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IRAQ: Islamic extremists target
women in Basra
January 2, 2008 – (IRIN) One hundred and
thirty-three women were killed last year in Basra, Iraq’s
second largest city, either by religious vigilantes or as a result
of so-called “honour” killings, a report said on 31
December.
The report, released by Basra Security Committee at a conference
on women’s rights in the city, said 79 of the victims were
deemed by extremists to be “violating Islamic teachings”,
47 others died in “honour” killings and the remaining
seven were targeted for their political affiliations.
“The women of Basra are being horrifically murdered and then
dumped in the garbage with notes saying they were killed for violating
Islamic teachings," Bassem al-Moussawi, head of the committee
and a member of Basra’s Provincial Council, told the conference.
“Sectarian groups are trying to force a strict
interpretation of Islam… They send their vigilantes to roam
the city, hunting down those who are deemed to be behaving against
their [the extremists’] own interpretations,” al-Moussawi
said.
The Basra office of Iraq’s radical Shia religious
leader Muqtada al-Sadr said his movement opposed the killings and
blamed “gangs with foreign support [which are out] to defame
the religious movements”.
“It is a sin,” said Harith al-Ethari,
a spokesman for al-Sadr’s office in Basra, not to wear a headscarf.
“But killing women is a bigger sin,” al-Ethari said.
“There is a concrete religious principle that says that wearing
makeup and foregoing a headscarf in public is a sin, but it must
not be dealt with like this,” he said.
Graffiti
Before the US-led invasion in 2003, Basra was known
for its mixed population and active night life. Now, in some areas,
graffiti messages threaten any woman who wears makeup and appears
in public with her hair uncovered: “Your makeup and your decision
to forego the headscarf will bring you death,” reads graffiti
in the city centre.
Throughout Iraq, many women wear headscarves, while others wear
a full face veil, although secular women are often unveiled. In
recent years, armed Islamic extremists in some parts of the country
have sometimes forced women to cover their heads or face punishment.
Christian women also targeted
Christian women have even been forced to wear headscarves
in many areas, including Baghdad.
On 11 December the bodies of a Christian woman
and her brother were found in a Basra rubbish dump, police and church
officials said on condition of anonymity.
A 20-year-old English student at Basra College
of Arts has not been seen since she left her college last year following
harassment by male students for using makeup and not wearing a headscarf.
“I'm from a secular family, but respect for
Islam’s instructions and wearing make-up and foregoing the
'hijab' (headscarf) doesn’t mean that I’m a bad woman,”
she told IRIN in a phone interview from Baghdad on condition of
anonymity.
She said she was stopped once by two fellow students
and ordered to cover her hair and stop wearing makeup “otherwise
it's better for me not to attend class”.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportId=76065
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