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MIDEAST: No Day Is a Woman's Day
in Gaza
By Mohammed Omer
March 7, 2008 - (IPS) Mahasen Darduna suffers in
ways the world recognises; her suffering comes at the hands of the
Israelis. But there are many Palestinian women whose suffering the
world does not see, because their hell is inflicted on them by Palestinians.
One way and another, no day is a woman's day in Gaza.
For all of a week, Mahasen Darduna, 30, has sat day and night by
her son's bedside in hospital. The boy, Yahiya, 9, was among the
group hit by an Israeli missile while playing football on a field
at the Jabaliya refugee camp. Yahia survived, but with severe injuries.
"He needs my support, he has been confined to this bed since
he was maimed by the Israeli missile," Mahasen says. But she
must also slip away often to see her other five children, who she
has moved to her mother-in-law's house in belief they will be safer
there.
"I think of them constantly when we are apart. I feel terrible:
two are getting sick, and they all cry each time we say goodbye.
I can't be at both places."
In the same hospital room, Umm Ali Faraj looks after her seven-year-old
son, who suffered a cracked skull in a bombing. Umm Ali too has
rearranged her family life. Four of her seven children stay with
her in the hospital. Umm Ali goes back and forth between hospital
and home, cooking for the children and getting them off to school.
Like Mahasen and Umm Ali, countless women have suffered through
more than 40 years of Israeli occupation.
"Palestinian women's lives are incredibly difficult under the
crippling international siege and the Israeli army's killing invasions,"
says Nadyia Abu Nahla, director of the Women's Affairs Technical
Centre in Gaza, an independent group that supports women's rights.
The large number of women who have been forced to give birth at
army checkpoints is well documented by international and Israeli
rights groups. Israel's policy of demolishing Palestinian homes
has collectively punished tens of thousands of women in Gaza and
the West Bank, rendering them and their children homeless.
But through this period, women have also struggled against denial
of rights by Palestinian society.
"The dire economic situation is one of the causes of an increase
of violence in Gaza," Abu Nahla told IPS. With resistance to
the siege and military attacks, religious fanaticism has grown,
and that has contributed to an increase in violence against women,
she said.
"Islam forbids violence against women, and forbids the use
of women as slaves," says Sheikh Dr. Hassan al-Jojo, head of
Gaza's Legitimacy Court, the main court for society and family issues.
But Dr. Jojo acknowledges that women do not have their full rights.
'Honour killing' has increased, according to Abu Nahla. At least
17 women died in 'honour killings' in Gaza last year, her centre
reports. Last year and 2003 have been the worst years for known
'honour killings' in Gaza. In 2003, 34 women were killed in Gaza
and the West Bank.
Jordanian criminal law enforced in the West Bank, and Egyptian law
enforced in Gaza, neither effectively prohibit nor appropriately
punish violence against women. Women are rarely encouraged to go
to the courts, or to seek the help of social services for rehabilitation.
Police chief investigator Mussa Dawoud told IPS that violence against
women is taken seriously. But in trying to solve problems, he says
the police try to protect the family structure, and avoid complications
that could lead to divorce.
Police officers and clan seniors routinely mediate to resolve issues
around family violence, but provide solutions that usually mean
that the abused woman is sent back to her husband. Where women receive
support to take a strong stand, they face pressure and punishment
from abusive men.
One 29-year-old woman from Khan Younies is not allowed by her husband
to use the phone or even send an sms, says Abu Nahla. She is locked
up at home daily, and on one occasion could not take her sick child
to hospital. Other women have been beaten up by husbands for visiting
relatives without their permission, Abu Nahla said.
Only 13 percent of Palestinian Legislative Council members are women,
with fewer holding leading positions. "This is not enough,"
Abu Nahla said. "We are hoping there will be more seats for
women." And, she said, that there will be safety at home in
every way.
From:http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=41498
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