#ShameOnWho Campaign Uses Art to Change Lebanese Attitudes to Rape

Lebanese women demonstrate against prostitution, sex slavery and violence against women in front of the Justice Palace in the capital Beirut. (AFP file photo)
Lebanese women demonstrate against prostitution, sex slavery and violence against women in front of the Justice Palace in the capital Beirut. (AFP file photo)
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#ShameOnWho Campaign Uses Art to Change Lebanese Attitudes to Rape

Lebanese women demonstrate against prostitution, sex slavery and violence against women in front of the Justice Palace in the capital Beirut. (AFP file photo)
Lebanese women demonstrate against prostitution, sex slavery and violence against women in front of the Justice Palace in the capital Beirut. (AFP file photo)

The hashtag #ShameOnWho? is being deployed as part of a new street art campaign in Lebanon to try to change attitudes to rape in a country where victim shaming remains common, said a Thomson Reuters Foundation report Wednesday.

The group behind the campaign, which launched this week, said it wanted to "shake" Lebanese society out of misconceptions about sexual violence, using street art depicting the faces of alleged rapists as described by their victims.

"There is so much blame and shaming of the victim. Our society needs to start recognizing that rape, no matter what, is not justified," said Ghida Anani, director of the campaign group Abaad.

"We need to demand more rights around sexual assault. If you don't shake society and this reality - nothing is going to change," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone from Beirut.

The images went up on walls of buildings around Beirut on Tuesday and Wednesday alongside the hashtag and the words "Prosecute the rapist. Do not blame the victim".

Some also featured voiceboxes with oral testimony from the victims, their voices distorted to disguise their identity.

About 13 sexual assaults on women are reported every month in Lebanon, official data show, but campaigners say many more go unreported.

The country only abolished a law that let rapists escape punishment if they marry their victims last year, and women's rights campaigners say a culture of victim-shaming persists.

In 2016 a member of the Lebanese parliament sparked an outcry when he said people needed to ask themselves "if women play an active role in pushing men to rape them".

A spokeswoman for the Lebanese Women Democratic Gathering, a local women's rights group, said shock tactics were needed if attitudes were to change.

"This captures people's attention and creates an important debate - we need to start talking about these issues," said Hayat Mirshad.

"Campaigns on violence against women need to start being aggressive and shocking."

As part of the campaign, Abaad also released a video on social media of an actress who claimed to have been raped. Many people blamed her for what she was wearing or asked if she was on drugs.

Hundreds of rape survivors and activists will participate in the Beirut Marathon on Sunday to mark the campaign, which ends on November 25, International Day for Elimination of Violence Against Women.



Pizza Delivery Monitor Alerts to Secret Israel Attack

The Pentagon is seen from the US Army Golden Knights parachute team plane ahead of their performance during the Twilight Tattoo ceremony as part of the Army’s 250th Birthday Festival in Washington, D.C., after taking off from Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall in Arlington, Virginia, US, June 11, 2025. (Reuters)
The Pentagon is seen from the US Army Golden Knights parachute team plane ahead of their performance during the Twilight Tattoo ceremony as part of the Army’s 250th Birthday Festival in Washington, D.C., after taking off from Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall in Arlington, Virginia, US, June 11, 2025. (Reuters)
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Pizza Delivery Monitor Alerts to Secret Israel Attack

The Pentagon is seen from the US Army Golden Knights parachute team plane ahead of their performance during the Twilight Tattoo ceremony as part of the Army’s 250th Birthday Festival in Washington, D.C., after taking off from Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall in Arlington, Virginia, US, June 11, 2025. (Reuters)
The Pentagon is seen from the US Army Golden Knights parachute team plane ahead of their performance during the Twilight Tattoo ceremony as part of the Army’s 250th Birthday Festival in Washington, D.C., after taking off from Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall in Arlington, Virginia, US, June 11, 2025. (Reuters)

The timing of Israel's plan to attack Iran was top secret. But Washington pizza delivery trackers guessed something was up before the first bombs fell.

About an hour before Iranian state TV first reported loud explosions in Tehran, pizza orders around the Pentagon went through the roof, according to a viral X account claiming to offer "hot intel" on "late-night activity spikes" at the US military headquarters.

"As of 6:59 pm ET nearly all pizza establishments nearby the Pentagon have experienced a HUGE surge in activity," the account "Pentagon Pizza Report" posted on Thursday.

While far from scientific, the Pentagon pizza theory "is not something the internet just made up," The Takeout, an online site covering restaurants and food trends, noted earlier this year.

Pentagon-adjacent pizza joints also got much busier than usual during Israel's 2024 missile strike on Iran, it said, as there are "a multitude of fast-food restaurants in the Pentagon complex, but no pizza places."

Pizza deliveries to the Pentagon reportedly doubled right before the US invasion of Panama in December 1989 and surged again before Operation Desert Storm in 1991.

President Donald Trump told The Wall Street Journal he was fully aware in advance of the bombing campaign, which Israel says is needed to end Iran's nuclear program. "We know what's going on."

For the rest of Americans, pepperoni pie activity was not the only way to tell something was about to happen.

Washington had already announced it was moving some diplomats and their families out of the Middle East on Wednesday.

And close to an hour before Israel unleashed its firepower on Iran, the US ambassador in Jerusalem, Mike Huckabee, sent out a rather revealing X post: "At our embassy in Jerusalem and closely monitoring the situation. We will remain here all night. 'Pray for the peace of Jerusalem!'"