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Iraqi Kidnap Victims’ Wives Face
Financial Struggle
Women whose husbands go
missing find it difficult to obtain government aid
By Hind al-Safar and Zaineb Naji in Baghdad
June 10, 2008 - (IWPR) Firdaw al-Baghdadi has
not seen her husband in three years. He was abducted in the Iraqi
capital Baghdad, and although his family paid a ransom for his
release, they never heard from the captors again.
Baghdadi, 38, from Baghdad’s Shia suburb Sadr City, cannot
find work and her own relatives are too poor to help out, so she
lives with her husband's family in cramped conditions.
“I don't know what to do,” she said. “Tradition
prevents women from working, especially women like me.”
Women whose husbands go missing in Iraq receive little financial
support and get lost in a welfare system that does not assist
the families of kidnap victims, critics said.
While no reliable figures are available, abductions became a widespread
– and lucrative – business from late 2003, with families
paying tens of thousands of dollars for the release of their loved
ones.
According to reports by the Washington-based Brookings Institution,
the incidence of kidnapping reached 30 to 40 a day as civil conflict
broke out in March 2006.
In many cases, kidnap victims have never been released even when
the families have paid a ransom.
Wives of the victims are emotionally and financially devastated
by the loss, say women's advocates, and their suffering is heightened
because often they cannot access benefits intended for Iraq's
most vulnerable.
While welfare is available for widows, orphans, the disabled and
divorced women, it does not cover women whose husbands have gone
missing, unless they can prove in court their husbands were kidnapped
or killed, according to Azhar al-Sharbaf, a legal adviser with
the women's affairs ministry.
This requirement is intended to prevent fraudulent claims in a
country wracked by corruption. However, kidnappings can be difficult
to prove.
Layla Kadhim Aziz, director of the Social Care Network, a welfare
system through the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs, said
families affected by kidnapping must also fill out forms proving
that they need aid.
Welfare benefits in Iraq stand at 75,000 dinar (65 US dollars)
a month for individuals or 100,000 dinar (85 dollars) for families
with children, Sharbaf said, noting that this allowance “doesn't
even cover a household's basic needs”.
The wives of government employees are entitled to up to one year
of their husbands' salary if their partners go missing and there
is no one else who can support them, said Shatha al-Abusi, a member
of parliament who advocates for women's rights.
However, many women do not take advantage of the benefits on offer,
as they do not report an abduction to police, for fear of retaliation
by the kidnappers. In addition, many Iraqis lost confidence in
the police after 2004, when the force was infiltrated by militias.
Moreover, as kidnappings are so common, the police spend little
time investigating them.
Abusi said that some women whose husbands are abducted become
so fearful that they abandon their homes and go and stay with
relatives. “Sometimes the woman leaves her house immediately
after her husband is abducted because she's afraid of being targeted,”
she explained.
Khetam Abdul Karim, a 30-year-old women's advocate and a lawyer
specialising in family matters, said Iraqi laws do not provide
adequate support for families in kidnapping cases. The only law
that deals with the missing dates from 1980, the start of the
Iran-Iraq war, she said. That law states that the defence or interior
minister must first declare an individual missing and after a
four-year lapse, the person is declared dead and family members
are then entitled to claim the inheritance.
Sharbaf said the women's affairs ministry had backed a law that
would have provided financial support, health care and other aid
for women who have no other means of support. The law, which was
drafted by parliament's human rights committee, was shelved in
May.
The ministries of finance, justice and labour and social affairs
all rejected the legislation on the grounds that the government
had not allocated funding for the programme and it would overlap
with the social care network, said Sharbaf.
Abusi, who is on the parliamentary human rights committee, said
it would continue to push for a law that aids the wives of kidnap
victims. Aziz also said she would encourage the government to
review the benefits system.
Weam Jasim, an activist with the rights group Dawn of the Woman
in Baghdad, said that while her organisation has tried to draw
attention to the plight of wives of kidnap victims, this has largely
been ignored by the authorities. Jasim is not hopeful that the
government will act on behalf of women.
“Women's rights are only slogans for politicians,”
she said.
From:http://www.iwpr.net/?p=icr&s=f&o=345111&apc_state=henh
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