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Iraq: Freedom lost
December 13, 2007 - (The Guardian)
After the invasion of Iraq, the US government claimed that women
there had 'new rights and new hopes'. In fact their lives have become
immeasurably worse, with rapes, burnings and murders now a daily
occurrence.
They lie in the Sulaimaniyah hospital morgue in Iraqi Kurdistan,
set out on white-tiled slabs. A few have been shot or strangled,
some beaten to death, but most have been burned. One girl, a lock
of hair falling across her half-closed eyes, could almost be on
the point of falling asleep. Burns have stretched the skin on another
young woman's face into a fixed look of surprise.
These women are not casualties of battle. In fact, the cause of
death is generally recorded as "accidental", although
their bodies often lie unclaimed by their families.
"It is getting worse, especially the burnings," says Khanim
Rahim Latif, the manager of Asuda, an Iraqi organisation based in
Kurdistan that works to combat violence against women. "Just
here in Sulaimaniyah, there were 400 cases of the burning of women
last year." Lack of electricity means that every house has
a plentiful supply of oil, and she accepts that some cases may be
accidents. But the nature and scale of the injuries suggest that
most were deliberate, she says, handing me the morgue photographs
of one young woman after another. Many of the bodies bear the unmistakable
signs of having been subjected to intense heat.
"In many cases the woman is accused of adultery, or of a relationship
before she is married, or the marriage is not sanctioned by the
family," Khanim says. Her husband, brother or another relative
will kill her to restore their "honour". "If he is
poor the man might be arrested; if he is important, he won't be.
And in most cases, it is hidden. The body might be dumped miles
away and when it is found the family says, 'We don't have a daughter.'"
In other cases, disputes over such murders are resolved between
families or tribes by the payment of a forfeit, or the gift of another
woman. "The authorities say such agreements are necessary for
social stability, to prevent revenge killings," says Khanim.
In March 2004 George Bush said that "the advance of freedom
in the Middle East has given new rights and new hopes to women ...
the systematic use of rape by Saddam's former regime to dishonour
families has ended". This may have given some people the impression
that the American and British invasion of Iraq had helped to improve
the lives of its women. But this is far from the case.
Even under Saddam, women in Iraq - including in semi-autonomous
Kurdistan - were widely recognised as among the most liberated in
the Middle East. They held important positions in business, education
and the public sector, and their rights were protected by a statutory
family law that was the envy of women's activists in neighbouring
countries. But since the 2003 invasion, advances that took 50 years
to establish are crumbling away. In much of the country, women can
only now move around with a male escort. Rape is committed habitually
by all the main armed groups, including those linked to the government.
Women are being murdered throughout Iraq in unprecedented numbers.
In October the UN Assistance Mission in Iraq (Unami) expressed serious
concern over the rising incidence of so-called honour crimes in
Iraqi Kurdistan, confirming that 255 women had been killed in just
the first six months of 2007, three-quarters of them by burning.
An earlier Unami report cited 366 burns cases in Dohuk in 2006,
up from 289 the year before, although most were not fatal. In Irbil,
the emergency management centre had reported 576 burns cases since
2003, resulting in 358 deaths.
When questioned, Iraqi doctors have told UN investigators that many
of these burnings are self-inflicted. "More than half of these
women had sustained between 70-100% burns which, according to doctors,
suggested that they were self-inflicted," the earlier Unami
report said. A UN human rights officer has relayed to me the words
of one judicial investigator in Irbil: "The woman is unhappy,
or there is domestic abuse, but the family doesn't listen. So she
does it because she wants to draw attention to herself."
The claim that some of these injuries are self-inflicted is something
you hear from different quarters in Iraq. The human rights minister
in the Kurdistan regional government, Yousif Aziz, says: "[Burnings
take] place daily. Some are killed, some burn themselves."
Activists, however, say that if the wounds are self-inflicted, it
is because the women have been forced to do it.
The Iraqi penal code prescribes leniency for those who commit such
crimes for "honourable motives", enabling some of the
men involved to get off with no more than a fine. The Kurdish authorities,
Aziz says, have removed these provisions for leniency from the code
- but the killings continue to mount. "The politicians say
the situation of women is all right with the new constitution in
Iraq and new laws in Kurdistan," says Khanim, "but it
is deteriorating."
Khanim's organisation sees cases from across Iraq, including from
Baghdad and as far away as Basra. She tells me of a man from Kirkuk
who accused his sister of adultery. "When we asked him why
he wanted to kill his sister, he said, 'Because it is now a democracy
in Iraq'. He thought that democracy meant he could do whatever he
wanted." But the man's stupidity hid an important point: under
the new system of government developing in Iraq, family disputes
are increasingly settled not in state courts but by local tribal
or religious authorities. "Not that any religion allows such
abuse - it is the culture," says Khanim. "And we see cases
from all the communities, including the Christians. It is even worse
outside Kurdistan."
An Iraqi staff member at the UN mission agrees. "As there is
no state authority in Iraq, everyone turns to the local sheikh.
Every year since 2003 honour killings have increased." In just
one month last year, 130 unclaimed women's bodies were counted in
the Baghdad morgue, a representative from the Organisation of Women's
Freedom in Iraq has told the BBC. Another women's activist tells
me why she refuses all media interviews: "The work has to be
secret. In Kurdistan it is possible, but in Baghdad we couldn't
open a shelter for women, we would just be attacked."
In a nondescript building on a busy road in the north I visit one
of the few secret shelters in Iraq for women fleeing violence. A
broom-cupboard door is unlocked to reveal a hidden staircase, leading
to a two-room apartment where the morning sunshine and the hum of
traffic filter through high-set windows. A pile of thin mattresses
show that up to 20 women can stay here at any one time. The most
recent arrivals are a woman and her two children from the local
area. The woman, Zaynab, says she wants to divorce her abusive husband,
a drunk, but he has refused. She had gone to live with her mother
but he had come to threaten her. "I love my children. My family
wanted me to marry again but I don't want to marry anyone, I want
to be with my children." She stretches her arm out towards
the room next door where her curly-haired daughter, eight, and son,
seven, are playing.
Nur is here because she helped someone on impulse. Near her home
in Diyala she heard the screams of a man locked in a compound and
helped him escape. It turned out he was being tortured by a militia
group. Later, the militia found out she had helped the man. "My
father is dead, I have no brothers, just my mother and my little
sister. They can't protect me." She fled north to Kirkuk, where
she heard about the shelter.
Solaf, the young manager of the shelter, is used to receiving threats
herself. (Her name, like those of Nur and Zaynab, has been changed
for this article.) With nowhere else for the women to go, she tries
to negotiate with their families to see if they can be reconciled,
sometimes threatening to take them to court. "Women now know
more about human rights, but the men and the culture don't allow
it. Sometimes the family marries off the daughter from a young age
- from 12 years old. But even if she stays out shopping too long,
they say she is a bad woman."
I ask about the burnings. "Sometimes the family burns their
daughter or wife, because no one can tell. They say in the hospital
it was an accident. Some kill themselves." Solaf can see that
I still find it hard to accept that someone, even under duress,
would commit suicide by burning herself alive. "You have to
realise," she says, "that the family just locks the girl
into a room until she does it. They may leave her a knife, but it
is hard to kill yourself with a knife. In one way, it is easier
with fire."
At the Iraqi parliament in Baghdad, the women MPs file into the
chamber beside their male counterparts, smiling, arguing, some in
white or coloured headscarves, a few in the full-length abaya or
the Iranian-style chador, a handful with heads uncovered. Under
the new constitution a quarter of the 275 seats are reserved for
women, making the level of female representation among the highest
in the world. But, as one MP reminds me: "Even getting here
is dangerous. People watch you come in." In 2005, one female
MP, Lamia Abed Khadouri, was gunned down and killed on her doorstep.
"If security in Iraq can be provided - and it's a big if -
then we have great hope," says a Baghdad economics professor
who herself survived an assassination attempt last year (and also
asked not to be named). "Three years has been a short time
for women to be mainstreamed in the political establishment, but
women have had the courage to expose themselves as activists. They
have a chance to prove themselves outside of the home, to establish
NGOs, to work in parliament and in the private sector." But
asked if she believes that security will improve in the long term,
her optimism disappears. "No. It is not in the interest of
the different groups that make up the government for the security
situation to get better. The domination of the religious parties,
which is a negative for women, is helped by the insecurity. The
ground is emptied for them."
While the new constitution has empowered women in parliament, she
fears that what it has to say about the family may have had the
opposite effect in the home. A committee reviewing the constitution
is due to present its final amendments to parliament by the end
of the year, and an alliance of women's organisations has been lobbying
for the removal of article 41, under which the old statutory family
law will be replaced with a new system where marriage, divorce,
custody and inheritance will be determined according to the different
religions and sects in Iraq.
Campaigners argue that this would strengthen the control of religious
institutions and give "constitutional legitimacy to sectarianism".
Most of all they fear an explosion in violence against women as
traditional tribal codes take hold.
But only two of the committee's 27 members are women, and many of
the women MPs represent the more conservative religious parties.
Some are escorted everywhere by their husbands. A cabinet minister
in Baghdad tells me: "The Islamisation had already started
under Saddam, but now it is much more pronounced. My young son came
to me laughing and showed me what he had in his schoolbook. It was
a verse from the Koran saying that when a man has a son in his family
he will be happy but when a girl is born he will be sad. They had
made them learn that."
Many meetings for MPs are now held outside the country. One evening
earlier this year I joined a group of women MPs in Amman who were
attending a UN gathering on women's rights. During a traditional
Jordanian meal of mansaf - lamb cooked in goat yoghurt - one of
them, Samira al-Musawi, a member of Iraq's ruling Shia alliance
and chair of the women's committee in the Iraqi parliament, said:
"We are making progress, because now we are a democracy and
we can discuss these issues together." Her faced framed in
black, she dismissed the concerns over article 41 and said that
"only one or two" members of her committee wanted it changed.
Reaching forward for some green salad known locally as zjerzil,
she suddenly pulled back. "It is haram - forbidden," explained
her companion, and then in an undertone: "It increases sexual
desire." I broke off a small corner of the leaf. It was a kind
of rocket.
At another table, an Arab Sunni MP in a white headscarf disagreed
pointedly over article 41. "We want the old law back, we and
the Kurds, but the Shia prevent it. You want to know what the situation
of women is? How many widows are there now?" But her bitterest
comments were reserved for Iraq's prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki.
Earlier that week three members of the interior ministry's public
order forces had been accused of raping a Sunni woman, who was admitted
to a hospital in the government's fortified green zone compound.
Two days later, Al-Maliki publicly rejected the woman's account
and instructed that the policemen should be honoured. "They
may have done it, or they may not, but how could he just say she
was lying before any proper investigation had been done? He has
turned them into heroes."
The coordinator of a women's organisation in Baghdad, who asked
not to be named, says some groups target women - through kidnapping
or sexual assault - "to make a family weak". "A girl
was raped and returned to her family but she committed suicide rather
than face the shame. Saddam was a dictator but at least then we
had the freedom to go out. Then there was only one criminal - Saddam
- but now they are everywhere, you do not know who your persecutor
is."
Claims of rape being used as a weapon of war to humiliate and terrify
communities are now frequently made against all the main parties
in the conflict, and not just Iraqi forces. Since 2003 US forces
have denied numerous allegations that soldiers have raped and abused
female detainees or held them as bargaining chips in the hunt for
family members wanted as insurgents. But the Pentagon's Taguba report
into abuse at Abu Ghraib prison confirmed that US military police
had photographed and videotaped naked women prisoners and referred
to a guard "having sex with a female detainee". Earlier
this year, four US soldiers were found guilty of the rape and murder
of 14-year-old Abeer Qasim Hamza and three members of her family
in Mahmoudiya, south of Baghdad, in an attack the US military had
at first blamed on Sunni insurgents. Abeer's body had been set on
fire, her killers believing that their guilt could be burned away.
Rapes carried out against Shia or Christian women have been justified
by insurgent groups as revenge for what was done to women in Abu
Ghraib. But the extent to which the abuse of women has become both
the vehicle and the justification for sectarian hatred in Iraq was
demonstrated most chillingly in the April killing of Du'a Khalil
Aswad. A 17-year-old from Nineveh, Du'a was stoned in front of hundreds
of men, some of whom videoed what happened on their mobile phones.
Climbing steadily past olive groves north of Mosul, the road into
Du'a's home town of Bashiqa is dominated by the conical shrines
of the Yezidi sect, an ancient religion that predates both Islam
and Christianity. Their veneration of a fallen angel in the form
of a blue peacock has led to the common slur in Iraq that the Yezidis
are devil-worshippers and the community suffers entrenched discrimination.
After Du'a's death, the international media widely repeated a claim
made on a number of Islamic extremist websites that she had been
killed because she converted to Islam, but local reports do not
concur. Some people tell me she had run away with her Muslim boyfriend
and they had been stopped at a checkpoint outside Mosul; others
say she had been seen by her father and uncle just talking with
the boy in public and, fearing her family's reaction, they had sought
protection at the police station. Either way, the police handed
Du'a into the custody of a local Yezidi sheikh. One woman tells
me that after she was stoned in the town square, Du'a's body was
tied behind a car and dragged through the streets.
But the killers' taste for publicity quickly backfired. As the videos
circulated around mobile phones in the region, and were even posted
on the internet, Islamic extremists called for Yezidis to be killed
in revenge. Meanwhile Du'a's body was exhumed and sent to the Medico-Legal
Institute in Mosul so that tests could be performed to see whether
she had died a virgin.
Just after 3pm on April 22 a bus carrying workers from a textile
factory in Mosul back to Bashiqa was stopped at a fake checkpoint.
Gunmen ordered the Muslims and Christians off the bus and drove
it to the east of the city. They then dragged out the Yezidis. They
were lined up, there was a shout of "Allah, curse your devil"
and then they were shot. Other Yezidis living in the city started
fleeing to the countryside, as an extremist Sunni group claimed
responsibility. In all 24 Yezidi men were killed.
Three days later, I was printing out the first local reports of
the massacre at a ramshackle business centre in Irbil when the manager
approached me. "What do you know about it?" he said, anger
breaking his habitual deference, as he dropped my print-outs on
the desk. I asked him what he thought about the case. "Look
what has happened now because of her," he said, jabbing his
finger at the headlines. "She was a very bad girl".
From: http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,,2226600,00.html
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