AFGHANISTAN: Violence against women needs
to be addressed. UN rapporteur
July 20, 2005 - (IRIN) Violence
against women remains a huge problem in Afghanistan, a visiting
United Nations official said in the capital Kabul, on Monday.
Yakin Erturk, Special Rapporteur
of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights on violence against
women, its causes and consequences, had spent ten days visiting
Afghan cities. She said child marriages, many of them forced,
and continued to be a source of violence against women and girls.
Erturk, a Turkish national, urged
the Afghan government and donors to priorities the elimination
of violence against women as an integral part of public policy
and to link donor support to progress on human rights and the
protection of women.
It seems that the international community
has forgotten [Afghan] women and we can't allow that to happen,
she told IRIN on her last day of her visit.
Erturk said she was astounded at
how (invisible Afghan women remain and at how they only seem to
exist in public in relation to men.
If they [women] turn to the police
or the judiciary for protection and redress, they are likely to
face abuse and be just taken back to the abusive environment,
she said.
She called on the Afghan government
to prosecute those who organize and participate in child marriages
and to create safe havens for women at risk.
I urge both the Afghan authorities
and the international community to recognize that sacrificing
respect for human rights, in particular women's rights, to the
claims of stability, not only falls short of the United Nations
founding principles but is also politically short-sighted, the
Erturk said.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48209&SelectRegion=Asia&SelectCountry=AFGHANISTAN