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Posted: 2017-07-31T14:39:16Z | Updated: 2017-08-02T13:43:44Z Daughter Of Kyrgyz President Hits Back After Breastfeeding Photo Controversy | HuffPost Life

Daughter Of Kyrgyz President Hits Back After Breastfeeding Photo Controversy

This body Ive been given is not vulgar, Aliya Shagieva told the BBC.
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After receiving censure for a photograph that showed her breastfeeding her newborn son, Aliya Shagieva, the 20-year-old daughter of the president of Kyrgyzstan, has responded to critics this week with a powerful message.

This body I’ve been given is not vulgar ,” Shagieva, an artist, told BBC Kyrgyz. “It is functional, its purpose is to fulfill the physiological needs of my baby, not to be sexualized.”

Shagieva is the youngest daughter of Almazbek Atambayev, a former prime minister who has served as president of Kyrgyzstan since 2011. Shagieva came under fire in April for posting a picture on social media that showed her breastfeeding her infant son, Tair. 

The photograph had the caption, “I will feed my child whenever and wherever he needs to be fed.”

Shagieva eventually took the photograph down after critics denounced it as “immoral ” and “shameful .” She told the BBC that her parents had also objected to the image. 

Before she deleted the picture, however, Shagieva defended it in a Facebook post. “Women’s breasts are not vulgar nor indecent ,” she wrote, according to Cosmopolitan Russia. “People have long forgotten their real purpose.”

Kyrgyzstan is a Muslim-majority former Soviet republic in Central Asia. In 2008, UNICEF launched a breastfeeding campaign in the country after it emerged that fewer than half of all babies under the age of 3 months, and fewer than 35 percent of infants under the age of 5 months, were being breastfed. The popularity of breast milk substitutes and “an absence of strong family communications that supports new mothers to breastfeed” were among the factors cited for these numbers.

A year later, UNICEF said the country had adopted new laws to promote breastfeeding  among Kyrgyz women. 

According to the BBC, breastfeeding in public is considered socially “acceptable” in Kyrgyzstan, though women typically cover themselves when doing so.

Before You Go

Places Moms Have Been Shamed For Breastfeeding
At A Middle School(01 of13)
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When Andrea Scannell took her children to eat at a summer lunch program at Mount Logan Middle School in Utah, she decided to nurse her infant while there. Before leaving, a school employee handed her a complaint letter from the principal, which went viral after her husband uploaded a photo of it to Reddit . The letter asked Scannell to "discretely feed the baby, whether with a small blanket or in a more private area while the lunch program is taking place." After garnering a lot of online support, Scannell organized a nurse-in at the school. (credit:Imgur)
At An Amusement Park(02 of13)
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Renee Villatoro was nursing her baby at the Kentucky Kingdom amusement park when an employee told her to move to the bathroom . After the incident, she and her fellow mothers' support group members flooded the park's Facebook page with comments and questions about its breastfeeding policy. (credit:Renee Villatoro)
At Walmart(03 of13)
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Employees at a Walmart in Greenville, SC verbally harassed and mocked Shawnee Colabella when she nursed her child in the store. When the mother told her breastfeeding support group about her experience, the members of the Facebook group "Upstate SC Breastfeeders" organized a nurse-in . (credit:Fox Carolina)
At A Homeless Shelter(04 of13)
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When Karen Penley tried to nurse her son in the Oahu homeless shelter Institute For Human Services, a worker reportedly told her to either cover herself or relocate .Penley described the exchange to HawaiiNewsNow : "He's like, You must cover to nurse your baby.' And I was like, I have the right not to cover.' And he goes, I have the right to refuse services.' In other wordskick me out, make me leave." (credit:HawaiiNewsNow)
On Twitter(05 of13)
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When Karlesha Thurman posted a photo of herself breastfeeding during her graduation from The California State University, Long Beach on social media, she received a lot of negative comments on Twitter . (credit: Karlesha Thurman)
At Bob Evans(06 of13)
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Kristina Gray was breastfeeding her son while waiting to be seated at a Bob Evans in Tampa, Florida. A female employee approached her and asked her to cover up. After the incident, Gray posted her complain on the restaurant chain's Facebook page and organized a nurse-in. (credit:Facebook)
At Victoria's Secret(07 of13)
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While at a Victoria's Secret in Texas, Ashley Clawson asked an employee if she could nurse her child in a dressing room. She was not only denied, but directed to go to the nearest alleyway. (credit:Fox7)
At Hollister (08 of13)
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Brittany Warfield, a mother of three from Texas, was nursing her 7-month-old outside of a Hollister store in a Houston mall, she says a manager forced her to move . He said, You cant do this here. This is not where you do that. You cant do that on Hollister property. We dont allow that. I said, Its Texas. I can breastfeed anywhere I like. He said, Not at Hollister. Your stroller is blocking the way. You have to go, she recalls. (credit:Facebook)
On Facebook(09 of13)
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Mom and breastfeeding advocate Emma Kwasnica had posted over 200 photos on Facebook of herself nursing her own three children and told the Huffington Post that her account has been suspended at least five times as a result.She organized a nurse-in in front of Facebook headquarters to challenge the company's policy that says photos depicting breastfeeding are "inappropriate." (credit:Paala Secor)
At Target(10 of13)
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Houston mother Michelle Hickman says she was harassed and humiliated by Target staff when she found a quiet space in the store to breastfeed her infant. She organized an international "nurse-in" at several Target locations on Tuesday December 28th. Pictured above is mom who participated, Brittany Hinson and her 4-month-old son, Kennedy, in front of the Super Target store, in Webster, Texas. (credit:AP)
At A Cafe(11 of13)
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Claire Jones-Hughes wrote : "After being verbally attacked for not covering up while feeding my four-month-old, I decided it was time to make a statement to show that mothers will no longer tolerate being harassed for feeding our babies in public." She then staged a breastfeeding flash mob at the Clock Tower in Brighton, UK. (credit:PA)
On A Plane(12 of13)
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Back in 2006, 27-year-old mom, Emily Gillette, was removed from a Delta flight for breastfeeding. Watch a news clip about this story here . (credit:YouTube)
In Her Religious Community(13 of13)
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One mom posted a frustrated essay in November 2006, detailing her pastor telling her that photos of her breastfeeding were equivalent to pornography. She and her husband decided to leave the church after this incident. (credit:Alamy)

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