aircraft fire can be seen both as Syrian retaliation and as an attempt to deter Israel by warning that its planes will no longer enjoy the broad freedom of action they have exploited in recent years,” it said.
Israel regularly hits positions held by the Syrian army in the Golan Heights, sometimes describing the attacks as “retaliatory.” Syria says the raids aim to boost the Takfiri militant groups fighting against government forces. Israel has occupied parts of the Syrian Golan Heights and is openly offering medical treatment to the militants wounded in battles with Syrian government forces.
Iran and Russia, on the other hand, have been offering advisory military support to the Syrian government in its battle against extremist militants. Russia has also been carrying out an aerial bombardment campaign against the positions of hard-line militants.
Last week, the chairman of the Chiefs of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces visited Damascus to discuss Iran and Syria’s long-time bilateral military cooperation. There, Major General Mohammad Baqeri said Israel could not be allowed to violate Syrian territory whenever it pleased.