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 Women's Rights is Focus of New Afghan Party
 


NEW AFGHAN PARTY TO FOCUS ON WOMEN'S RIGHTS

By Farangis Najibullah

For nearly three decades, Afghans have endured war and foreign occupation, extreme poverty, and the Taliban. Yet some suffer more than others. Not all Afghans are created equal. Fatima Nazari wants to change that.
Nazari, an Afghan parliamentarian, is the driving force behind the country's first political party dedicated to women's rights and issues. She launched National Need on February 19 at a ceremony in Kabul, saying the party hopes to put women's rights at the forefront of the national political debate. It intends to run in the next parliamentary elections, which will probably be held in three years' time.
"I believe women understand their own problems better than men would," she says, adding that National Need will seek to increase women's participation in politics and business. "We want to campaign for democracy, not only talk about democracy. In this way, we want to work with our brothers and the rest of Afghan society."
Some of Nazari's fellow deputies and officials in Kabul welcomed the creation of the country's first-ever women's political party. Some called it a step forward toward greater democracy and recognition of women's rights. Interestingly, the Afghan parliament already boasts fairly high representation by women: Twenty-three of 100 members in the upper house and 68 of 249 deputies in the lower house are women.
But in a deeply conservative Islamic country devastated by decades of war, poverty, and a lack of education, that's not enough. "I have already dealt with women's issues as a deputy," Nazari tells RFE/RL. "But I eventually felt that we Afghans needed a special party entirely focused on women to raise their profile."
Not everyone is so optimistic. Nazari says the party already boasts 22,500 registered members, men and women, not only in Kabul but also conservative areas such as Paktika, Maidan Wardak, and Helmand. Yet can a neophyte political party hope to change traditional views about the role of women in a place like Afghanistan?
Maryam Panjsheri has her doubts. A female activist in the northern Panjsher Province, she says she is "highly skeptical" about National Need's potential to forge change beyond the capital and a few bigger cities, such as Mazar-e Sharif or Herat.
"It's all for show," Panjsheri tells RFE/RL. "The party leaders will give speeches, interviews, set up seminars -- and that's all they'll do. I don't think women's organizations play a significant role in Afghan women's lives. I don't believe there is such a group that fights for their economic well-being, rights, or health care. I'm just being realistic."
Afghan women are also systematically excluded from social, political, and public life, and are often victims of domestic violence. Even Afghan officials admit that while job and educational opportunities for women have improved since the fall of the Taliban, domestic violence against women is unchanged. It might be even more common than before. According to the Ministry of Women's Affairs, over the last year more than 2,000 cases of violence against women have been registered. Yet most abuse goes unreported.
Often, very young Afghan girls are also victims of fixed marriages. Some parents force their daughters -- sometimes as young as 8-years-old -- into marriage to settle debts or family feuds.
Moreover, women usually cannot leave their families or seek a divorce, because in many parts of Afghanistan divorce is considered dishonorable. A divorced woman cannot return to her parents' family and, in an impoverished country with widespread unemployment, she cannot rebuild her life on her own, either.
Some women seek escape by self-immolation, resulting in death or disfigurement. Last year, at least 30 women committed suicide in the western Farah Province alone, most of them by setting themselves on fire, according to Afghan media reports.
Panjsheri acknowledges her hopes may seem unrealistic. "We know our goals won't be easy to implement, but they are realistic," she says. "We know it won't happen overnight. It may take many years." Panjsheri adds that the biggest challenge will be to reach the women in the most conservative families.
For now, that's a tall order. "Parents who deny education for their daughters, force their young girls into marriage, or a husband who abuses his wife, definitely would not allow rights activists to meet their daughters and wives to educate them about their rights and invite them into politics and business," she says.
But you've got to start somewhere, says Malolai Rushandil Osmani, a women's rights activist in the northern Balkh Province. Speaking to RFE/RL, Osmani acknowledges the challenges facing both women and women's rights activists. "It's a difficult task, especially in the conservative southern and eastern provinces. But one way or another, you have to try."
Osmani, who runs the women's NGO Foundation to Defend Afghan Women's Rights, has her own tactics for promoting women's rights in sensitive areas. "When we go to a village, first of all we talk to the local elderly and the local religious leader," she says. "With their approval, we can then meet with their families. Everybody accepts the fact that it would be better if women dealt with women's issues."
Since the fall of the Taliban in late 2001, millions of Afghan girls have returned to school all over the country. Many women now have access to jobs and medical care. In the past five years, in the southern city of Kandahar alone, some 5,000 women have graduated from special literacy courses where they were taught to read and write as well as skills such as dressmaking or computer knowledge. And recently, the government announced a strategy to give nearly one-third of state jobs to women by 2012.
"Let's just hope the new party's leaders really seek to improve Afghan women's lives, and that they include every woman everywhere -- from Kabul to the most remote villages," Osmani says.

(Farangis Najibullah is an RFE/RL correspondent based in Prague. RFE/RL's Radio Free Afghanistan contributed to this report.)
Posted by Dan's Blog at 1:13 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 
 Al-Sadr purportedly Help in Negotiations of Kidnapped Journalist
 

U.S. BROADCASTER APPEALS FOR RELEASE OF JOURNALIST. The U.S.-based CBS television network reportedly sent an appeal to Muqtada al-Sadr on February 22 seeking the cleric's continued help to release a journalist abducted in Al-Basrah on February 10, the Voices of Iraq news agency reported. Al-Sadr aide Harith al-Athari told the agency that the cleric's office "has left no stone unturned" and continues to work for the release of the journalist. Al-Athari said on February 14 that his office is in ongoing negotiations with the kidnappers to release the unidentified journalist (see "RFE/RL Newsline," February 15, 2008). KR

Posted by Dan's Blog at 1:10 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 
 Muqtada al-Sadr Extends Cease fire for another Six months
 

IRAQI CLERIC EXTENDS CEASE-FIRE FOR SIX MONTHS. Iraqi cleric Muqtada al-Sadr has officially extended his militia's cease-fire for another six months, international media reported on February 22. Aides to al-Sadr cautioned earlier this week that the Imam Al-Mahdi Army militia's cease-fire could be called off (see "RFE/RL Newsline," February 20, 2008). "According to an order by Sayyid Muqtada, activities of the Al-Mahdi Army will be extended...for another six-month period," al-Sadr aide Hazim al-A'raji said during a Friday Prayer sermon at Baghdad's Al-Kadhimiyah Mosque. KR
Posted by Dan's Blog at 1:08 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 
 Knowledge of Turkish Incursion denied by Iraqi Government
 

AS IRAQI GOVERNMENT DENIES KNOWLEDGE OF INCURSION. Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said on February 22 that his government is not aware of any Turkish ground offensive into northern Iraq, Reuters reported. "Until this minute, we have not received anything from the [Iraqi] border guards about Turkish forces crossing the international border," Zebari said in a telephone interview. The Kurdistan regional government's foreign minister, Falah Mustafa, also denied the incursion, the news agency reported. Al-Sharqiyah television reported on February 22 that President Jalal Talabani left Baghdad on an urgent visit to Al-Sulaymaniyah because of the deteriorating situation with Turkey. Talabani's political party, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, is headquartered in Al-Sulaymaniyah. Meanwhile, Kurdistan regional President Mas'ud Barzani, who heads the Kurdistan Democratic Party, traveled from Irbil to Dahuk to monitor the crisis, sources told Radio Free Iraq. Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said in a February 21 statement that Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki asked Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in a telephone call the same day to "respect the sovereignty of Iraq's borders and inviolability of its lands...and stressed the importance of avoiding a military solution," Reuters reported on February 22. KR
Posted by Dan's Blog at 12:52 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 
 Turkey launches quick Ground Offensive into Kurdistan against rebels.
 

TURKEY SAYS GROUND OFFENSIVE LAUNCHED INTO IRAQ... In a statement on its website, the Turkish General Staff announced on February 21 that it launched a ground offensive into northern Iraq at 7 p.m. local time. "The Turkish armed forces, which attach great importance to Iraq's territorial integrity and stability, will return home in the shortest time possible after its goals have been achieved." Press reports earlier in the day quoted eye witnesses as saying armored vehicles were deployed at the Habur border crossing, north of Dahuk. Meanwhile, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan's website quoted a source inside Turkey as saying some 2,000 "fully equipped Turkish soldiers" were mobilized at a position in the Semdinli district in southeast Turkey, close to the Iraq and Iran borders. Turkey's NTV reported that some 10,000 troops crossed the Turkish-Iraqi border. Iraqi media also reported on February 21 that clashes broke out between Turkish forces based at Bamarni Airport north of Dahuk and Iraqi Kurd peshmerga forces. The Turkish General Staff issued a statement denying the clashes took place, as did peshmerga chief Jabar Yawar in an interview with RFE/RL's Radio Free Iraq. Kurdish television did report that Turkish warplanes bombed several villages around Al-Amadiyah in northern Dahuk Governorate on February 21. KR

Posted by Dan's Blog at 12:51 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 
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