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Pervasive gender gaps need
urgent addressing, says World Bank
KABUL, 26 Jan 2006 (IRIN) - A new World Bank report
has warned that reconstruction and development in post-conflict
Afghanistan will be severely affected unless pervasive gender gaps
are addressed. In the report, National Reconstruction and Poverty
Reduction (NRPR): The Role of Women in Afghanistan's Future, issued
on Wednesday, the bank called for legal reforms to remove gender
inequities within family law in the country. It said that opportunities
available to Afghan women in the areas of health, education, employment,
legal and political rights were extremely low by world standards.
"With around 36 percent of women participating in the labour
force, Afghan women contribute in large measure to the economic
development of Afghanistan," said Jean Mazurelle, the World
Bank's Country Manager for Afghanistan. "But a lot needs to
be done to reduce maternal mortality, to increase literacy, to provide
livelihood and employment possibilities, to protect rights and to
ensure women have influence over their own lives."
Wednesday's report says two decades of conflict have not only led
to a breakdown of infrastructure and delivery of services in Afghanistan,
but have also contributed to the downward trend of women's rights.
According to the United Nations' National Human Development Report
(2004), only Niger and Burkina Faso are placed lower on the Gender
Development Index. Health indicators for women are among the worst
in the world, particularly in the areas of child health and women's
reproductive health. Almost half of all deaths among women of reproductive
age are a result of pregnancy and childbirth; more than 75 percent
of these deaths are preventable, the report said.
On education, Afghanistan has achieved a significant leap in school
enrollment over the last couple of years. Half of all school-age
children in the country now go to school and one-third of them are
girls. However, these figures hide dramatic disparities, with girls
representing less than 15 percent of the total enrollment in nine
provinces in the east and south, according to the report. The traditional
role of women in Afghanistan is a constraint to more equitable participation
in economic activities, the report suggests. The wage rates of the
women who do work are normally half those of men. Their involvement
in the formal sector is mainly in the health and education sectors.
Currently, close to only one-third of all teachers are female. An
estimated 40 percent of all basic health facilities lack female
staff.
Although women play an important role in many aspects of handicraft,
agricultural, livestock and dairy production, most of their labour
is non-monetized. The report has suggested legal reforms to remove
gender inequities within family Law, in terms of marriage, marriage
age, divorce and inheritance. It calls for a series of actions,
including creation of an appropriate institutional framework to
support women's training; market linkages; access to credit and
childcare facilities; schooling infrastructure, including incentives
designed to reduce the dropout rate for girls; and maternal healthcare
facilities to be spread out into remote rural areas. "Given
the magnitude of gender disparities, the direct and indirect benefits
of policy actions to address these priority areas are much greater
than the costs," said Asta Olesen, Senior Social Development
Specialist and lead author of the report. "The challenge now
is to formulate policies, develop and implement reforms, in partnership
between the government of Afghanistan and donors, to provide practical
and effective programmes that will enable women to participate fully
in the rebuilding of Afghanistan."
Despite some progress following the collapse of hardline Taliban
regime in 2001, women are still suffering from an array of problems.
In a survey carried out by the NGO Terre des Hommes (TDH) in 2003
through their Maternal and Child Health (MCH) programme, covering
around 400 mothers, domestic violence occurred in 95 percent of
all surveyed households in post-conflict Afghanistan. The World
Bank has contributed over US $900 million to post-war Afghanistan
since 2002, with the major component being soft loans.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=51348&SelectRegion=Asia&SelectCountry=AFGHANISTAN
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