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The Hidden War on Women
in Iraq
By Ruth Rosen
July 13, 2006 -(Global Policy Forum) Abu Ghraib.
Haditha. Guantanamo. These are words that shame our country. Now,
add to them Mahmudiya, a town 20 miles south of Baghdad. There,
this March, a group of five American soldiers allegedly were involved
in the rape and murder of Abeer Qassim Hamza, a young Iraqi girl.
Her body was then set on fire to cover up their crimes, her father,
mother, and sister murdered. The rape of this one girl, if proven
true, is probably not simply an isolated incident. But how would
we know? In Iraq, rape is a taboo subject. Shamed by the rape, relatives
of this girl wouldn't even hold a public funeral and were reluctant
to reveal where she is buried.
Like women everywhere, Iraqi women have always been vulnerable to
rape. But since the American invasion of their country, the reported
incidence of sexual terrorism has accelerated markedly. -- and this
despite the fact that few Iraqi women are willing to report rapes
either to Iraqi officials or to occupation forces, fearing to bring
dishonor upon their families. In rural areas, female rape victims
may also be vulnerable to "honor killings" in which male
relatives murder them in order to restore the family's honor. "For
women in Iraq," Amnesty International concluded in a 2005 report,
"the stigma frequently attached to the victims instead of the
perpetrators of sexual crimes makes reporting such abuses especially
daunting."
This specific rape of one Iraqi girl, however, is now becoming symbolic
of the way the Bush administration has violated Iraq's honor; Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki has already launched an inquest into the
crime. In an administration that normally doesn't know the meaning
of an apology, the American ambassador, Zalmay Khalilzad and the
top American commander in Iraq, Gen. George W. Casey Jr. both publicly
apologized. In a fierce condemnation, the Muslim Scholars Association
in Iraq denounced the crime: "This act, committed by the occupying
soldiers, from raping the girl to mutilating her body and killing
her family, should make all humanity feel ashamed." Shame,
yes, but that is hardly sufficient. After all, rape is now considered
a war crime by the International Criminal Court.
It wasn't always that way. Soldiers have long viewed women as the
spoils of war, even when civilian or military leaders condemned
such behavior, but in the early 1990s, a new international consensus
began to emerge on the act of rape. Prodded by an energized global
women's movement, the General Assembly of the United Nations passed
a Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women in 1993.
Subsequent statutes in the International Criminal Tribunals for
the Former Yugoslavia and for Rwanda, as well as the Rome Statute
for the International Criminal Court in July 2002, all defined rape
as a crime against humanity or a war crime.
No one accuses American soldiers of running through the streets
of Iraq, raping women as an instrument of war against the insurgents
(though such acts are what caused three Bosnian soldiers, for the
first time in history, to be indicted in 2001 for the war crime
of rape). Still, the invasion and occupation of Iraq has had the
effect of humiliating, endangering, and repressing Iraqi women in
ways that have not been widely publicized in the mainstream media:
As detainees in prisons run by Americans, they have been sexually
abused and raped; as civilians, they have been kidnapped, raped,
and then sometimes sold for prostitution; and as women -- and, in
particular, as among the more liberated women in the Arab world
-- they have increasingly disappeared from public life, many becoming
shut-ins in their own homes.
The scandal of prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib focused on the torture,
sexual abuse, and humiliation of Iraqi men. A variety of sources
suggest that female prisoners suffered similar treatment, including
rape. Few Americans probably realize that the American-run prison
at Abu Ghraib also held female detainees. Some of them were arrested
by Americans for political reasons -- because they were relatives
of Baathist leaders or because the occupying forces thought they
could use them as bargaining chips to force male relatives to inform
on insurgents or give themselves up.
According to a Human Rights Watch report, the secrecy surrounding
female detentions "resulted from a collusion of the families
and the occupying forces." Families feared social stigma; the
occupying forces feared condemnation by human rights groups and
anger from Iraqis who saw such treatment of women by foreigners
as a special act of violation. On the condition of anonymity and
in great fear, some female detainees nevertheless did speak with
human rights workers after being released from detention. They have
described beatings, torture, and isolation. Like their male counterparts,
they reserve their greatest bitterness for sexual humiliations suffered
in American custody. Nearly all female detainees reported being
threatened with rape. Some women were interrogated naked and subjected
to derision and humiliating remarks by soldiers. The British Guardian
reported that one female prisoner managed to smuggle a note out
of Abu Ghraib. She claimed that American guards were raping the
few female detainees held in the prison and that some of them were
now pregnant. In desperation, she urged the Iraqi resistance to
bomb the jail in order to spare the women further shame.
Amal Kadham Swadi, one of seven Iraqi female attorneys attempting
to represent imprisoned women, told the Guardian that only one woman
she met with was willing to speak about rape. "She was crying.
She told us she had been raped. Several American soldiers had raped
her. She had tried to fight them off, and they had hurt her arm.
She showed us the stitches. She told us, 'We have daughters and
husbands. For God's sake don't tell anyone about this.'"
Professor Huda Shaker, a political scientist at Baghdad University,
also told the Guardian that women in Abu Ghraib have been sexually
abused and raped. She identified one woman, in particular, who was
raped by an American military policeman, became pregnant, and later
disappeared. Professor Shaker added, "A female colleague of
mine was arrested and taken there. When I asked her after she was
released what happened at Abu Ghraib, she started crying. Ladies
here are afraid and shy of talking about such subjects. They say
everything is OK. Even in a very advanced society in the west it
is very difficult to talk about rape."Shaker, herself, encountered
a milder form of sexual abuse at the hands of one American soldier.
At a checkpoint, she said, an American soldier "pointed the
laser sight [of his gun] directly in the middle of my chest…
Then he pointed to his penis. He told me, 'Come here, bitch, I'm
going to fuck you.'"
Writing from Baghdad, Luke Hardin of the Guardian reported that
at Abu Ghraib journalists have been forbidden from talking to female
detainees, who are cloistered in tiny windowless cells. Senior US
military officers who have escorted journalists around Abu Ghraib,
however, have admitted that rapes of women took place in the cellblock
where 19 "high-value" male detainees were also being held.
Asked how such abuse could have happened, Colonel Dave Quantock,
now in charge of the prison's detention facilities, responded, "I
don't know. It's all about leadership. Apparently it wasn't there."
No one should be surprised that women detainees, like male ones,
were subjected to sexual abuse at Abu Ghraib. Think of the photographs
we've already seen from that prison. If acts of ritual humiliation
could be used to "soften up" men, then the rape of female
detainees is hardly unimaginable. But how can we be sure? In January,
2004, Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, the senior U.S. military official
in Iraq, ordered Maj. Gen. Antonio M. Taguba to investigate persistent
allegations of human rights abuses at Abu Ghraib. The Taguba Report
confirmed that in at least one instance a U.S. military policeman
had raped at least one female prisoner and that guards had videotaped
and photographed naked female detainees. Seymour Hersh also reported
in a 2004 issue of the New Yorker magazine that these secret photos
and videos, most of which still remain under wraps by the Pentagon,
show American soldiers "having sex with a female Iraqi prisoner."
Additional photos have made their way to the web sites of Afterdowningstreet.org
and Salon.com. In one photograph, a woman is raising her shirt,
baring her breasts, presumably as she was ordered to do.
The full range of pictures and videotapes are likely to show a great
deal more. Members of Congress who viewed all the pictures and videotapes
from Abu Ghraib seemed genuinely shaken and sickened by what they
saw. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn called them "appalling;"
then-Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle described them as "horrific."
Ever since the scandal broke in April 2004, human rights and civil
liberties groups have been engaged in a legal battle with the Department
of Defense, demanding that it release the rest of the visual documents.
Only when all those documents are available to the general public
will we have a clearer ¬and undoubtedly more ghastly ¬record
of the sexual acts forced upon both female and male detainees.
Meanwhile, the chaos of the war has also led to a rash of kidnappings
and rapes of women outside of prison walls. After interviewing rape
and abduction victims, as well as eyewitnesses, Iraqi police and
health professionals, and U.S. military police and civil affairs
officers, Human Rights Watch released a report in July, 2003, titled
Climate of Fear: Sexual Violence and Abduction of Women and Girls
in Baghdad. Only months after Baghdad fell to U.S. forces, they
had already learned of twenty-five credible allegations of the rape
and/or abduction of Iraqi women. Not surprisingly, the report found
that "police officers gave low priority to allegations of sexual
violence and abduction, that the police were under-resourced, and
that victims of sexual violence confronted indifference and sexism
from Iraqi law enforcement personnel." Since then, as chaos,
violence, and bloodletting have descended on Iraq, matters have
only gotten worse.
After the American invasion, local gangs began roaming Baghdad,
snatching girls and women from the street. Interviews with human
rights investigators have produced some horrifying stories. Typical
was nine-year-old "Saba A." who was abducted from the
stairs of the building where she lives, taken to an abandoned building
nearby, and raped. A family friend who saw Saba A. immediately following
the rape told Human Rights Watch: "She was sitting on the stairs,
here, at 4:00 p.m. It seems to me that probably he hit her on the
back of the head with a gun and then took her to [a neighboring]
building. She came back fifteen minutes later, bleeding [from the
vaginal area]. [She was still bleeding two days later, so] we took
her to the hospital." The medical report by the U.S. military
doctor who treated Saba A. "documented bruising in the vaginal
area, a posterior vaginal tear, and a broken hymen.'
In 2005, Amnesty International also interviewed abducted women.
The story of "Asma," a young engineer, was representative.
She was shopping with her mother, sister, and a male relative when
six armed men forced her into a car and drove her to a farmhouse
outside the city. They repeatedly raped her. A day later, the men
drove her to her neighborhood and pushed her out of the car. As
recently as June 2006, Mayada Zhaair, spokeswoman for the Women's
Rights Association, a local NGO, reported, "We've observed
an increase in the number of women being sexually abused and raped
in the past four months, especially in the capital."
No one knows how many abducted women have never returned. As one
Iraqi police inspector testified, "Some gangs specialize in
kidnapping girls, they sell them to Gulf countries. This happened
before the war too, but now it is worse, they can get in and out
without passports." Others interviewed by Human Rights Watch
argued that such trafficking in women had not occurred before the
invasion. The U.S. State Department's June 2005 report on the trafficking
of women suggested that the extent of the problem in Iraq is "difficult
to appropriately gauge" under current chaotic circumstances,
but cited an unknown number of Iraqi women and girls being sent
to Yemen, Syria, Jordan, and Persian Gulf countries for sexual exploitation.
In May 2006, Brian Bennett wrote in Time Magazine that a visit to
"the Khadamiyah Women's Prison in the northern part of Baghdad
immediately produces several tales of abduction and abandonment.
A stunning 18-year-old nicknamed Amna, her black hair pulled back
in a ponytail, says she was taken from an orphanage by an armed
gang just after the US invasion and sent to brothels in Samarra,
al-Qaim on the border with Syria, and Mosul in the north before
she was taken back to Baghdad, drugged with pills, dressed in a
suicide belt and sent to bomb a cleric's office in Khadamiyah, where
she turned herself in to the police. A judge gave her a seven-year
jail sentence ‘for her sake' to protect her from the gang,
according to the prison director." "Families and courts,"
Bennett reported, "are usually so shamed by the disappearance
[and presumed rape] of a daughter that they do not report these
kidnappings. And the resulting stigma of compromised chastity is
such that even if the girl should resurface, she may never be taken
back by her relations."
To avoid such dangers, countless Iraqi women have become shut-ins
in their own homes. Historian Marjorie Lasky has described this
situation in "Iraqi Women Under Siege," a 2006 report
for Codepink, an anti-war women's organization. Before the war,
she points out, many educated Iraqi women participated fully in
the work force and in public life. Now, many of them rarely go out.
They fear kidnap and rape; they are terrified of getting caught
in the cross-fire between Americans and insurgents; they are frightened
by sectarian reprisals; and they are scared of Islamic militants
who intimidate or beat them if they are not "properly covered."
"In the British-occupied south," Terri Judd reported in
the British Independent, "where Muqtada al-Sadr's Mehdi's Army
retains a stranglehold, women insist the situation is at its worst.
Here they are forced to live behind closed doors only to emerge,
concealed behind scarves, hidden behind husbands and fathers. Even
wearing a pair of trousers is considered an act of defiance, punishable
by death."
Invisible women -- for some Iraqi fundamentalist Islamic leaders,
this is a dream come true. The Ministry of the Interior, for example,
recently issued notices warning women not to go out on their own.
"This is a Muslim country and any attack on a woman's modesty
is also an attack on our religious beliefs," said Salah Ali,
a senior ministry official. Religious leaders in both Sunni and
Shiite mosques have used their sermons to persuade their largely
male congregations to keep working women at home. "These incidents
of abuse just prove what we have been saying for so long,"
said Sheikh Salah Muzidin, an imam at a mosque in Baghdad. "That
it is the Islamic duty of women to stay in their homes, looking
after their children and husbands rather than searching for work---especially
with the current lack of security in the country."
In the early 1970s, American feminists redefined rape and argued
that it was an act driven not by sexual lust, but by a desire to
exercise power over another person. Rape, they argued, was an act
of terrorism that kept all women from claiming their right to public
space. That is precisely what has happened to Iraqi women since
the American invasion of Iraq. Sexual terrorism coupled with religious
zealotry has stolen their right to claim their place in public life.
This, then, is a hidden part of the unnecessary suffering loosed
by the reckless invasion of Iraq. Amid the daily explosions and
gunfire that make the papers is a wave of sexual terrorism, whose
exact dimensions we have no way of knowing, and that no one here
notices, unleashed by the Bush administration in the name of exporting
"democracy" and fighting "the war on terror."
From: http://www.globalpolicy.org
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