Female Family Members Naked

Female Family Members Naked




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"At my first event, I slung a towel over my shoulder and went down for breakfast - naked."
Events organiser Pamela Fraser, 27, went to her first naturism event 14 months ago. She's been to 20 since.
Spa days, archery, yoga, cider-tasting and even a Fawlty Towers-themed night with actors playing Basil, Sybil and Manuel - all without an item of clothing in sight.
She describes the first time she got naked at a large gathering as a "non-event', adding "you soon realise people aren't interested in what you look like."
On Saturday, she'll join around 300 others of all ages, paying up to £21 for a skinny dip at Blackpool's Sandcastle Water Park.
"It's no different to going swimming with your costume on," Pamela believes. "A lot of female costumes don't hide much anyway."
"The whole idea is you're stepping back from the stress of life and the feeling that you have to fit into a certain mould."
"You wouldn't take your work clothes with you when you go on holiday and when you go home you probably get changed.
"Sometimes I get in from work and take all my clothes off - that's me saying this is now my free time."
Pamela is one of 9,000 people who pay about £44 a year to be members of the British Naturism (BN) organisation.
It offers advice and support and organises days out and festivals - including NudeFest, NKD and Nudestock - across the UK.
Pamela had always found it "more comfortable" to be nude at home but began going to events after spotting a BN magazine while at work.
"Everyone looked so happy - it was really inviting and it looked like there was so much going on. I thought, 'How have I got to 25 and not heard about this?'"
"There are some people who think nudity and bottoms are really funny. But I think laughing at someone who has nothing on is rude."
Upcoming trips include two more swimming days in Stoke-on-Trent and Poole, naked-dining near Stevenage, a pétanque tournament in Norwich and a two-hour boat trip in Scotland.
But Saturday's swim has caused concern for some.
About 50 people signed a petition calling for Saturday's swim to be cancelled or to be made over-18s only. Children, it said, would be "at risk of being subject to abuse by sex offenders who may slip into the organisation unnoticed".
One self-employed woman who plans to go to the event says she has no concerns about taking her children.
The 38-year-old - who asked not to be named - said: "I do understand where people are coming from in asking 'how can it be safe?'. It's just like any area of life, you always want to protect your children.
"But some don't have an understanding of the community. I've never once been worried about anything. When you're in something, it can often be very different to what others might perceive from the outside."
Her family found naturism about eight years ago, she says, when they accidentally ended up on a nudist beach on holiday. After enjoying the "relaxed atmosphere" they were keen to find similar experiences elsewhere abroad and, finally, in the UK.
"The girls love the swimming events - the queues are much better than if you go on another day, " she said, speaking ahead of Saturday's swim.
"There are some times when my daughter might say she wants to wear her bikini bottoms - and that's fine of course. Then she gets there and they decide she doesn't need them. It's their choice to go naked if they want to but, if not, that's also fine."
And she thinks there might be an even greater benefit than queue-jumping.
"My eldest daughter's friends are becoming more concerned about what they look like but she says she doesn't. That really touches me as a parent: that she hasn't really taken on that societal body-conscious stuff.
"How can naturism not have influenced that?"
BN event organiser Mark Walsh says many new members are introduced to the group through other events aimed at "free and earthy" vegans, yoga fans and camping enthusiasts.
"Some of our events are open to non-members, which brings in new people," he said. "Otherwise we just do marketing the same as any other organisation - but mainly in nudist circles."
On Saturday the group will also attempt to break the Guinness World Record for the most people on a rollercoaster at Blackpool Pleasure Beach. The record was set in Southend in August 2010.
People can join on the day but are asked to sign-up via the website in advance.
"Our members are our life-blood," says Mr Walsh. "And when they get a crazy new idea, it's my job to make it happen."
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By
Hollie McKay , | Fox News
Hollie McKay has a been a Fox News Digital staff reporter since 2007. She has extensively reported from war zones including Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Burma, and Latin America investigates global conflicts, war crimes and terrorism around the world. Follow her on Twitter and Instagram @holliesmckay
The deceased body of a Kurdish female fighter was defiled in an Afrin battle. Who was she and what was she fighting for?
KOBANI, Syria – As the battle for the northwestern Syrian city of Afrin raged earlier this year, amid Turkey’s eventually successful “Operation Olive Branch” to seize control from the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), images of the bloodbath flooded social media.
But there was one especially shocking video, captured via cellphone , that ignited international outcry: a fighter with the all-female Kurdish unit known as the YPJ lay dead and half-naked in the dirt, her body mutilated with deep cuts lacerating her exposed breasts. Turkey-backed Syrian rebel fighters in military fatigues can be seen swarming the corpse, groping the pockets of her jeans.

Barin Kobani and her brother Ahmed, who saw the graphic video online before learning that it was his younger sister.

“She’s beautiful, man,” declares one fighter as one purports to take a selfie with the defiled body. In Arabic, others declare “God is Great,” while some call the downed soldier a “female pig.” One even digs his dirty boot into her chest, and another puts the muzzle of his rifle at her head.
“I was checking Facebook and I came across the video and was in shock; it was so awful that I had no words,” Ahmed, 31, told Fox News. “I didn’t know who the girl was... and then a commentator wrote it was Barin Kobani.”
Barin Kobani, Ahmed’s beloved sister.
In desperation, he called around hoping it was someone else with the same name. But within hours, SDF officials confirmed Ahmed’s worst nightmare. In agony, he delivered the news to the family. They believed Barin, 27, was killed on February 3 fighting in a village outside Afrin, but the footage did not surface on the Internet until several days later.
Over the course of the next week, more videos and images emerged – showing Barin’s remains in different locations and with different jubilant fighters, indicating she may have been paraded as a dead trophy through the streets.

Barin Kobani's family: sisters, mother and brothers mourning her death in Kobani, Syria.
(FOX News/Hollie McKay)
Ahmed said that his sister, whose real name was Amina Omar, joined the YPG as a fighter after the genocide and capture of thousands of Yazidi women by ISIS in neighboring Iraq’s Sinjar Mountain. The family helped smugglers to rescue three sex slaves from the “caliphate capital” of Raqqa, and hosted them at their home for several weeks before they could return to Iraq.
“Barin would take girls to the markets and buy things for them and their children,” her 55-year-old mother, Zahra, recalled through her soft sobs. “She was deeply affected by what had happened to them. For a long time, she wanted to fight but didn’t have the confidence. What these girls had survived gave her the confidence to do more.”
Barin – the middle child in a family of nine children consisting of six daughters and three sons – started out in YPJ as a “normal fighter,” but made “commander” status last year and went on to lead the charge in the Raqqa liberation from ISIS, Ahmed said. She was so dedicated to her role that her family rarely were able to see her, but by chance around a year before her death saw her passing in a vehicle in the Afrin streets and flagged her down.
“We told Barin we missed her and asked her was she going to stay in this hard life forever,” Ahmed recalled. “She insisted that there was no other life for her, that she was determined to be a high-level person and bring change to the rights of women.”
Early in the Afrin battle, the family spotted Barin on a local news segment about the conflict and felt a mix of “sadness and excitement” – sad she was in a dangerous situation, but excited she was leading the all-female unit stationed in the area.
Yet her death, and its aftermath, has infuriated many SDF and women’s rights supporters around the world. SDF officials called it a “bestial scene” and accused Turkey of being “the world’s biggest state-sponsor of terrorism.”
The video – which was first obtained by the UK-based NGO Syrian Observatory of Human Rights and made headline news worldwide – remains online, including on YouTube, where it comes with a warning that it may be “inappropriate” for some viewers and requires a sign-in to verify the viewer is 18 years or older.
“It’s hard for us, but it is important this video is not taken down,” Ahmed stressed. “We want people to know of these inhumane acts and why we are afraid for our future. We hoped maybe this video would bring an end to this war, but it did not.”
Ahmed said he watches the video every day, sometimes dozens and dozens of times, fruitlessly hoping that somehow the ending will be different.
The Turkey-backed Free Syrian Army (FSA), which was the primary ground force battling the SDF in Afrin, has since stated that they would form a committee to investigate and authenticate the incident. The group also stated that they would “not hesitate” to hold the fighters shown in the footage accountable for their actions, and mandated that they endeavor to always abide by international law and tend to all deceased fighters in accordance with Sharia principles of a dignified burial.
Several FSA members, now displaced on the Turkey side of the Syrian border, also expressed outrage at the video and insisted to Fox News that this was not standard practice for most factions of the once U.S.-supported FSA and, if true, was perpetrated by a few bad actors.
The video of Barin also made Turkish state media, which had a vastly different take, referring to the slain “terrorist” as a “would-be suicide bomber.”
Debate has since raged over whether Barin was mutilated after her death, or if she blew herself up before being captured. To date, her remains have not been returned to the family and they suspect they will never see that happen. Barin's remains are not recoverable, a source told Fox News.
Barin’s family now receives support from the Martyrs Family Foundation, headquartered in the city of the same name. It’s a quiet, ailing building where the young and old – anyone who has lost a loved one in the fighting – gather daily to drink tea and find comfort in their collective mourning.
Locals refer to the foundation’s dwellings as their “holiest place” – more meaningful than any mosque or house of worship. Nearby, they have established a new post-revolution “Martyrs Graveyard” – along with a large monument dedicated to those whose bodies have not yet been recovered from the ongoing war within Syria.

Those who have lost loved ones in the protracted Syrian conflict gather at the Martyrs Family Foundation.
(FOX News/Hollie McKay)
Nonetheless, the news of Barin’s death and video is still being circulated weeks on, and still ignites a special breed of outrage in their community.

Monument for the missing fighters constructed in Kobani, Syria.
(FOX News/Hollie McKay)
“The honor of our women is so sensitive to us,” noted Khalil, a member of the foundation and the person who most often delivers the dreaded news of the dead to loved ones. “So to see this happen to Barin, her naked body like this, really hurts.”

Khalil, a member of the Martyrs Foundation who delivers news to families if their relatives have been killed in action.
(FOX News/Hollie McKay)

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https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-47406580
https://www.foxnews.com/world/family-of-kurdish-female-fighter-seen-naked-mutilated-in-graphic-viral-video-speaks-out
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