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RESOLUTION 1325
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Pain of Afghan suicide women
December 7, 2006, (BBC News) Gulsoom is 17-years-old
and married. Last year she tried to commit suicide - she failed.
She set fire to herself but, against the odds, survived with appalling
injuries. Her plight reflects that of a growing number of young
Afghan women, campaigners say. Driven to desperation by forced marriages
and abusive husbands, more and more are seeking release through
self-immolation.
Gulsoom was engaged at the age of 12. Three years later her family
married her to a man aged 40 who she says was addicted to drugs.
She was then taken to Iran. Her husband beat her regularly, Gulsoom
says, particularly when he had no money for heroin.
"Once after I was badly beaten by my husband, I was in bed
when I heard a voice murmuring and telling me to go and set fire
to myself," she says. "I went and poured petrol on my
whole body. The flames on my body lasted for minutes. After eight
days I found myself conscious in bed.
"I cared about my father's dignity - that's why I tolerated
everything."
Gulsoom has had many operations since she divorced her husband and
faces many more.
She's not alone - there are hundreds of other women who have tried
and failed to kill themselves. Some women do manage to end their
lives, but many survive with huge burns to their faces and bodies,
like Gulsoom. In many cases they have no choice but to return to
the husband and the abuse from which they sought escape. Gulsoom
looks hopelessly at her scarred hands saying her only wish now is
to be made better, although she says no one will marry her again
with her burnt skin.
"When I wore nice clothes my husband showed jealousness,"
she recalls.
Forced marriages, a culture of family violence and many other social
problems are given as causes for the suicides. Afghan women have
long had to suffer violence or mysterious deaths. Even now girls
are still handed over in disputes or as compensation in murder cases.
Publicising abuse
The BBC's Salmi Suhaili, who works on women-related issues, says
women taking their lives is not a new phenomenon in what is traditionally
a very conservative society. But the rise of a civil society and
a free media is helping to publicise their acts, he says. Figures
given by Afghanistan's Independent Human Rights Commission show
that more women burned themselves to death this year in the southern
province of Kandahar than anywhere else in the country. Last year,
Herat in the west - where most girls marry at around 15 - was top.
Deputy minister of women's affairs Maliha Sahak says that 197 incidents
of self-immolation have been recorded since March 2006, 35 of them
in Kandahar province alone. A total of 69 women lost their lives.
The UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan says that Kandahar's only
hospital for women, which has 40 beds, received 29 cases of suicide
in the space of two months. Twenty of those women had set themselves
alight.
Independent Human Rights Commission head Sima Samar regrets that,
five years after the Taleban were ousted, Afghan women are still
suffering violence in its various forms. She says suicide is the
final decision for women who don't have any other way to solve their
problems or escape abuse.
Changing mindsets
The commission has been working with the Medica Mondiale agency
to try to overcome cultural obstacles and give women more of a voice.
Campaigners say violence against women must not remain hidden or
it will not stop. Deputy women's minister Maliha Sahak points to
last year's protocol involving many Afghan ministries, the Supreme
Court and the human rights commission. It was passed with President
Hamid Karzai's approval and banned the marriage of a woman if she
is under 18 years old.
She says another law is in the pipeline which will require agreement
from both man and woman for their wedding to be legal. The women's
ministry is to mount an awareness campaign targeting men in an attempt
to reduce the violence. After decades of war, Afghanistan's civil
society is still in its infancy. Those trying to end violence against
women face many years of struggle to change fundamental elements
of tradition and culture, as well as so-called Afghan dignity.
Story from BBC NEWS: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6196716.stm
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