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The Women of Kosovo and Afghanistan Urge Iraqi Women
to 'Organize and Raise their Voice' During Reconstruction
May 25, 2003 - (US Advocacy Project) 'According to reports, Iraq's women
have been apprehensive to emerge in public because of the violence and
looting, and support seems to be growing for Islamic fundamentalism in
the south. Equally disturbing, the US and British occupation forces appear
to have made little effort to appoint specialists in women's affairs or
make women's rights a priority in the reconstruction effort. All of this
seems ominously familiar to the women of Kosovo and Afghanistan, who have
had to fight hard for a seat at the table of reconstruction.'
Two prominent women's networks in Afghanistan and Kosovo, representing
hundreds of influential women activists, have pledged solidarity to Iraqi
women and urged them not to be intimidated by the emergence of conservative
elements in Iraq that threaten to reverse years of steady gains by women.
In separate open letters, which have just been released, the two networks
also urge the occupying forces in Iraq to improve security - which poses
a special threat to women - and ensure that women's rights are guaranteed
in any new legal system.
The two open letters have been issued by the Afghan Women's Network (AWN)
and the Kosovo Women's Network (KWN). The AWN represents 24 NGOs and over
1000 individual women in Pakistan and Afghanistan. The KWN serves as a
coordinating forum for 32 women's groups in Kosovo.
'We encourage women in Iraq to organize, raise their voice, and be part
of the rebuilding of their country,' says the Kosovo letter, which was
drafted by Igo Rogova, chair of the KWN board. The AWN letter strikes
a similar note: 'We write this letter in solidarity with our sisters in
Iraq, as they face a similar rebuilding effort to Afghanistan. We encourage
Iraqi women to have a voice in the process.'
Unlike the women of Afghanistan, who suffered atrociously from the repressive
fundamentalism of the Taliban, Iraqi women were among the main beneficiaries
of Iraq's secular regime. The level of education among Iraqi women is
extraordinarily high. Iraq was one of the first Middle Eastern countries
to have a woman judge and government minister.
There is growing concern that these gains could be threatened by the post-war
chaos and by the emergence of religious conservatism, particularly in
the Shiite areas of southern Iraq.
It took a massive international lobby effort to get women involved at
the Bonn conference that planned the reconstruction of Afghanistan. But,
says the AWN letter, the lobby is now paying dividends: 'Women still do
not have enough representation in the transitional government of Afghanistan,
but we take hope from the appointment of Habiba Surabi as the Minister
of Women's Affairs and Sima Sumar as the leader of the Human Rights Commission.
Women also have been included in the Constitutional drafting process.
And even more women will be part of the Loya Jirga -- the decision-making
body that, in October, will approve or reject the final draft of the new
Constitution. Further, once the permanent government takes leadership
in Afghanistan and elections are held, 160 women representatives are guaranteed
seats in the new government. Others may be elected to non-reserved seats.'
The women of Kosovo also struggled to be heard following the war, but
emerged stronger for the experience: 'We greeted joyfully the decision
that put Kosova under a UN administration. But most of those (UN) agencies
did not recognize that we existed. Instead of dedicating all our energy
to helping women and their families put together lives shattered by war,
we had to spend efforts in fighting to be heard and in proving to UNMIK
that we knew what was best for us, that women in Kosova were not just
victims waiting to be helped. 'But we did not give up. We raised our voice.
We met with UN officials, wrote letters, went to meetings to present our
ideas, knowledge and expertise. We talked to donors and built alliances
with those international organizations in Kosova and abroad that genuinely
saw and related to us as partners in the common efforts to advance women's
cause in our country.'
The AWN letter recognizes that post-war insecurity poses a special threat
to Iraqi women, just as it does in Afghanistan: 'Even as we make progress,
there are tremendous obstacles that prevent women from taking a stronger
place in society. The most serious of these is the threat to women's security
from
husbands, fathers, fathers-in-law, brothers and warlords. These threats
make it difficult for women to work, to vote, to leave their homes --
not even to mention their holding a public office.'
The Advocacy Project has supported the KWN since 2002. AP is now working
with the Women's Commission for Refugee Women Commission to promote the
advocacy of the Afghan Women's Network.
Kosovo Women's Network: A
Cautionary Tale from Kosovar Women to Women in Post-War Iraq
Afghan Women's Network: Open
Letter to the Women of Iraq
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