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Women Suffer Untold Violence and
Repression in U.S.-Occupied Iraq
Interview with Yifat Susskind, communications director with MADRE
and author of a report on violence against Iraqi women, conducted
by Melinda Tuhus
March 12, 2007 – (scoop)
The situation for Iraqi women since the U.S. invasion four years
ago this month has deteriorated dramatically by every measure of
daily survival: lack of access to clean water, electricity, food,
education and jobs; and the absence of personal security. Women
have virtually disappeared from public life in Iraq, yet their disappearance
has been barely noted by media coverage of the war.
On March 6, MADRE, an international women's human rights organization
based in New York City, released a report titled, "Promising
Democracy, Imposing Theocracy: Gender-Based Violence and the US
War on Iraq." The report, made public at a meeting of the Commission
on the Status of Women at the United Nations, exposes what it calls
"the incidence, causes, and legalization of gender-based violence
in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion."
Between The Lines' Melinda Tuhus spoke with Yifat Susskind, communications
director with MADRE, and author of the report. She discusses how
Iraq's gender war and civil war are intertwined, as well as the
role of U.S. occupation forces in the abuse of Iraqi women.
YIFAT SUSSKIND: Iraqis really have faced two inter-related crises
since the U.S. invasion. One is, of course, the civil war and the
sectarian cleansing that we’ve heard so much about. And another
we’ve heard much less about, and that is this a very directed
campaign of violence against women. The fact is that the systematic
attacks on women and the sectarian cleansing are deeply intertwined.
One of the things that MADRE was warning about back in 2005 when
the Iraqi constitution was being drafted is that a lot of the provisions
in the constitution that set the stage for sectarian conflict also
inscribed what we’ve been calling gender apartheid –
in other words, separate sets of laws, separate and unequal laws,
for men and women on the basis of gender. All the articles of the
constitution use sharia, or clerics’ interpretations of Islamic
law, as the basis for national legislation in Iraq under the new
constitution. It allows people who are unelected – in some
cases self-appointed – religious authorities to de
BETWEEN THE LINES: Under Saddam Hussein, Iraq was a secular society
and women had a lot of freedom and access to education and a wide
range of jobs. Now it seems like you never see women in the public
square at all.
YIFAT SUSSKIND: Well, I mean Iraqi women across the board are saying
their lives are much, much worse now even than they were under the
very brutal regime of Saddam Hussein. And that’s because violence
now is really indiscriminate. It’s based on gender in many
cases. But anybody who’s a woman (is) targeted. The so-called
punishment committees of the Islamist militias in much of Iraq are
patrolling streets and they’re attacking women who don’t
dress to their liking. In a lot of places, these Islamists kill
women who wear pants or appear in public without a head scarf. You
know, most Iraqi women are virtually confined to their homes now,
because of the likelihood of being beaten or raped or abducted in
the streets.
BETWEEN THE LINES: And what about this recent case of a young Sunni
woman going public with accusations of rape by Shia policemen? President
al Maliki’s first response was to say they would investigate,
and a few hours later he declared that she was lying. Given the
fact that women in Iraq are often blamed and punished even when
they’re the victims of rape, I can’t imagine her lying
about it. Does MADRE have information about how widespread sexual
assault is there now, situation for women? I can’t imagine
her lying.
YIFAT SUSSKIND: The irony is that we saw that case presented very
much in isolation. This young woman may have been the first Iraqi
rape survivor to go on national television, but she’s hardly
the first woman to accuse the U.S.-trained police force. One of
the things that MADRE documents in our report is that 10 different
Iraqi organizations and several major international agencies have
all documented evidence of extensive rape and other forms of sexualized
torture against Iraqi women by the police force that is sponsored
by the U.S. And in that way, the Iraqi police are very much following
in the footsteps of their U.S. sponsors, who themselves have a terrible
record of rape and gender-based torture -- the most famous cases
coming out of Abu Ghraib, but the truth is that gender-based violence
in the prisons of Iraq, whether they’re being run by U.S.
forces or Iraqi forces, is really kind of a routine horror now.
BETWEEN THE LINES: Your report also criticizes all the media, including
the so-called alternative media of which I’m a part, for really
not bringing this forward. And it’s true. I try to talk to
groups like MADRE occasionally to get an update on these issues,
but it certainly isn’t a big story out there, even though
there’s so much coverage of the war in Iraq. What do you think
needs to happen to improve this situation?
YIFAT SUSSKIND: Well, you know, the most simple answer I can give
is to listen to Iraqi women. These are people whose voices have
really been shut out of the discussion and the analysis of what’s
going on in Iraq, despite the fact that women comprise, as they
do in most countries, over half the population. What MADRE does
in our report is retell the story of the Iraq war from the perspective
of Iraqi women. And when we do that, we can see really clearly both
the epidemic of violence that has gripped Iraq under U.S. occupation.
And we can see that what’s true in every country is true in
Iraq, namely that women’s human rights and democratic rights
really go hand in hand, and that the Bush administration, for all
its rhetoric, really has contempt for both genuine democracy and
women’s rights.
From: http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0703/S00217.htm
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