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The Iraq Legacy: Millions of Women's
Lives Destroyed
By Nadje Al-Ali
March 31, 2008 – (Alternet) Politicians
hoped the Iraq war would see the advance of women's rights. Instead,
Iraqi women face violence, sexual abuse and segregation.
On International Women's Day in 2004, nearly a year after the
invasion of Iraq, George Bush, the US President, addressed 250
women from around the world who had gathered at the White House.
"The advance of women's rights and the advance of liberty
are ultimately inseparable," he said. Supported by his wife
Laura, who herself hailed the administration's success in achieving
greater rights for Afghan women, the president claimed that "the
advance of freedom in the greater Middle East has given new rights
and new hopes to women there."
Advance. New rights. New hopes. Stirring stuff, but totally empty
claims. In fact, Iraq's women have become the biggest losers in
the post-invasion disaster. While men have borne the brunt in
terms of direct armed violence, women have been particularly hard-hit
by poverty, malnutrition, lack of health services and a crumbling
infrastructure, not least chronic power cuts which in some areas
of Iraq see electricity only available for two hours a day.
More than 70 percent of the four million people forced out of
their homes in the past five years in Iraq have been women and
children. Many have found temporary shelter with relatives who
share their limited space, food and supplies. But this, according
to the UN refugee agency, has created "rising tension between
families over scarce resources." Many displaced women and
children find themselves in unsanitary and overcrowded public
buildings under constant threat of eviction.
Meanwhile, rampant political violence has also engulfed women
in Iraq. Islamist militias with links to political parties in
government and insurgent groups opposing both the government and
the occupation have particularly targeted Iraqi women and girls.
A new Islamist puritanism is seeing women and girls being violently
pressured to conform to rigid dress codes. Personal movement and
social behaviour are being "regulated," with acid attacks
(deliberately designed to disfigure "transgressive"
women's faces), just one of the sanctions of the new moral guardians
of post-Saddam Iraq.
Suad F, a former accountant and mother of four children who lives
in a previously mixed neighbourhood in Baghdad, was telling me
during a visit to Amman in 2006: "I resisted for a long time,
but last year also started wearing the hijab, after I was threatened
by several Islamist militants in front of my house. They are terrorising
the whole neighbourhood, behaving as if they were in charge. And
they are actually controlling the area. No one dares to challenge
them. A few months ago they distributed leaflets around the area
warning people to obey them and demanding that women should stay
at home."
By 2008, the threat posed by Islamist militias and extremist groups
has gone far beyond dress codes and calls for gender segregation
at universities. Despite -- or even partly because of US and UK
rhetoric about liberation and women's rights -- women have been
pushed back into their homes.
Women who have a public profile -- as teachers, doctors, academics,
lawyers, NGO activists or politicians -- are now systematically
threatened, seen as legitimate targets for assassinations. Criminal
gangs have joined in. Though rarely reported in Britain, the criminal
kidnapping of women for ransom, for trafficking into forced prostitution
outside Iraq, and for out and out sexual abuse have all taken
root in post-Saddam Iraq.
Killings in Basra in 2007 provide a snapshot. According to a study
by the Basra Security Committee, 133 women were killed last year
in the UK-controlled city, either by religious vigilantes or as
a result of so-called honour killings. Of these, 79 were deemed
to have "violated Islamic teachings," 47 were killed
to preserve supposed family honour, and the remaining seven were
targeted for their political affiliations. As Amnesty International
said last year, "politically active women, those who did
not follow a strict dress code, and women [who are] human rights
defenders are increasingly at risk of abuses, including by armed
groups and religious extremists."
The invasion and occupation of Iraq has also directly added to
suffering of women. While aerial bombings of residential areas
have been responsible for thousands of civilian deaths, many Iraqis
have lost their lives while being shot at by American or British
troops. Whole families have been wiped out as they approached
a checkpoint or did not recognize areas marked as prohibited.
In addition to the killing of innocent women, men and children,
the occupation forces have also been engaged in other forms of
violence against women. There have been numerous documented accounts
of physical assaults at checkpoints and during house searches.
American and British forces have also arrested wives, sisters
and daughters of suspected insurgents in order to pressure them
to surrender. Recent figures show that the US and Iraqi forces
are currently holding (mostly without charge) many thousands of
detainees, and even where women have not been detained as bargaining
chips they have spent frantic months or even years trying to discover
where their family members were being held and why.
Women in Iraq suffered from discrimination and violence well before
2003. Deep-rooted patriarchy (especially in rural and tribal areas)
and the pervasive repression of all women politically resistant
to Saddam's Ba'athist project were hallmarks of life in Iraq in
the 1960s, 70s and 80s.
But there were subtleties which gave women relative freedom. First,
Saddam's political acuity meant that he was perfectly capable
of a policy of "state feminism" that partly shifted
patriarchal power away from fathers, husbands and brothers, investing
this power in the state itself -- Saddam himself becoming the
father of the nation. As long as you steered clear of all oppositional
politics, this created 20 years (from the late 1960s on) of moderate
liberty for at least Iraq's urban middle-class women.
Then, with the growing militarization of Iraq after the Iran-Iraq
war and the major reverse of the Gulf war of 1991, Saddam switched
policy toward cultivating political allegiance through tribal
leaders. The upshot for women? A re-assertion of traditional conservative
values that saw women's rights used as bargaining chips and their
bodies the repositories of tribal and familial "honor."
As he stood before his female audience in 2004 did President Bush
actually understand any of this? Was it factored at all? Or instead,
did the US's infamous lack of post-invasion planning include a
blind spot over women's rights? Perhaps George and Laura would
like to update us.
From:http://www.alternet.org/reproductivejustice/80609/?page=entire
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