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Calls for an end to violence against
women
November 24, 2005 – (IRIN) Although the plight
of Afghan women has improved somewhat following the collapse of
the hard line Taliban regime in late 2001, acts of intimidation
and violence against them have continued unabated, with many women
- particularly in rural areas – believing that their situation
remains unchanged.
"Islam and the current laws of the country strictly condemn
violence against women, which is one of the false traditions of
our society," Masooda Jalal, the country's Minister of Women's
Affairs (MoWA), said, calling on people to recognise the extent
of violence against women in the country.
While domestic violence has traditionally been a
problem in conservative Afghan society, more than two decades of
brutal civil war have also fuelled the problem. "People should
know that violence against women brings about murder and suicide
in their families," Jalal maintained.
But that challenge won't be easy and resources for
the problem remain limited. There are just four shelters for women
in the country, all in the capital, providing refuge to more than
100 women and girls. Supported by different agencies and the MoWA,
the confidential centres are designed to provide protection, accommodation,
food, training and health care to women who are escaping violence
in the home or are seeking legal support due to family feuds.
"Often they are introduced to the MoWA by the
office of the attorney-general or supreme court, while sometimes
they come directly to our ministry," Shakila Afzalyar, a legal
officer at the ministry, said at the time.
Women interviewed at the shelter said they had broken
no laws, but were fleeing from brutality or forced marriages. Afghanistan's
new constitution guarantees equality before the law for men and
women, but the reality, the women point out, is very different.
One girl at a shelter, Paikai, just 12 years old, said she had been
compelled to marry the brother of her fiancé, who died before
marrying her. In another dramatic example, a local prominent poet,
Nadia Anjuman, 25, died after a serious assault in her home in the
western city of Herat in early November.
In an effort to mitigate such incidents, the women's
ministry has launched a nationwide awareness campaign to end violence
against women in post-conflict Afghanistan, with vehicles covered
with posters of acts of violence against women on the streets of
the capital and other cities. "We launched a nationwide campaign
a week ago to make people aware of the rights of women and to end
violence against them," Noria Banwal, head of economic development
department for the ministry for women said, adding the campaign
would continue until 10 December.
The period from 25 November to 10 December - International
Human Rights Day - has been designated as 16 days of global action
on violence against women.
"We want the international community to support
us in our campaign on violence against women and send us their messages
of cooperation," Banwal added.
From: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/ad4c605bda31a3c3888f197dfc39e679.htm
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