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Self-Immolation
Seen as Only Escape
By Mohammad Jawad Sharifzada and Abdul Baseer Saeed
September 30, 2005-(IWPR London Reporters) Family
problems and desperate circumstances lead many young women to burn
themselves to death.
Five months after being married at age 12, Lila poured petrol over
herself and set herself ablaze. She whispered from her hospital
bed that she had wanted to kill herself because her 17-year-old
husband constantly beat her.
"My husband hates me and is always beating me. I ran to my
mother's place but my brother forced me to go back to my husband's
home," she said. With burns covering 35 per cent of her body,
she tried to remain immobile as she spoke.
Her 45-year-old mother, who asked not to be named, said she could
not prevent her daughter being sent back to the young but violent
husband. But she tearfully told IWPR, "I will never again allow
any of my daughters to be married under-age."
According to the new constitution, the legal age for marriage is
16 for women and 18 for men. But the law is frequently ignored and
there are reports that 57 per cent of marriages in Afghanistan involve
girls under 16.
Lila was just one of three teenagers being treated for burns after
setting themselves fire, when IWPR visited the overcrowded Howzawi
Hospital in the western city of Herat on one day in September.
Her marriage had been contracted when she was only six, as part
of an exchange arrangement that allowed her older brother to marry
a girl even though he could not afford the bride price demanded
by her father. As part of the deal, Lila had to marry the girl's
younger brother.
It was her elder brother who forced her to return to her abusive
husband.
Outside the ward, in a bed in the second floor corridor, 17-year-old
Fatima moaned quietly in agony from her burns. A year earlier, she
too had been the "bride price" in a swap for the girl
her brother wanted to marry.
From the first few months of her marriage, she was constantly beaten
by her husband who, she said, was in love with someone else. "I
burned myself so that I could relax for ever," she said, before
crying out suddenly, "My stomach is burning."
Her long, disheveled black hair frames a face painted over with
a dark blue solution to ease the pain. Burns cover almost 40 per
cent of her body, according to a doctor.
"I did this because I had no other alternative," she told
IWPR.
Herat has one of the highest incidences of self-immolation in Afghanistan,
and many doctors here think it is a common method of suicide here
because of the influence of practices in nearby Iran.
Dr Mohammad Hamyon Azizi, who heads the burns unit in the hospital,
said around 400 people in the province - mostly young women - had
attempted suicide by setting themselves on fire since 2002. Some
60 per cent had died.
Many of the patients come from families who had spent time in Iran
as refugees, he said.
"There are many factors why they try to kill themselves - low
levels of education, desperate economic conditions, compulsory marriages,
and from watching films and then comparing them with their own living
conditions in Afghanistan."
Sima Shir Mohammadi, head of the provincial women's affairs department,
pointed to forced marriages as another cause of teenage girls setting
themselves on fire.
But there were other reasons as well. "In one family, a 14-year-old
girl just wanted to wear a short-sleeve dress at a wedding party
and also dress like that at home. Her family would not let her,
so she set herself on fire," said Shir Mohammadi.
"Frustration in teenage marriages, where the husband can't
meet the wishes of a young wife, low levels of education, and forced
marriages which are a form of oppression by parents, leave some
girls seeing self-immolation as the only answer."
There are no precise figures nationally on how many girls kill themselves
this way, partly because many families see it as a source of shame
and try to hide the reason for the burns, attributing them to cooking
accidents. Suicide is also frowned upon for religious reasons.
Judge Ghulam Nabi Hakak, chairman of the human rights commission
for western Afghanistan, said they had tried to counter the increase
in self-immolation cases.
"We set up some workshops for men and women in towns and districts
and promoted women's rights from the point of view of Islam, with
the help of some mullahs in the mosques. We also published a book
called ‘Why self-immolation?’ and held several academic
seminars," he said.
Shir Mohammadi said her women’s affairs office had also tried
to use the media and had asked preachers to speak out against forcing
teenagers into marriage, but more needed to be done.
The department had produced a report on the problems faced by women
and their reasons for self-immolation, and this had gone to the
ministry for women's affairs. "I am waiting for a reply,"
she said.
Fouzia Amini, an official at the ministry, said she was unaware
of the report and claimed that the number of women setting themselves
of fire had "decreased from the past". However, she added
that nationwide there were reports of 57 cases of self- immolation
within the same number of days, "We have obtained these numbers
from the internet, and they are accurate." She refused to comment
further.
It was not possible to speak with the minister, Massouda Jalal,
who was quoted in the Kabul newspaper Outlook in August as saying
that 700 women had tried to burn themselves to death in 2004.
Sajia Behgam, an official with the German aid agency Medica Mondiale,
said her organisation’s figures showed around 500 cases of
self-immolation and other forms of suicide each year in Afghanistan
- but she said most cases were concealed by the families because
of the shame involved. Around half the known cases involved women
setting fire to themselves, and between 60 and 70 per cent of them
died. The other half involved women killing themselves by other
methods.
In Kabul's Istiqlal hospital – the main burns treatment centre
- director Sayed Hassan Kamel said 40 per cent of the hospital was
dedicated to burn victims. In August they had received 558 such
casualties, of which five per cent - 28 patients - were women who
had attempted suicide by setting themselves on fire.
One such case was an 18-year-old girl, Zarsanga, from Maidan Wardak
province, who was admitted in late September.
Her grandmother said the girl had complained earlier about being
oppressed by her mother-in-law and sister-in-law – another
common cause of misery for young wives.
"When I came home, Zarsanga was badly burnt, about 50 per cent,
so I brought her to the hospital," said the grandmother, who
did not want to be named.
Mohammad Jawad Sharifzada and Abdul Baseer Saeed are IWPR staff
reporters in Kabul.
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/arr/arr_200509_190_2_eng.txt
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