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AFGHANISTAN: VIOLENCE AGAINST
WOMEN REMAINS DRAMATIC - UN EXPERT
July 18, 2005 - (UN News) From forced child
marriages entailing physical and sexual abuse to the public execution
of a woman on local council's orders, from girls burning themselves
to death out of despair to impunity for abusers, violence against
women in Afghanistan is a dramatic problem that must be addressed
now, a top United Nations expert said today.
"Violence against women remains dramatic in
Afghanistan in its intensity and pervasiveness, in public and private
spheres of life," the Special Rapporteur of the UN Commission
on Human Rights on Violence against Women, its Causes and Consequences,
Yakin Ertürk, told a news briefing in Kabul, the Afghan capital,
at the end of a 10-day visit.
The three and a half years since the fall of the
Taliban regime, which repressed women's rights, have seen considerable
change in the legal and institutional framework, but "action
has to be taken now to protect women, to save lives," she added,
outlining a list of measures that appear feasible in the short term.
These include launching media campaigns to inform
the public that forced and child marriages violate fundamental precepts
of Islam, and clearly establishing the 'marriage' of a girl-child
as a crime subject to prosecution and punishment.
Police and prosecutor's offices must not return
girls and women who escape domestic violence to their families unless
their safety can really be ensured, safe-havens for women at risk
must be created and strengthened and donor support for Afghanistan
should be linked to human rights and the protection of women, she
added.
"The present time constitutes a unique window
of opportunity that should not be missed," she declared.
Most people she spoke to pointed to forced and child
marriages as the primary source of violence against women, Ms. Ertürk
said. "In addition to being in themselves serious forms of
violence, forced and child marriages in combination with polygamy
considerably increase the likelihood that women will be subjected
to violence within the family, including sexual violence by significantly
older males," she added.
She cited "one very dramatic example which
affected me tremendously" of an eight-year-old girl, now under
protection, who was sold by her mother at age six for marriage although
neither Civil Law nor Islamic Sharia can accept that a six-year-old
girl is marriageable.
"This girl and others like her that I have
talked to, who were not lucky enough to end up in a protective area,
are abused physically as well as sexually. Not only by the designated
husband, but until the designated husband grows up, other males
in the family may abuse her," she said. "I was just told
at a government meeting a while ago that girls are married off to
families who in turn use them to sell their blood, or use them as
prostitutes," she added.
"In only an exceedingly small fraction of cases
will any sanction be imposed on the perpetrators of domestic violence,"
she noted, adding that many women have no alternative but to endure
such violence since unaccompanied women have no place in the public
space and are automatically suspected of being engaged in sexual
offences.
"Once a girl or women has spent a night away
from family control, this might constitute a dead end in her life.
The stigma attached thereto often makes her return impossible, as
she is either refused or accepted only to face punishment, often
death."
She referred to the case of a woman called Ameena
who was stoned or beaten to death because of a "fatwa by the
local authorities for her murder."
"The violence has to come to an end. There
is no reason under the sun that can legitimize any of these acts,
if the government is going to gain legitimacy and credibility it
has to find ways of dealing with these issues," she said.
She also cited cases of self-immolation in the town
of Heart. "These girls are burning themselves to death because
they have no other option in life to escape violence," she
declared. "They are committing suicide in order to escape a
life full of violence, not only from their husbands or fathers,
but sometimes even by mothers-in-law, surprisingly. So being women
does not free one from exercising violence unfortunately."
From: http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=15050&Cr=afghan&Cr1=
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