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AFGHANISTAN: Was Women's Vote a Roar, or
a Whisper?
by Rousbeh Legatis
September 27, 2005 (IPS) - While
the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush describes the
recent elections in Afghanistan as a major step forward for the
war-torn nation, human rights groups here wonder if women will have
an effective voice in the new parliament.
A few weeks before the Sep. 18 legislative elections, about 140
women were forced to withdraw their candidacies because of security
concerns, says Human Rights Watch (HRW), a New York-based advocacy
group, in a report documenting a number of cases where women were
unable to campaign in rural areas because of threats from warlords.
Titled "Campaigning Against Fear: Women's Participation in
Afghanistan's 2005 Elections", the report pointed out that
there were many "threats and obstacles" not only for the
women candidates but also their supporters, as activists, journalists,
and teachers.
"We are encouraged by the high numbers of women who registered
to vote, but have yet to see the actual turnout of women voters,"
Nisha Varia of Human Rights Watch told IPS after the elections.
"We expect that while turnout may be high in some areas, women's
participation as voters and as candidates was much more restricted
in areas still ruled by the gun, rather than by law."
Final results for the elections are not due until Oct. 22, although
women are supposed to be guaranteed a quarter of the parliamentary
seats.
However, Varia said that Afghan warlords who are obsessed with male
dominant customs and values created a variety of obstacles for women
willing to contest and participate in polls. "Imagine a woman
candidate who posts her photograph on a campaign flyer. She is challenging
social norms, given that most women still wear a head-to-toe burqa
in public," said Varia. "In some places, women candidates
did most of their campaigning through male relatives. We know of
one female election worker who was shot, and one female candidate
who was shot. A few others reported attacks on their homes and vehicles,
but the majority of women faced obstacles in the form of threats
delivered by telephone or letters from the warlords."
One female parliamentary candidate in the eastern city of Jalalabad
told HWR staffers in an interview, "I feel frightened. I am
not afraid of al-Qaeda, I am afraid of commanders who are candidates."
Even though warlords are the main security threat in Afghanistan,
many of them ran for parliamentary and provincial council seats.
"I do not share the enthusiasm of (Afghan President Hamid)
Karzai and Bush because they have often used women's participation
as an excuse to justify their policies," Sonali Kolhatkar,
co-director of Afghan Women's Mission, a U.S.-based non-governmental
organisation, told IPS. "The most dire threats to women's rights
are coming from fundamentalist warlords, whom both the U.S. and
Karzai have propped up and supported for years," she added.
Kolhatkar said only a very few steps were taken to get rid of candidates
with dubious rights records, noting that only about 50 out of 200
blacklisted politicians were excluded from the election. Selay (no
last name), the spokeswoman for the Pakistan-based Revolutionary
Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA), shares Kolhatkar's
observations on the inclusion of candidates who are known for widespread
violations of human rights, particularly women's rights. "They
include both the anti-U.S. Taliban and the pro-U.S. Northern Alliance,"
she told IPS in an email interview.
Women leaders note that many candidates had ties with illegal armed
gangs and fundamentalist groups. For example, warlords like Abdul
Rasoul Sayyaf, a former guerrilla leader whose abuses have been
documented by HRW, ran in the elections, along with Mohammed Qalamuddin,
former minister of the department of vice and virtue, which was
called "the most misogynist.department in the whole world"
by the U.N. in 1999. According to preliminary results released Tuesday,
Sayyaf was running fourth in Kabul province, which includes the
Afghan capital. With 9.2 percent of ballots counted from the province,
the most votes were going to the runners-up in the 2004 presidential
election, Mohammed Mohaqeq and Yunus Qanooni.
Noting that only 12 percent of the 2,707 candidates for the Wolesi
Jirga (Parliament) and less than 10 percent of the 3,025 candidates
for the provincial council were women, Selay said: "These figures
are not desirable at all."
According to press accounts, women were effectively denied the vote
in several provinces, including Zabul, Nangarhar and Khost, where
officials refused to set up separate polling places for women. U.N.
officials who closely watched the election scene in Afghanistan
see the democratic exercise as promising, but agree that women's
access to power is still far from being ideal.
"Women in rural areas continue to face very real difficulties,
including mistreatment and violence against them by men," said
Adrian Edwards, spokesperson for the U.N. mission in Kabul. "The
problem of child and forced marriage continues, with girls as young
as seven being promised to men much older than them. There continue
to be reports of honour killings, trafficking of women, and sexual
and domestic violence." Edwards said access to justice for
women remains "very poor, and women who do report crimes risk
being ignored, accused of sexual offences, unjustly tried or worse".
"This is a very difficult process in a country where law and
order and judicial institutions are still very weak," Filippo
Grandi, a U.N. official, regarding screening and disqualifying doubtful
candidates at a press briefing three days before the election. "The
justice system needs to be overhauled," said Kolhatkar. "Progressive
judges need to be hired. Currently there are some very fundamentalist
judges who pass very harsh sentences on women according to their
extreme interpretation of Sharia law." She said many of the
warlords who contested the elections as candidates hold conservative
views on women's rights -- ideologically similar to the Taliban
-- and will not be able to lead the country to protect women's right
to education.
However, activists acknowledge that there has been some progress
since the end of the Taliban regime, such as the quotas in the parliament
which ensure that there is participation by women. "But for
the most part, things are still very bad. Maternal mortality is
still among the highest in the world, and women have little access
to education, health care, employment and decent housing,"
said Kolhatkar. Given that the composition of the new parliament
is in favour of fundamentalist groups and warlords, Selay is not
so optimistic about an improvement in the human rights situation
for Afghan women. "We think it will be distrusting and a nightmare
for the Afghan people," she said of the parliament. "This
is the result of the wrong policies of the Karzai government and
their U.S. masters to promote, support and give a free hand to the
pro-U.S. warlords in Afghanistan."
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