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Woman accuses former president George HW Bush of groping her when she was 16

November 14, 2017 by  
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Former president George H.W. Bush waits on the field before Game 5 of the World Series last month in Houston. A woman alleged Monday that Bush groped her in 2003, when she was 16. (David J. Phillip/AP)

A woman alleged that George H.W. Bush groped her buttocks in 2003, when the woman was 16 years old, according to Time Magazine.

Rosyln Corrigan — who said she was excited to meet the 41st president as a teenager, having dreamed of a career in politics — told Time that Bush groped her 14 years ago while photographing with her at an event in the Woodlands, Tex., office of the Central Intelligence Agency. Corrigan’s father and other intelligence officers and their families came to hear Bush address the agency.

“My initial reaction was absolute horror. I was really, really confused,” Corrigan told Time. “The first thing I did was look at my mom and, while he was still standing there, I didn’t say anything.”

“What does a teenager say to the ex-president of the United States? Like, ‘Hey dude, you shouldn’t have touched me like that?’ ” she said.

A spokesman for Bush, Jim McGrath, did not deny the allegations. He told The Washington Post in a statement that the former president “simply does not have it in his heart to knowingly cause anyone harm or distress, and he again apologizes to anyone he may have offended during a photo op.”

Corrigan is the sixth woman to make similar accusations against Bush in recent weeks. The others were adults at the times they were allegedly groped.

Three of the women — actresses Heather Lind and Jordana Grolnick and novelist Christina Baker Kline — said they were groped by Bush within the past four years. Bush’s spokesman said in response that Bush, 93, has used a wheelchair for roughly five years, so his arm “falls on the lower waist of people with whom he takes pictures.”

“To try to put people at ease, the president routinely tells the same joke — and on occasion, he has patted women’s rears in what he intended to be a good-natured manner,” McGrath previously said. “Some have seen it as innocent; others clearly view it as inappropriate.”

At the time of the CIA event in November 2003, Bush was 79, and did not use a wheelchair. He stood upright in his photograph with Corrigan and her mother, Sari Young.

Having seen Bush speak at a conference held at the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum at Texas AM University earlier that month, Corrigan asked her father if she could leave school early to see Bush speak at the CIA event. Corrigan attended the Woodlands High School at the time, Time reported.

After Bush’s address, Corrigan and her mother took a photograph with Bush.

“As soon as the picture was being snapped, on the one-two-three, he dropped his hands from my waist down to my buttocks and gave it a nice, ripe squeeze, which would account for the fact that in the photograph my mouth is hanging wide open,” Corrigan told Time.

Corrigan told her mother about the incident as soon as Bush stepped away. She said she was upset, and that “had it been just some Joe Blow or something” she would “chase him down and yell at him.”

“But, you know, it’s the president. What are you supposed to do?” she told Time. “And you’ve got your husband’s job that could be in jeopardy.”

Lind, Grolnick and Kline all said last month that they were groped by Bush while taking photos with him at events. In the cases of Grolnick and Kline, Bush told a joke about “David Cop-a-feel” being his favorite magician and book before allegedly groping their behinds.

Lind and Grolnick said former first lady Barbara Bush saw the incidents. Kline said a friend of the Bush family later asked the best-selling author to be “discreet” about the incident.

On Nov. 1, Laura Bush, the wife of George W. Bush, told CNN that the alleged incidents against her father-in-law were innocent.

“I’m just sad that we’ve come to this,” Laura Bush said. “That was something that was very, very innocent that he’s been accused of. But I know he would feel terrible.”

Corrigan told Time that the incident made her feel like she was not taken seriously.

“I thought, he’s a career politician … if anybody’s going to take me a little bit seriously or at least try to pretend he’s interested in what I have to say, it would be this guy,” she said. “And he didn’t. All he did was grab my butt.”

Since October, dozens of actresses have gone public with allegations that Hollywood producer and former studio executive Harvey Weinstein either sexually harassed or assaulted them, and at least 20 high-profile men in Hollywood, the media and the political sphere have also been accused. In the fallout of claims ranging from sexual misconduct to rape, some have resigned and others have been fired.

Millions of women and men have since taken to social media, using the hashtag #MeToo as they post their stories of sexual harassment or assault.

Last week, The Post published an extensive report detailing the experience of Leigh Corfman, who said Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore of Alabama initiated a sexual encounter with her in 1979, when she was 14 years old. Three other women, all on the record, have said that Moore pursued them when they were between 16 and 18 years old. Another woman came forward Monday, saying Moore sexually assaulted her in the 1970s when she was 16.

Read more: 

Opinion: Defending sexual assault is never worth it. Really.

Perspective: I went public with my sexual assault. And then the trolls came for me.

The woman behind ‘Me Too’ knew the power of the phrase when she created it — 10 years ago

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Southeast Asia summit draft statement skips over Rohingya crisis

November 13, 2017 by  
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MANILA (Reuters) – A draft of the statement to be issued after a Southeast Asian summit makes no mention of the exodus of Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar’s Rakhine state following a military crackdown that has been described by the United Nations as ethnic cleansing.

One paragraph of the communique, seen by Reuters on Monday, mentions the importance of humanitarian relief provided for victims of natural disasters in Vietnam and a recent urban battle with Islamist militants in the Philippines, as well as “affected communities” in northern Rakhine state.

The statement was drawn up by the Philippines, current chair of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) – which includes Myanmar – whose leaders met for a plenary session in Manila on Monday.

The draft did not give any details of the situation in northern Rakhine or use the term Rohingya for the persecuted Muslim minority, which Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi has asked foreign leaders to avoid.

The government in mostly-Buddhist Myanmar regards the Rohingya as illegal migrants from Bangladesh and does not recognize the term.

Well over 600,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh to find shelter in refugee camps after military clearance operations were launched in response to attacks by Rohingya militants on security posts on Aug. 25.

The plight of the Rohingya has brought outrage from around the world and there have been calls for democracy champion Suu Kyi to be stripped of the Nobel peace prize she won in 1991 because she has not condemned the Myanmar military’s actions.

From left, Malaysia Prime Minister Najib Razak, Myanmar State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, Thailand Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, Vietnam Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, Brunei Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah, Cambodia Prime Minister Hun Sen, Indonesia President Joko Widodo and Laos Prime Minister Thongloun Sisoulith, smile during a family photo before the 31st ASEAN Summit in Manila, Philippines on Monday Nov. 13, 2017. REUTERS/Aaron Favila/Pool

In September, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the situation in Rakhine was best described as ethnic cleansing.

Some members of ASEAN, particularly Muslim-majority Malaysia, have voiced concern. However, in keeping with ASEAN’s principle of non-interference in the internal affairs of one another, the issue appears to have been put aside at the summit.

In September, Malaysia disavowed a statement issued by the Philippines on behalf of ASEAN’s foreign ministers as misrepresenting “the reality” because it did not identify the Rohingya as an affected community in Rakhine state.

Suu Kyi, who did not mention the crisis in a speech after arriving in Manila on Sunday, criticized ASEAN’s principle of non-interference herself in 1999 when she was fighting for democracy in a country then ruled by a military junta.

“This policy of non-interference is just an excuse for not helping,” she wrote in an opinion column in the Thai daily the Nation at the time. “In this day and age, you cannot avoid interference in the matters of other countries.”

Roberto Romulo, a former Philippine foreign minister, told the Philippine news channel ANC that there appeared to be no discussion about the Rohingya at the ASEAN summit.

“They’re treating with a great deal of respect a discredited Nobel Peace Prize winner like Aung San Suu Kyi,” he said.

Amnesty International Philippines representative Wilnor Papa told ANC that the ASEAN leaders would talk about “terrorism and peace and order … but there are a whole lot of elephants in the room they won’t be talking about, that people are trying to ignore.”

Reporting by John Chalmers; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan

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