IRAQ: Extremists fuel anti-women violence in
Basra
November 20, 2007 - (IRIN) Anti-women violence
in Basra, Iraq's second largest city, about 600 km south of the
capital, Baghdad, has increased markedly in recent months and
has forced women to stay indoors, police and local NGOs have said.
"Basra is facing a new type of terror which
leaves at least 10 women killed monthly, some of them are later
found in garbage dumps with bullet holes while others are found
decapitated or mutilated," the city's police chief Maj. Gen.
Abdel Jalil Khalaf told IRIN in a telephone interview.
"The perpetrators are organised gangs who
work under religious cover pretending to spread instructions of
Islam but they are far from this religion. They are trying to
impose a life style like banning women from wearing western clothes
or forcing them to wear head scarf," Khalaf said.
In September, Khalaf added, police found the
body of a decapitated woman with that of her also decapitated
six-year-old son lying beside her.
"We do believe that the number of murdered
women is much higher as more cases go unreported by their families
who fear reprisals from extremists," he added.
Extremism culture
Speaking only on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals,
a woman activist with a local NGO in Basra said that a deteriorated
security situation has made the province a hotbed for the extremists.
''Basra is facing a new type of terror which
leaves at least 10 women killed monthly.''
"(Sunni and Shia) extremists are imposing
an extremist culture on the community of Basra, a new culture
in our society which leads to bloody violence against women,"
she said.
"And this culture, which surfaced after
the US-led invasion in 2003, added more to the already existing
tribal culture which condones family violence against women,"
she added.
She went on saying that women, who are threatened
by extremists, have approached her NGO but they cannot help them
as they do not have shelters or appropriate places in the province
for the women to take refuge in.
"Iraq's southern cities in general and specifically
Basra don't have these shelters for women, a matter that has derailed
our efforts in helping them. And therefore we approach the local
police, dignitaries and religious leaders to harbour them. Some
of them accept it while others refuse," she said.
The activist added that the issue has been raised
many times with local officials in Basra but the city's deteriorated
security situation makes women’s rights the last on their
list of priorities. "And women are left with only two choices:
either to leave the city if they can afford it or stay locked
in their houses."
Once a peaceful city
Like other parts of Iraq, Basra before the US-led invasion in
2003 was known for its mixed population and active night life
with social and night clubs. Basra women had the right to choose
their own life-style although it was considered a tribal society.
But now vigilantes patrol the streets of Basra
on motorbikes or in cars with dark-tinted windows and no license
plates. They accost women who are not wearing the traditional
dress and head scarf known as hijab. They also attack men for
clothes or haircuts deemed too Western.
Hana Youssif was one of hundreds of Christians
who were living peacefully in the once-religiously mixed city,
but sectarian violence drove him out.
“My family has been in Basra for ages,"
said Youssif, a 43-year-old father of four." But sectarian
violence forced us to leave all our memories behind," Youssif
added.
Youssif, who has ended up in a relative’s
house in Baghdad, said that troubles started last May when gunmen
stopped him as he was walking with his wife and asked her about
her clothes and why she did not wear hijab.
"We were beaten so badly that day when I
told them that we are Christians and they threatened to kill me
if I would not respect Islam in this city."
From:http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=75396