Afghan women battling repression
Olivia Ward
March 8, 2007 - (Toronto Star) Five years after
the Taliban were ousted from power in Afghanistan, many women
are still facing violence and discrimination
It's good news that Afghanistan's youngest member
of parliament is an outspoken 28-year-old woman, who fearlessly
criticizes the government and promotes the cause of women.
The bad news is that Malalai Joya travels with
six bodyguards, cloaks herself in a voluminous burqa outside her
home, and has survived four assassination attempts – by
men. The dangers she faces are familiar to many active Afghan
women today.
As International Women's Day dawns in Afghanistan,
Canadian forces are still battling the Taliban more than five
years after the Islamists were ousted from power. And the dramatic
contrast between the rights that women have gained since then
and the often bitter realities show that their ideology is still
casting a dark shadow over female lives.
"The Taliban were an extreme movement even
in the history of Afghanistan," says Vina Nadjibulla, of
Women for Afghan Women, based in New York. "Women are delighted
that it ended. But that doesn't mean the factors that caused the
Taliban are gone. Getting rid of them will be a long-term endeavour."
Under the Taliban, women were effectively silenced
and lived as though under house arrest. Girls were denied education
and their mothers the right to work at most jobs. A draconian
series of rules reduced the female population to slaves of their
male relatives, and punishment for breaking the rules was often
life-threatening.
Now, laws have been passed that give women basic
rights. And, says Kathryn Lockett of the London-based Womankind
Worldwide, "the instruments have been put in place for the
women's movement to build upon."
According to the group's wide-ranging survey
of the position of women in Afghanistan, that movement is growing
healthily, alongside a new body of law that is meant to dismantle
the damage done to women's rights by the Taliban. Women have been
voted into parliament in encouraging numbers, and women's voices
are regularly heard in the media.
The new Afghan constitution gives all men and
women "equal rights and duties before the law," allowing
women to work, run for parliament, vote and seek education. But
Lockett says, "the real challenge now is to have the political
will and security to enable the implementation of the laws."
For many Afghan women, the biggest problem is
pervasive violence – often related to badal, in which girls
and women are exchanged to settle debts or disputes, the practice
of paying a "bride price" which turns women into a financial
commodity, and early marriage that forces close to 50 per cent
of girls into wedlock before the age of 16, and some as young
as six.
Rape is common, and women may be punished if
they report it. But "honour" killings go unpunished,
and abuse of widows is widespread.
The despair of Afghan women is underscored by
growing reports of suicide by self-immolation. According to research
by German-based Medica Mondiale, 106 women and girls in Kabul
and Herat alone burned themselves alive between May and July 2006,
many of them victims of abuse after they were traded off to settle
debts or feuds.
The Afghan Department of Women's Affairs says
"forced marriages, lack of education and unacceptable customs
are the main reasons for the suicides." The horrifying method
is chosen because women have access to few tools other than cooking
fuel to set themselves alight.
But less dramatic problems also plague the female
population, says Nadjibulla. After a bombing near the U.S. embassy
in Kabul last September, "women had to really struggle with
their families to go to work. There is a feeling that if things
are unstable, women should be at home."
From:http://www.thestar.com/News/article/189564