WOMEN IN AFGHANISTAN FEAR
NEW TALIBAN-LIKE RULE
INTERNATIONAL
By Shauna
Curphey - WeNews correspondent
PASADENA, Calif.
(WOMENSENEWS)
--Hours before images of jubilant
Iraqis toppling a statue of
Saddam Hussein made their
way around the globe last
month, Afghan women's rights
activist Tahmeena Faryal took
the podium at California Institute
of Technology's Baxter Hall
to tell an audience what has
happened in Afghanistan since
the cameras stopped rolling
there. Her message: Although
the Taliban has been driven
from power, Afghan women still
suffer under fundamentalist
persecution--and the United
States has not kept its promise
of liberation.
Born in Afghanistan,
Faryal grew up as a refugee
in Pakistan, after her parents
fled their homeland following
the Soviet invasion in 1979.
She now works full time for
RAWA--the Revolutionary Association
of the Women of Afghanistan--as
an advocate for the rights
of Afghan women.
Since it was
established in Kabul, Afghanistan
in 1977, RAWA has survived
because it works as an underground
organization in that country.
Though RAWA provides mobile
health teams in eight Afghan
provinces, runs handicrafts
centers and works through
home-based schools to provide
literacy classes and human
rights education, they do
not take credit for these
projects within the country.
A spokesperson for RAWA abroad,
Faryal keeps personal details
and photos of her face out
of press reports, due to fear
for her safety.
When the U.S.-led
invasion of Afghanistan ended
the five-year rule of the
Taliban in October 2001, Faryal
hoped for a democratic government
that would make such precautions
unnecessary. Less than two
months later, that hope dwindled
when the United Nations convened
peace talks in Bonn, Germany,
with the Northern Alliance
at the table. As she saw it,
the international community's
decision to support the Northern
Alliance in Afghanistan's
new government simply exchanged
one fundamentalist regime
for another.
The Northern
Alliance includes a collection
of Mujahadeen warlords who
ousted the Soviets in 1992
and then plunged the country
into a brutal four-year civil
war, during which civilians,
especially women, were frequent
targets. "Their real
place is in the Hague Court,
not the government of Afghanistan,"
said Faryal.
Northern Alliance
members now rule as semi-autonomous
warlords in many provinces,
and several hold key cabinet
positions in President Hamid
Karzai's administration. Mounting
evidence of abuses of women's
rights in Afghanistan indicates
that fundamentalism continues
to hold sway in Kabul and
the countryside.
The Burqa
Is Back
In December
2002, President Karzai decreed
that women had the right to
choose whether to wear a burqa,
the head-to-toe veil that
came to symbolize women's
oppression under the Taliban.
Despite this announcement,
women inside and outside Kabul
continue to wear the concealing
garment, said Faryal, because
"they find more safety
and security" under the
veil.
Since the fall
of the Taliban, Afghan girls
have been permitted to go
to school and women have been
allowed to rejoin the work
force. But recent events may
indicate that fundamentalist
restrictions on women are
taking hold in Afghanistan
once again.
Last summer,
President Karzai demoted Dr.
Sima Samar, then-minister
for women's affairs, to a
less prominent position within
the human rights commission
after Islamic fundamentalists
accused her of blasphemy for
speaking out on past offenses
against women committed by
the Taliban and the Mujahadeen.
Later in the year, the Afghan
government established the
Department of Islamic Teaching
under the Ministry of Religious
Affairs. Akin to the Taliban-era
Department of Vice and Virtue,
the new department trains
and deploys women to stop
public displays of "un-Islamic"
behavior among Afghan women.
In January, Afghanistan's
Supreme Court Chief Justice
Fazl Hadi Shinwari banned
cable television broadcasts,
declaring that the images
violate Islamic morals.
Even more disheartening
is the situation of women
in Afghan's warlord-ruled
provinces. According to a
U.N. report on women in Afghanistan
released in January, there
have been arson attacks on
girls' schools in several
provinces. The report also
indicates that forced marriages,
domestic violence, kidnapping
of young girls, harassment
and intimidation of women
continue unabated.
Arrests of
Women Seen with Wrong Men
Religious police
in the Western province of
Herat have arrested women
who appeared in public with
men who were not their husbands
or relatives and forced them
to submit to gynecological
exams to see if they had recently
had intercourse, according
to a Human Rights Watch report
released last December. Ismail
Kahn, the governor of Herat
recently banned men from teaching
female students. According
to a U.S. State Department
report released in March,
a 14-year-old in Herat attempted
suicide by immolation after
she had been given in marriage
to a 60-year-old man with
grown children.
"Children
deserve more, women deserve
more," said Anne Brodsky,
who has traveled extensively
in Pakistan and Afghanistan
conducting research for her
recently completed book, "With
All Our Strength: The Revolutionary
Association of the Women of
Afghanistan," which documents
the history of RAWA. "If
we are not careful, Afghanistan
will once again be the largest
forgotten tragedy," she
added.
In April, a
government-appointed committee
finished the first draft of
Afghanistans new constitution.
President Karzai appointed
a 34-member constitutional
commission to finalize the
draft and submit it to the
Constitutional Loya Jirga.
Only seven women serve on
the commission. According
to an April report from Radio
Free Europe, the draft constitution
establishes that in areas
where no law passed by both
houses of parliament and approved
by the president exists, Islamic
religious law will prevail.
The draft constitution has
not been widely distributed,
nor has it been translated
into English. The constitutional
commission will spend a month
gathering public input on
the document, which they plan
to finalize by August.
While the central
government works toward writing
the new law of the land, however,
it struggles to maintain the
rule of law in the provinces.
An international security
force maintains security in
Kabul, but outside the capital
the provincial governors reign
over local militias and challenge
the central authority. Ismail
Khan in the West, Gul Agha
Shirzai in the South and Abdurrashid
Dostum in the north continue
to defy Kabul. The United
Nations credits the lawlessness
in the provinces with the
continued persecution of women.
"If we
have a good constitution but
we cannot implement it in
a good way, this means the
country will not go in the
right direction," said
Afghan Women's Affairs Minister
Habiba Surabi in a statement
to the U.N. Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs.
Taliban Rule
Was Not So Different
According to
a January 2003 U.N. report
on the situation of women
in Afghanistan, "Intimidation
and violence by regional and
local commandos against women
continue unabated. In rural
areas, especially in the more
conservative tribal belt,
the situation of women has
not changed to any great extent
since the removal of the Taliban."
President Karzai
is unlikely to unseat the
unruly regional governors
without U.S. or international
support, many experts say.
The Washington Post reported
in March that President Karzai
broached the subject with
President Bush during a February
trip to Washington. But U.S.
forces have strong ties to
the local leaders. The U.S.
played a major role in bringing
Ismail Khan to power in Herat,
says the article, and the
governor's militia guard the
residential compounds of U.S.
special forces.
Faryal said
she wants to see an expansion
of the U.N. peacekeeping force
in Afghanistan and disarmament
of the regional warlords before
the first post-Taliban elections,
which will take place next
year. Until then, she says
she will continue speaking
out in an effort to draw the
world's attention back to
Afghanistan with the hope
that the cameras will return,
and people will care again.
Shauna Curphey
is a freelance writer living
in Long Beach, Calif.
For more
information:
Revolutionary
Association of the Women of
Afghanistan: - http://rawa.false.net/index.html
United Nations--Commission
on the Status of Women - "The
situation of women and girls
in Afghanistan" - (Adobe
Acrobat PDF format): - http://ods-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N03/222/74/PDF/N0322274.pdf?OpenElement
Human Rights
Watch--"'We Want to Live
As Humans': Repression of
Women and Girls in Western
Afghanistan" - (Adobe
Acrobat PDF format): - http://www.hrw.org/reports/2002/afghnwmn1202/Afghnwmn1202.pdf