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Afghanistan:
Vice and Virtue Department Could Return
Women and Girls Again at Risk
July 18, 2006 – (Human Rights
Watch) Proposal to reestablish the Department for the Promotion
of Virtue and Prevention of Vice in Afghanistan raises serious concerns
about potential abuse of the rights of women and vulnerable groups,
Human Rights Watch said today.
President Hamid Karzai’s cabinet has approved the proposal
to reestablish the department, and it will go to Afghanistan’s
parliament when it reconvenes later this summer. It is not clear
what the department’s enforcement power would be. Nematullah
Shahrani, the minister of Haj and religious affairs, who would oversee
the department, has stated that it would focus on alcohol, drugs,
crime and corruption. Afghanistan’s criminal laws already
address these issues.
“Afghan women and girls face increasing insecurity, and it’s
more important for the government to address how to improve their
access to public life rather than limit it further,” said
Zama Coursen-Neff, senior researcher for Human Rights Watch. “Reinstatement
of this controversial department risks moving the discussion away
from the vital security and human rights problems now engulfing
the country.”
In a recently released report, “Lesson in Terror: Attacks
on Education in Afghanistan,” Human Rights Watch identified
the lack of access to education, especially for girls, as jeopardizing
the country’s future development and security. Human Rights
Watch pointed out that the proposed vice and virtue department does
not address the real problems of increasing insecurity in the south
and southeast, particularly attacks on schools, teachers and students
that are preventing children from attending school.
“The proposed vice and virtue department’s vague standards
for upholding morality could be used to silence critical voices,
and further limit women’s and girls’ access to work,
health care and education,” Coursen-Neff said.
A female member of parliament told Human Rights Watch that the proposal
was “a symbolic decision from the government but I’m
worried about it, maybe as always there will be some extremist violence
against freedom of speech on women’s issues. The only hope
is the Parliament.”
Under the Taliban, the vice and virtue department became a notorious
symbol of arbitrary abuses, particularly against Afghan women and
girls. The department ruthlessly enforced restrictions on women
and men through public beatings and imprisonment. The department
beat women publicly for, among other things, wearing socks that
were not sufficiently opaque; showing their wrists, hands, or ankles;
and not being accompanied by a close male relative. They stopped
women from educating girls in home-based schools, working, and begging.
They also beat men for trimming their beards.
President Karzai came under pressure from conservative political
figures two months ago to reestablish the department in order to
counter anti-Western propaganda by opposition groups. The president
then appointed a panel with representatives from the Ministry of
Interior, Ministry of Haj and Religious Affairs, and the Supreme
Court, which drafted a proposal and presented it to the cabinet.
The cabinet approved the draft and plans to submit it for parliamentary
approval when the Afghan National Assembly reconvenes later this
summer.
Human Rights Watch called on the international community to make
clear a commitment to Afghanistan’s long-term security and
reconstruction, and to avoid a return to repressive past practices.
From: http://hrw.org
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