|
AFGHANISTAN: Bleak prospects
for country's estimated 1.5 million widows
January 30, - 2008 (IRIN) - Knocking on the windows
of cars stuck in traffic on Shar-e-Naw Street in Kabul, Zulaikha
and her children beg for money to keep warm and feed themselves.
Their daily routine starts at about 7am and ends at 6pm every day.
"Often we collect 100-150 Afghanis [US$ 2-3] a day," she
said, adding that it was barely enough for bread and tea.
Zulaikha lost her husband, Jamaluddin, in factional fighting between
former Taliban and Northern Alliance forces in the northern outskirts
of Kabul in 1999. She has three children - an 11-year-old son and
two daughters aged eight and nine.
Over the past three years she has been living in a shack outside
Kabul, for which she pays a monthly rent of $15.
"We have nobody to help us," the widow said.
Afghanistan has one of the highest numbers of widows (proportionate
to the total population) in the world, owing to the armed conflicts
that have bedevilled the country for over two decades.
There are over 1.5 million widows out of an estimated 26.6 million
people in Afghanistan, according to Beyond 9/11, a US-based nonprofit
group that provides direct financial support to Afghan widows and
their children. Some 50,000-70,000 widows live in Kabul alone, it
says.
The government of Afghanistan does not have an accurate figure for
the number of widows in the country, but some officials say there
are more than 1.5 million.
Most widows illiterate
"The average age of an Afghan widow is just 35 years, and 94
percent of them are unable to read and write," Deborah Zalesne,
a board member of the Beyond 9/11 and a law professor at the City
University of New York, told IRIN.
"About 90 percent of Afghan widows have children, and the average
widow has more than four," Zalesne added.
To survive many Afghan widows weave carpets, do tailoring, beg or
even engage in prostitution.
In urban areas where women have better access to employment and
other services than in conservative rural areas, an average working
widow earns about $16 a month, experts estimate.
Shelter, food, earning a living and social protection are among
the most pressing issues for widows, the Ministry of Women's Affairs
(MoWA) said.
During winter, when fuel and food costs increase, female-headed
households become highly vulnerable.
Psychosocial difficulties
"Widowed women are also at greater risk of emotional problems
and impaired psychosocial functioning than either married women
or men, typically because of social exclusion, forced marriages,
gender-based violence and lack of economic and educational opportunities,"
said Zalesne.
"In Afghanistan's patriarchal society, the death of a husband
not only diminishes a woman's economic independence but also damages
her sense of social protection," said Hussain Ali Moin, an
official at MoWA.
Government, donors not doing enough
Women's rights activists such as Soraya Subhrang, a member of Afghanistan
Independent Human Rights Commission, have criticised the government
and international donors for not doing enough to alleviate the plight
of widows.
"Afghan women in general and widows in particular do not have
a voice to express their problems and are also deprived of meaningful
representation in public institutions," Subhrang said.
Officials at the Ministry of Women's Affairs also concede that Afghan
widows often live in wretched conditions, and say more needs to
be done to deal with their problems.
The interim-Afghanistan National Development Strategy (i-ANDS) has
a noble aim: to reduce poverty among women by at least 20 percent
and ensure that women make up at least 20 percent of all public
bodies by 2010. However, there is a long way to go before the lives
of widows like Zulaikha can be changed for the better, analysts
say.
From:http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=76492
|