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LOVE AFGHAN STYLE: WOMEN ARE STILL
BEING USED AS CURRENCY IN THE MARRIAGE MARKET
June 2, 2005 - (The Institute for War and
Peace Reporting) Zakira was given away in marriage to stop a blood
feud. Her uncle had murdered a man and, rather than start a round
of revenge killings between the families, 20-year-old Zakira was
bestowed on the murdered man's brother who happened to be three
times her age.
The young woman's misery can be clearly seen in her face but, she
said, at least she had the consolation of having restored peace
to the two families. "It is my fate," she shrugged.
Now aged 22 and obviously quite ill, Zakira is refusing to go to
a doctor. "I am praying to die, because anything is better
than this living death," she wept.
I do not know why God created women. We live no better than animals.
Forced marriages have long been a custom in Afghanistan. Daughters
are used as currency to settle debts, to facilitate advantageous,
if expensive, marriages for male children, or, as in Zakira's case,
to settle inter-family quarrels. But these marriages actually cause
as many problems as they resolve, according to women's rights experts.
Judge Fawzia Amini, director of the women's rights department at
the women's affairs ministry, said that, according to their research,
half of all family feuds begin with a forced marriage. This problem
is much more widespread in the provinces, she said, adding that
while the ministry is working on this problem, its powers are limited
and it is struggling against the heavy weight of tradition.
"We do not have any executive authority - the only way we can
work is through propaganda," she said.
Dr Khadija Alokozai, psychiatrist at Ali Abad hospital, said that
well over half of their mentally ill patients are female. Out of
these, she said, the overwhelming majority are women who have been
forced to marry against their will.
Qayamouddin Kashaf, a member of the Afghan Supreme Court, deems
forced marriages a nationwide problem. "Islam has given women
the right to choose their own husbands. Parents should not force
their children into marriages for their own benefit," he said,
adding that he believed people's lack of information about Islamic
law was to blame.
President Hamid Karzai addressed this problem at a gathering held
in Kabul on April 22, to celebrate Mohammed's birthday. The president
called on religious scholars to preach to the population against
forced marriage. ?Underage and forced marriage is against Islam,?
he said.
The problem of forced marriage exists all over Afghanistan, but
in the capital, at least, it seems to be on the wane.
Gulai Jan, 21, who was born in Kabul?s Shar-e-Kohna district, has
been promised to a man who already has two wives. Her parents are
giving her to the man in settlement of a large debt, but Gulai Jan
refuses to bow to her fate. The young woman has very little education,
but life in the big city has given her courage, or at least bravado.
"I will not accept this marriage even if they kill me,"
she said.
Once a woman is married, she becomes, in effect, the property of
her husband's family, with very little control over her life. Hassina,
35, is a widow. She was 18 when she was married to an old man because
her parents were in debt to him. Her husband passed away after a
relatively short time, leaving her with two small children. Hassina's
daughter is now 14, her son 13, and she wants to remarry. But her
male relatives her husband's brothers are refusing permission.
My in-laws are telling me that I have to either marry my husband's
brothers or remain a widow, she said, with tears in her eyes. "I
do not like my husband's brothers, so I prefer to remain a widow."
Parwin Mohmand, the author of this article, is an IWPR trainee in
Kabul.
From: http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/wp/wp_002_01_eng.txt
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