Afghanistan: Rights Watchdog
Alarmed At Continuing 'Honor Killings'
By Golnaz Esfandiari
September 20, 2006 - (RFE/RL) A UN-backed rights
watchdog has expressed continuing concern over violence against
women in Afghanistan. The Afghanistan Independent Human Rights
Commission (AIHRC) released disturbing figures in mid-September
on violence against women and girls, including dozens of cases
of so-called honor killings.
Mujahedeh's Story
Sixteen-year-old Mujahedeh was murdered by her
own father -- ostensibly to redeem her family's "honor."
Her offense? Her family had accused her of bringing shame upon
them by escaping a home in which she was subjected to daily beatings.
"She had enough," says Homa, a deputy
director of a women's rights group called the Center for the Growth
of the Talents of Afghan Women who got to know Mujahedeh. "She
escaped home and went to the Ministry of Women's Affairs. Then
she spent some time in a ministry shelter. She liked to go to
school and was busy studying. She was enjoying [better] conditions
and she didn't want to return to her family, but her mother insisted
they'd let her go to school -- her mother said, 'Your father has
forgiven your sin.' And she was finally forced to return to her
relatives Later it was heard from a neighbor or someone else that
her father had murdered her when she returned." Homa describes
the teenager as a happy girl who liked to read and write.
The Center for the Growth of the Talents of Afghan
Women has produced a documentary based on the plights of Mujahedeh
and other female victims of violence. Women and young girls are
being strangled, beaten to death, and burned by their fathers,
brothers, and uncles for refusing to enter arranged marriages
or for committing adultery.The movie is titled "Last Poem,
Last Night," and it has casts a spotlight on a practice that
women's rights defenders say is frighteningly prevalent in Afghanistan.
Unpunished Crime
Most cases of honor killings go unreported, and
perpetrators rarely face justice. Police and judicial authorities
often turn a blind eye to the practice. In Mujahedeh's case, no
one has been prosecuted. Her family claims that she died following
a sickness. But workers at the shelter where she stayed say she
didn't suffer from any evident health problems.
Dr. Soraya Sobrang, who heads the women's affairs
division of the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission, tells
RFE/RL that honor killings are widely accepted, and considered
by many Afghans to be a private family matter. "I can tell
you that they happen all over Afghanistan," Sobrang says.
"Most of them get buried within the family, and no one is
ever informed about them. But today, some cases are made public
and are disseminated -- so we are able to get some figures. They
take places in faraway villages in rural areas."
Underreported, But That's Improving
Sobrang says that since the fall of the fundamentalist
Taliban regime, violence against women -- including honor killings
-- is increasingly reported. She credits the information flow
to a growing media, but also a changing attitude among women.
"In 2005, we had 1,664 cases of violence against women --
including 47 cases of honor killings. In 2006, we've recorded
704 cases of different types of violence so far -- including 20
honor killings," Sobrang says. Those are only the documented
cases. The true figure is likely to be higher.
Women and young girls are being strangled, beaten
to death, and burned by their fathers, brothers, and uncles for
refusing to enter arranged marriages or for committing adultery.
In some cases, rape or sexual-assault victims are being killed
in macabre efforts at preserving family honor.
Family Values?
Homa says women who flee troubled homes are
also being murdered by vindictive family members. "Because
of traditions and customs, most families are not ready to take
in [women] who ran away or left home because of problems -- or
when they take them in, it is only because they have forced them
into accepting their conditions or because they want to punish
them in a way that [ensures] no one else would dare to do the
same," Homa says. The AIHRC's Sobrang says tribal practices
as well as freedom from prosecution are behind honor killings
in Afghanistan. "Honor killings happen mostly because a lack
of awareness -- because of insecurity and also because women and
children are the most vulnerable part of society. Our country
had put about 30 years of conflict behind it, so a culture of
violence dominates our society. There are also bad customs --
our society has been a patriarchal society."
Hope Of Progress
The Afghan Interior Ministry recently announced
the creation of a special commission to tackle the issue of honor
killings. A ministry spokesman, Dad Mohammad Rasa, insists that
such crimes are prosecuted. But in the same breath, he also concedes
that honor crimes are deeply entrenched in Afghan society. He
says stamping them out is a long-term project. Sobrang says the
judicial system and laws need to be reformed in order to stop
the practice. "This is one of the main ways to deal with
this problem -- it means the rule of law should be applied in
society and there should be security," Sobrang says. "Conditions
should be [created] so that women can be empowered.
Women should become active, and they should not
be economically dependent. And also cultural work should be done,
because violence has deep cultural roots." Both activists
say much groundwork needs to be laid to curb domestic violence
in Afghanistan -- including its most extreme form: killings in
the name of honor.
The United Nations estimates that some 5,000
women are victims of honor killings around the world each year.
Many cases are reported in Pakistan, Jordan, and Turkey. But the
practice also exists in other countries -- including in Albania,
Palestinian territories, and some parts of Iran and Iraq.
From: http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/09/7d9925b9-96ee-4698-b292-dc4eafb0e18e.html