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IRAQ: Widow numbers rise in wake
of violence
April 26, 2006 -(IRIN) More than 90 women become widows each day
due to continuing violence countrywide, according to government
officials and non-governmental organisations devoted to women’s
issues.
“Hundreds of households are losing their heads due to ongoing
violence, causing a drop in living standards,” said Mayada
Zuhair, a spokesperson for the Women’s Rights Association
(WRA). “More women now have to search for work to support
their children.”
“In addition to being widowed, these women don’t get
any government support,” Mayada added, “nor are their
rights respected.”
Although few reliable statistics are available on the total number
of widows in Iraq, the Ministry of Women’s Affairs says that
there are at least 300,000 in Baghdad alone, with another eight
million throughout the country.
Officials point out that at least 15 police officers’ wives
become widows every day because police constitute major targets
for the insurgency. “Every married police officer is concerned
about what he will bequeath his family,” said senior police
officer Major Khalid Maruf. “They fear that death is around
the corner.”
Thousands of Iraqi women lost their husbands during the ten-year
war with Iran in the 1980s. This number rose further during the
1991 US-led war with Iraq following the latter’s invasion
of Kuwait.
Local NGOs say the situation has become even more critical since
the 2003 US-led invasion of the country, which has given rise to
increasing violence and sectarian killing. “Saddam Hussein
was responsible for killing thousands of men during his 25 years
of brutal rule,” said Ibtissam Kamal, a member of a local
organisation that works on the issue but which prefers anonymity
for security reasons. “But more people have died during the
past three years, most of them men whose families are now without
support.”
Ibtissam’s NGO, which has received threats more than five
times in the past three months, is devoted to empowering women by
preparing them for employment. “We’re looking for funds
to support these women and try to reintegrate them into society,”
Ibtissam said. “We want to empower them by getting them jobs,
instead of having them rely solely on remarriage as a means of raising
their orphaned children.”
The Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs is also looking into ways
of helping widows who have lost husbands as a result of violence.
According to a senior ministry official, projects currently being
studied include the creation of more job opportunities and the establishment
of free day-care centres.
As is common with many of the government’s more altruistic
plans, however, funding remains an overriding concern. “A
lot of investment is required to implement these projects, and the
ministry lacks funding for new initiatives,” said Sinan Youssef,
an official at the social affairs ministry’s strategy department.
Youssef added that many marginalised groups were suffering from
a lack of government assistance. “We expect international
NGOs to help us provide these widows with the necessary support
to raise their children,” he said.
Under the Saddam Hussein regime, widows of “martyrs”,
particularly during the Iran-Iraq war, were provided with compensation
and free education for their children. In some cases, they were
provided with free homes.
Under the current system, however, no such safety net exists, and
widows have few resources at their disposal. “I lost my husband
six months ago, and don’t have parents to help me, because
they died in the Iran-Iraq war,” said recently-widowed Yousra
Ibraheem, 38. “My late husband supported me, but left me with
no means of sustenance.”
From: http://irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=53006&SelectRegion=Middle_East&SelectCountry=IRAQ
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