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WOMEN UNDER SIEGE
By Lauren Sandler
December 29, 2003 (The Nation) All the shades are
drawn in Raba's house on a wide residential street in one of Baghdad's
more affluent neighborhoods. Small daughters and nieces streak through
a well-appointed living room, leaving giggles and shrieks in their
wake, as their young mothers and aunts sip Pepsi from cans and make
wry comments in the darkened space. None of these women leave this
home, even so many months after the war came to its so-called end.
And Raba, a usually spunky twentysomething, is afraid even to stand
in her own doorway.
"Before the war we were out until 2 o'clock in the morning
all the time," she says. "Now I don't even bother to put
on my shoes."
Millions of women have found themselves living under such de facto
house arrest since the coalition forces claimed Baghdad in April.
They have been forced into this situation by a menacing triple threat
that has emerged since the war: First, Saddam Hussein threw open
the doors to his prisons in October 2002, releasing criminals onto
Iraq's tightly policed streets. Then came the fall of the regime
and the concomitant crumbling of law enforcement. And now, the Coalition
Provisional Authority (CPA) is treating a growing human rights crisis
for women as an extracurricular issue at best, leaving women at
the mercy of thugs on the streets and the religious parties that
have rushed into the political vacuum. Upwards of 400 women have
been kidnapped in this city alone, according to various women's
groups, and each horror story ripples with alacrity throughout each
neighborhood. Raba's story is one of them. As she leans forward
to fuss over a tiny niece, her auburn curls part to show a jagged
line of black stitches that vertically bisect her scalp. "My
wound from the war," she says with a sardonic laugh.
Raba and her fiancé were driving late one summer evening
in his Toyota RAV 4 when they were attacked by a band of men engaged
in a popular and profitable postoccupation occupation: carjacking.
As they were violently booting the fiancé from the car, one
of the men decided that Raba would make a nice addition to the evening's
spoils. But as he was attempting to rape her in the back seat, the
intrepid--more furious than afraid, she says--Raba pulled open the
door handle and flung herself from the speeding car. The next day,
her fiancé and her brother went to the police station to
report the stolen car. They didn't file anything regarding the attempted
rape, since, as she says, neither they nor the cops were interested.
"What did I learn from all of this? That what's important here
isn't a woman's life, but a nice car," she says, closing the
subject. She's more interested in talking about how she hasn't heard
a word from her fiancé since the incident, and our conversation
spirals easily into a lengthy eye-rolling and hand-squeezing conference
on men and commitment--the sort of thing we should be discussing
over brunch, or window shopping in the Mansour district, which everyone
says is very fashionable but which these days feels like a ghost
town. It's impossible for Raba and her relatives to imagine feeling
safe anywhere but in this room these days, her sister comments as
she jumps at the sound of what we hope is just a car backfiring
outside. "You can't imagine what this time has done to us,"
she says. "This is not how anything was supposed to be."
If you talk to women throughout Bagdhad, from the brave few who
venture out to beauty salons--some of which are now being targeted
by fundamentalist groups--to many others at their dining tables,
"This is liberation?" emerges as a constant, insistent
refrain. Not that they feel any great nostalgia for life under Saddam.
Far more women here have stories about husbands and sons who disappeared
into mass graves and torture prisons under Saddam than tales of
nieces and female neighbors who have gone missing since the war.
And sexual violence was a hallmark of a regime that employed men
to hold the job of "Violator of Women's Honor," who would
videotape themselves raping the wives of men the regime perceived
as suspect. But as women here will remind you, the advantage to
living under a police state is that the streets feel safe. As demeaning,
terrifying and tragic as life under a dictator was for Iraqis, threats
were not random acts from random criminals but rather tightly controlled,
deliberately deployed terrors. These days the sheer unpredictability
of violence is what makes the fear so pervasive. Then, women may
have been afraid to step out of line, but now they're afraid even
to step outside their homes alone.
It's not hard to find women in Baghdad who tell stories of life
since the war that make Raba's tale seem like a lucky break. Eighteen-year-old
Zainab and 14-year-old Hanaa can't use their real names, since every
day outside the semivacant office building they call home, a man
who wants to kill them sits parked in a white car. The two girls
were abducted and gang-raped in August when heavily armed former
neighbors of theirs burst into their front door late one evening.
After several hours of torturous violence at gunpoint Zainab escaped.
Hanaa wasn't so fortunate. She spent the next week blindfolded in
an abandoned house. Each night her abductors would tell her she
was to be sold the next day in the north, as part of a growing ring
of trafficking in abducted women. But word got out that Zainab had
gone to the police, and so they dropped Hanaa off at her doorstep
with the threat that if she told anyone what had happened to her,
her family would be murdered. Now every day the girls sit at home
in pajamas in the empty rooms they share with their mother and small
brother watching their sole luxury, a black-and-white television.
Their captors were a prominent Baathist's son and his newly released
felon cronies. "What do you expect?" said Zainab when
I first met her in the hours before the gang dropped a trembling
Hanaa at the door, when she thought she might never see her sister
again. "They let out the criminals. They got rid of the law.
Here we are."
Zainab and Hanaa say their only hope rests with the Iraqi police--a
cruel irony. It turns out that once the police impounded the car
used to abduct the sisters, they closed the case. The lead investigating
officer, a portly, chain-smoking man with a shaved head named Major
Hasan, refused to term the case kidnapping because the captors were
known by the girls in their old neighborhood. "They knew them,
yes? So how is it kidnapping?" he says. His treatment of the
case is hardly unique--it's standard practice. "All cases that
have to do with kidnapping, they are lies, they are not real. And
after the war we haven't received any case of rape," says a
thickly mustached Lieut. Khalil Majid Ahmed, who manages the all-male-staffed
precinct. My questioning of this assertion was met with livid bellowing.
"Has anyone tried to assault you? No? So how can you judge?
This subject should be closed!" His second in command--with
matching mustache--named Lieut. Col. Ra'ad Heider, elaborated vehemently,
"Iraqi society has customs and traditions that keep us very
well served. No American values are practiced here. Things that
have to do with women, rape, that kind of thing--we will never follow
American values!"
To women who remember the days before the cultural shifts that followed
the Baathist seizure of power in 1968, when freedom from rape was
an Iraqi value, not a Western construct, it's this misogynistic
culture that is an imposition. "Do you think this is the real
Iraq?" says Amal Al-Khaderi, a member of Baghdad's intelligentsia
who remembers a very different life here. "This is Iraq since
the wars. This Iraq where women are covered, stay inside, do not
speak their mind, this is not Iraq, not the real Iraq." Today's
Iraqi culture is a multilayered and deeply complicated dish of still-living
ancient tribal traditions, varying forms of Islam and the vestiges
of a modern secular society that not so long ago saw miniskirted
women working for equal pay, heading ministries and demonstrating
for equality throughout the nation's cities. Under Saddam those
women receded from view as their groups were outlawed and their
rights stripped. Today, when associations like the Iraqi Women's
League, the oldest such group in the country, are allowed free speech
and organization, subjects like rape go unmentioned for fear of
angering the newly empowered religious authorities. "We can't
even mention such things," says founding member Wassan Al Souz,
who shudders in frustration at the situation in which she finds
her group. "Just like under Saddam, the problem is the barrier
of fear" in this insecure environment, she says.
That is also why women's groups like the league have decided they
cannot take on the penal code Saddam enacted in 1990, which obliterated
most rights of women. "What is law? Something you write with
a pencil," the dictator once said flippantly, explaining why
he could change laws at will and ignore the Iraqi Constitution,
which guaranteed equal rights for men and women. His laws remain
what the police as well as judges, even women judges I met, enthusiastically
continue to enforce since the war. Laws permit a man to take up
to four wives, and they deny women rights in issues of inheritance
and divorce. Then there are laws like Article 427, which states
that a rapist is not guilty of rape if he marries his victim. Or
Article 409, which prescribes leniency for any man who murders his
female relative if she has had sexual intercourse--including rape--that
could dishonor the family.
At the CPA's interim Ministry of Justice, a row of cubicles crammed
into a marble stateroom in Saddam's former Baghdad palace, Zakia
Hakki taps away at her keyboard with long fingernails. This elegant
woman wrapped head to toe in black, who was one of Iraq's first
women judges, had just been hired by the CPA to make recommendations
about legal reforms. At first she seems like a true flash of hope
for women's rights within the occupation--a progressive past as
an activist in Kurdistan, a strong connection to her country, a
history of work and study in Washington. But after some prodding
she begins to describe the legal reforms she imagines, and the complex
ideological contradictions that bind so many Iraqi women present
themselves. For all her talk of change, Hakki does not believe Saddam's
laws should be jettisoned. "Take polygamy," she says.
"We need to change the law. If a man is going to take another
wife, it can only be because she is mentally ill, sexually dysfunctional,
can't have a child or has AIDS. You know, things like that. We can't
just let men do whatever they want just because they want it. We
need rules." The new rules, of course, sound awfully similar
to the old ones, but she justifies her modest approach simply: These
laws exist to protect the sanctity and longevity of the family.
And in this country that has known nothing for decades but fear,
the family and a strong and self-protecting tribal culture represent
the only hope for stability and comfort.
Tension between protecting the family and protecting women's rights
is a common theme in Iraq, when women gab over lunch in their homes
or discuss politics in the heavily guarded meeting rooms of the
CPA compound. This past September, I spoke with Governing Council
member Aquila al-Hashimi in the marble jewel box of a building that
only recently housed a segment of the fallen regime and now serves
as the council headquarters. As a member of the previous Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, al-Hashimi was not allowed to leave the country
without a male relative, so fierce was the notion that women, even
ones in high positions, needed to be protected. This perceived need
to protect women, said al-Hashimi, was inextricably linked to the
central concept of honor. And honor worked to represent not just
men's interests but those of the families they headed. It was the
ideal of protecting the family that made the law codes, and the
culture that absorbed them, palatable to women. "Take honor
killings," said al-Hashimi. "They only exist to protect
the family. That may sound crazy, but it is simply a question of
culture." (Two days after our conversation, al-Hashimi was
fatally shot, leaving only two women on the Governing Council.)
The women who live in fear of "honor" killings have little
support in Iraq, as Hadil Jawad attests. After Jawad ran off with
her neighbor--a man her family passionately disapproved of--eight
years ago, her parents and brother made regular visits to her husband's
family's home in the hopes that the couple would arrive and they
could make good on their desire to murder their daughter, or "wash
the scandal," as it is called here. She and her husband returned
to Baghdad after living on the lam before the war, Jawad says, but
she still expects every day to be recognized by a relative who will
put an end to her life. "I am scared to run into my brother
and my uncles, and yet I am still dying to hear news of my family,"
she sighs. Each time a woman is raped or even kidnapped--since most
families assume that the kidnapping of a woman results in rape--her
life is endangered not just by her abductors but by her closest
relatives. "A lot of women are like me," says Jawad, beginning
a litany of horror stories. Jawad, who unlike most women in this
city refuses to cover her long wavy hair with the hijab, or headscarf,
blames Islam and its Sharia law for the culture that she says makes
certain her future murder.
Other women activists are doing their best to work within the Islamic
system, like Manal Omar, a Muslim American who heads the Iraq field
office of the Washington-based group Women for Women International.
When Omar was attempting to set up work-training programs for women
here, she was astonished to hear many women say that they would
be breaking Islam's tenets if they took jobs. Omar's response was
to approach Shiite clerics throughout the country and convince them
to issue fatwas permitting women to work. "It's not news that
Islam and women's rights can coexist--I mean look at me," she
says, a round face full of urban American attitude glowing from
under her hijab.
Many Iraqis are hopeful that Islamic leaders will take it upon themselves
to institute changes in favor of women. Maybe--but I had to wonder
what kind of liberation that would be when I visited a small mosque
in Salam City one Friday afternoon. Mosques in Iraq open their main
spaces only for men to pray, but this one had announced the seemingly
radical decision to offer the space for a women's service instead.
That first Friday, more than a hundred women formed lines of black
abayas (the garment that covers all but a woman's face, hands and
feet), performing the elaborate kneeling and standing choreography
of Friday prayer in the stifling space. The two-hour service was
broken by a solemn sermon, in which the prayer leader repeated for
upwards of ten minutes the importance of waking two hours early
to prepare meals for husbands and children and to clean the house
so that prayer attendance would in no way interrupt domestic duties.
"We used to talk about equality," said Hanaa Edwards,
an Iraqi activist, after hearing about the service. "Now we
only talk about this kind of advancement."
A few do still talk about equality, most notably Yanar Mohammed,
whose bare arms in this sweltering country would be enough to establish
iconoclasm, even leaving aside the radically secular group she has
founded since the war, the Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq.
Mohammed travels with bodyguards and packs a pistol in her compact
handbag because of the death threats she has received for her very
public views. She has appeared on Al Jazeera arguing that the hijab
constitutes a form of slavery for women--a view not very popular
in a country where Shiite extremists have been invading university
classrooms with machine guns to threaten women who will not cover
their heads, as they have been doing since summer exams began in
occupied Basra. "Who should we fear more these days, these
religious fascists or the men who are kidnapping and raping women?"
she says, her dark eyes shining in anger.
But talk to Mohammed about how to establish a secular democracy
and impossible contradictions abound. "Of course everyone should
be given a free vote," she says, "and of course we should
have a secular government." The trouble is, it's likely that
only a small minority of Iraqis would use their votes to such ends.
Indeed, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the cleric who has the ear
and esteem of the majority of Shiites, who in turn make up the majority
of the country, recently proposed that Islam be "considered
a main source for the constitution," according to Jalal Talabani,
current president of the Governing Council. This will surely add
momentum to a constitutional process already on that track. The
council's appointed Constitutional Provisional Committee (an all-male
gang) had intimated that an Iraqi constitution would need to have
a distinctly Islamic flavor. Now Sistani and his representatives
want the general public to elect the constitution's drafters--a
move that would almost certainly ensure a Sharia-based constitution,
which does not bode well for women's rights.
For women, moreover, the sad irony is that while many Iraqis would
see any attempt to help them as a US ploy (à la Colonel Heider),
the coalition is doing nothing to help them anyway. In the aftermath
of so many failed wars, Saddam played the misogyny card as a way
of appealing to the millions of Iraqi men who felt their masculinity
had been robbed by defeat, and then poverty. The absence of action
on the part of the coalition is, in effect, doing much the same
thing, sacrificing women to the larger cause of currying favor with
an increasingly restive male population.
When the coalition claimed Saddam's palaces as its own and sought
to establish legitimacy and control with existing non-Baathist structures,
the Shiite majority Saddam had violently ostracized was the most
organized game in town. But the coalition failed to grapple with
the human rights consequences of a power shift in that direction,
especially as far as women, who make up 65 percent of Iraq's war-ravaged
population, are concerned. While new governmental ministries were
created to support various causes like the environment and displaced
people, a ministry of women's affairs was immediately rejected.
(Instead, a single person is the dedicated "focal point"
for women's issues; none of various people who have occupied that
revolving-door position have been permitted any real authority within
the coalition.) Over dinner in the palace cafeteria one night, when
I discussed the accelerating crisis for women with two high-ranking
American officials in the Interior Ministry--which oversees police
and security--I was told with shocking candor as my pen perched
over my reporter's notebook: "We don't do women." It's
hardly a dirty secret that our government abroad views women's rights
as at most a secondary concern, yet it was thoroughly sobering to
hear this lack of interest so casually discussed.
As anticoalition violence erupts with greater intensity, officials
retreat farther behind the tank-guarded checkpoints of their security
compound, and many of the existing resources of Iraq--the once-great
university system, the numerous women's groups that dream of the
opportunity to take advantage of their newfound freedom of speech,
the millions of educated women who survived the terrors of the regime
only to be threatened by random abduction, rape and murder--are
being overlooked and squandered in favor of tribal and Islamic structures
and the airlifted and imposed rule by US-led committee. The Americans'
utter lack of comprehension of what Iraqi women have to offer was
apparent at a meeting about women's work prospects, when one well-meaning
camouflage-clad officer said to rows of female attendees, including
many professionals such as judges and doctors, "Under the occupation,
you can think about what work is appropriate for women to do--you
don't have to just sew anymore."
Before her death, Governing Council member al-Hashimi warned of
putting too much emphasis on what the coalition could accomplish
through top-down initiatives. "You must not impose by laws
what culture should be. Culture creates laws, not the other way
around," she said. Of course, laws can provide a buffer when
culture fosters human rights abuses. But al-Hashimi's ideas resonate
with many people working to address the difficulty of life as an
Iraqi woman, like Hanaa Edwards, whose group, called Al Amal (Arabic
for "hope"), is instituting human rights training courses
for women throughout Baghdad, modeled on a program thousands of
women have attended in the more liberal Kurdish north. "I used
to think in terms of political reform," says this veteran of
the 1960s student movement. "Now I think about the grassroots.
Now, humanitarian assistance is what's important." It is perhaps
unimaginable now that the governing authority could work at the
grassroots level as well, establishing shelters for women in need,
or reforming the social infrastructure, which now requires women
who have been raped to undergo a forensics test at the morgue and
counsels women seeking divorce to work it out with their husbands.
Unless the coalition and the conservative tribal and religious authorities
of Iraq are somehow compelled to recognize that women are crucial
to the future of the country--not just as mothers and homemakers
but as full members and leaders of Iraqi society--the current situation
is not likely to improve. Which means, for example, that men will
continue to have the right to marry additional wives without spousal
permission, except if Hakki's reforms pass, in which case they would
have to demonstrate their wife (or wives') sexual dysfunction or
mental illness. Hadil Jawad will continue to live under threat,
knowing that if her brother or father or uncle sees her he may shoot
her in the head, or strangle her with a rope, or stab her to death
with a kitchen knife, as a member of the Iraqi police nonchalantly
described the manner of so many honor killings. Zainab and Hanaa
will continue to believe that the Iraqi police force that ignores
them is in fact safeguarding them as they hide out at home. And
each day it becomes less likely that Raba and the millions of women
like her will stay out until 2 o'clock in the morning any time soon.
From: http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20031229&s=sandler
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