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IRAQ: WOMEN'S DAY: Surviving
Somehow Behind a Concrete Purdah
By Dahr Jamail
March 6, 2008 - (IPS) Iraq, where women once had
more rights and freedom than most others in the Arab world, has
turned deadly for women who dream of education and a professional
career.
Former dictator Saddam Hussein maintained a relatively secular society,
where it was common for women to take up jobs as professors, doctors
and government officials. In today's Iraq, women are being killed
by militia groups for not conforming to strict Islamist ways.
Basra police chief Gen. Jalil Hannoon told reporters and Arab TV
channels in December that at least 40 women had been killed during
the previous five months in that city alone.
"We are sure there are many more victims whose families did
not report their killing for fear of scandal," Gen. Hannoon
said.
The militias dominated by the Shia Badr Organisation and the Mehdi
Army are leading imposition of strict Islamist rules. The Shia-dominated
Iraqi government is seen as providing tacit and sometimes direct
support to them.
The Badr Organisation answers to the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council
(SIIC), the Shia bloc in the Iraqi government. The Mehdi army is
the militia of anti-occupation Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
Women who do not wear the hijab are becoming prime targets of militias,
residents both in Basra and Baghdad have told IPS in recent months.
Many women say they are threatened with death if they do not obey.
"Militiamen approached us to tell us we must wear the hijab
and stop wearing make-up," college student Zahra Alwan who
fled Basra to Baghdad told IPS last December.
Graffiti in red on walls across Basra warns women against wearing
make-up and stepping out without covering their bodies from head
to toe, Alwan said.
"The situation in Baghdad is not very different," Mazin
Abdul Jabbar, social researcher at Baghdad University told IPS.
"All universities are controlled by Islamic militiamen who
harass female students all the time with religious restrictions."
Jabbar said this is one reason that "many families have stopped
sending their daughters to high schools and colleges."
In early 2007 Iraq's Ministry of Education found that more than
70 percent of girls and young women no longer attend school or college.
Several women victims have been accused of being "bad"
before they were abducted, residents have told IPS in Baghdad. Most
women who are abducted are later found dead.
The bodies of several have been found in garbage dumps, showing
signs of rape and torture. Many bodies had a note attached saying
the woman was "bad", according to residents who did not
give their names to IPS.
Similar problems exist for women in Baquba, the capital city of
Diyala province, 40 km northeast of Baghdad.
"My neighbour was killed because she was accused of working
in the directorate-general of police of Diyala," resident Um
Haider told IPS in January. "This woman worked as a receptionist
in the governor's office, and not in the police. She was in charge
of checking women who work in the governor's office."
Killings like this have led countless women to quit jobs, or to
change them.
"I was head of the personnel division in an office," a
woman speaking on condition of anonymity told IPS in Baquba. "On
the insistence of my family and relatives, I gave up my position
and chose to be an employee."
Women's lives have changed, and women are beginning to look different
across most of Iraq. They are now too afraid to wear anything but
conservative dresses -- modern clothes could be a death warrant.
The veil is particularly dominant in areas under the control of
militias.
Women are paying a price for the occupation in all sorts of ways.
"Women bear great pain and risks when militants control the
streets," Um Basim, a mother of three, told IPS in Baquba recently.
"No man can move here or there. When a man is killed, the body
is taken to the morgue. The body has to be received by the family,
so women often go alone to the morgue to escort the body home. Some
are targeted by militants when they do this."
Confined to home, many women live in isolation and depression.
"Women have nowhere to go to spend leisure time," Um Ali,
a married woman in Baquba, told IPS. "Our time is spent only
at home now. I have not travelled outside Baquba for more than four
years. The only place I can go to is my parents' home. Housekeeping
and children have been all my life; I have no goals to attain, no
education to complete. Sometimes, I can't leave home for weeks."
In northern Kurdish controlled Iraq, 'honour killings' continue.
In the ancient tradition of 'honour killing', the view is that a
family's honour is paramount. As of last December, at least 27 Kurdish
women were murdered on suspicion of having had 'illicit' affairs
in the previous four months, according to Youssif Mohamed Aziz,
the regional minister of human rights.
Iraqi women are not spared U.S. military prisons either. In December,
Iraq's parliamentary committee for women's and children's affairs
demanded the release of female detainees in Iraqi and U.S.-run prisons.
According to Nadira Habib, deputy head of the parliamentary committee,
there are around 200 women detained in the Iraqi run al-Adala prison
in Baghdad. Habibi says there are presumably women in U.S.-run prisons
too. "But no one knows how many female detainees are now in
prisons run by U.S. forces as they always refuse requests from our
committee to visit them."
As the central government remains essentially powerless, and religious
fundamentalism continues to grow across Iraq, it appears that the
plight of Iraqi women will get worse.
From:http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=41479
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