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Violence mars Algerian women's
equality
December 17, 2007 – (Reuters) The sight of
women working as bus and taxi drivers, petrol pump attendants or
police officers in Algeria's larger towns can surprise newcomers
by suggesting women are emancipated in Algeria. They are not, feminists
say.
Such cases remain exceptions in a male-dominated
Muslim society in which, despite official appearances, women are
often treated like slaves and violently abused by husbands, fathers
and brothers.
"Don't be fooled by a minority of westernised
women," said Saliha Larab from Algerian women's organisation
RAFD. "Algeria remains a very conservative society that considers
women as second-class citizens."
Algerian women who fought for independence like
Hassiba Ben Bouali and Jamila Bouhired are still held up as heroines
in the north African country.
Equality of the sexes is enshrined in Algeria's
constitution and women hold senior positions in central and regional
government, the courts, security services and embassies.
The government says sexual harrassment has been
criminalised and provisions added to legislation to bolster women's
rights.
But up to a dozen women and children can sometimes
be seen sleeping rough on the streets in downtown Algiers at night,
many fleeing spousal abuse or rejected by husbands in family disputes.
According to police figures, 7,400 women in the
north African country of 33 million were victims of violence in
2005, up from 5,845 in 2004.
"The figures don't say much. The big problem
is most victims don't complain," said Larab."They stay
silent, fear reprisals by society. A woman does not have the right
to complain."
At a centre for women in distress in Algiers, Lamia,
35, said she had endured five years of beatings from her husband
in front of her young children before he threw her onto the streets.
She fled her village to escape a barrage of persecution
and insults from her husband and neighbours. Destitute, she appealed
to her own family but they rejected and abandoned her.
Lamia received no support and for a while lost
custody of her children. When they were returned to her she found
they had been sexually abused by one of her husband's relatives.
"I made a complaint but all I got in return
was another beating from my husband, who is a police officer."
Now in the shelter, Lamia's daughter is back in
primary school after a long break in her education. A non-governmental
organisation gave her legal assistance to claim rights such as child
maintenance payments from her husband and official custody of the
children.
HEROINES
Although reproductive health has improved dramatically
and the birth rate declined, the rate of illiteracy among Algerian
women is still twice as high as for men, at 37 percent, and only
13 per cent of women are in the paid workforce, according to the
United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).
With nearly a quarter of Algerians living below
the national poverty line and 70 percent of adults under 30 without
a job, frustration and insecurity are widespread and women are most
often the victims.
Amnesty International said in a report in 2005
that allegations of rape and other sexual violence were often not
investigated and those responsible were not brought to justice.
A 2005 amendment to the family code improved the
position of women by banning men from divorcing their wives for
no reason, giving women access to financial support from former
husbands and a right to a home if they gain custody of their children.
But President Abdelaziz Bouteflika rejected a recommendation
by a government-appointed reform commission to abolish a rule forcing
women to get permission from a male family member or so-called tutor
to marry.
Analysts say Bouteflika's decision not to drop
the clause from an amendment to the 1984 family code showed Islamic
parties still carry influence after a long-running militant uprising
that has claimed the lives of up to 200,000.
SINGING CAREER, SUICIDE
Wives and daughters who make their grievances public
often risk a violent revenge by incensed male relatives.
Fatiha, 53, filed for divorce after beatings from
her husband who disapproved of her career plans left her in hospital
for three months with severe trauma and fractures.
"All I wanted was to become a singer,"
Fatiha said. The repeated violence caused psychiatric disorders
in her children and one of her daughters attempted suicide, she
said.
Exhausted and unable to endure such humiliating
violence any longer, Fatiha sought refuge with her aged father while
waiting for her divorce, leaving the children with her husband.
When her father died and she was left without a
protector, her husband came with one of her sons to kill her, knowing
that she was alone in the house.
She escaped death thanks to a neighbour who warned
her of their plan, and found refuge at the Darna women's centre
in Algiers.
Now divorced, Fatiha has the freedom to develop
her talents as a poet and singer. With support from the women's
centre she has written a collection of poems, and made a CD expressing
her pain in song.
From:http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L1975358.htm
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