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RESOLUTION 1325
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WOMEN'S GROUP FIGHTS FOR RIGHTS
IN THE NORTH
December 29, 2003 (IRIN) The opening of a
new women's and children's hospital in Arbil, northern Iraq, is
the latest victory for the region's main women's group.
The Kurdistan Women's Union (KWU) has more than 52,000 members throughout
Iraq and positions in the Kurdish government. General Secretary
Shirin Ahmadi told IRIN in Arbil that whereas women still faced
many problems, their situation was improving rapidly.
"Men in the Middle East don't have an open mind - their minds
are locked. But the situation of Kurdish women is much better than
in the south and centre of Iraq. Year by year things are improving
and we are trying to provide information to help this," she
said.
The hospital is the first to be established by the KWU and the first
completely free facility in the city. It includes dental, eye and
maternity treatment, as well as psychological help for women who
have seen and suffered so much in the past. There will also be social
workers to help women deal with the many problems they face in life
other than medical concerns.
Shirin said many doctors had already contacted her and offered to
work at the hospital free of charge. Help will also come from the
Kurdistan Regional Government and the American NGO Counterpart International,
which provided all the equipment and medical supplies for the hospital.
Counterpart's project manager, Shahla Muhammed, told IRIN that whereas
the hospital's premises were quite small, by the New Year it will
have been moved into those of a former hospital, where it would
be possible to perform surgery. The existing hospital would then
remain as a health centre for women and children.
At the hospital's opening on Monday, Counterpart's Iraq Programme
Manager, Sam Jones, described it as a "shining example"
of cooperation between different groups.
Another example of this is joint work by Counterpart and the KWU
to establish a library for women and children. Using lateral thinking,
six 14-metre containers initially used by Counterpart to bring aid
to Iraq by air are being modified to form components of the library.
Existing libraries were mainly full of textbooks, Shahla Muhammed
told IRIN, and this was an effort to create a place where people
could access other material and sit and discuss issues.
The aim was to broaden access culture and also to help "unlock
the community" by having a place where boys and girls could
come together. The library will be called Rozh, or sunshine, and
is being set up in an area where there are currently few facilities.
Counterpart will provide books, furniture and technical assistance,
while KWU will supply staff.
This was important to the task of enabling women to find jobs, income
and status, Shahla said, and would in itself encourage other women
to come to the library. An important section of it would hold children's
books - something none of the existing libraries in Arbil currently
have.
The plan is to open the library within two months.
Shirin, herself studying for a law degree, said there was nowhere
for women to study when they finished university, and the library
would hopefully fill that gap. Educating women was vital, she said,
and towards this end KWU had many programmes, including recently
having opened a computer training centre in Mosul for young women.
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