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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Thomas A Watson who wrote (424983)7/9/2003 8:16:17 PM
From: sea_biscuit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Afghan women are free now? How do you know? Dumbya's wife told you, huh?

Here is the status of women in the post-Taliban era (from the leading women's organization in Afghanistan -- the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan) :

Post-Taliban Warlords Oppress Afghan Women

Reuters, Dec 17, 2002
By Evelyn Leopold

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Many Afghan women are still subject to the same abuse
as under the ousted Taliban and in some regions, such as the west of the country, face
increasing harassment, a human rights group said on Tuesday.

Human Rights Watch, in a 52-page report, singled out warlord Ismail Khan in the city of
Herat, instrumental in helping the United States topple the Taliban, for bundling women
back into the all-enveloping burka and forcing them to undergo "chastity checks."

"Many people outside the country believe that Afghan women and girls have had their
rights restored," when the Taliban was removed from power a year ago, said Zama
Coursen-Neff, co-author of the report, "We Want to Live as Humans."

"It's just not true. Women and girls are still being abused, harassed and threatened all
over Afghanistan (news - web sites), often by government troops and officials," she said
in the report.

The New York-based human rights group concedes that conditions for women have
improved and they are allowed to go to school and to work. But in many areas they suffer
serious restrictions by government troops and local officials, who invoke vague
"Taliban-era" edicts on dress and behavior.

Khan, the governor of Herat, who has received
considerable U.S. financial and military
assistance, was named as the most flagrant
abuser, inventing a series of draconian
measures.

Among them is a religious police and a "youth police" to haul women and girls to hospitals
for gynecological examinations for the purpose of "chastity checks."

"Ismail Khan has created an atmosphere in which government officials and private
individuals believe they have the right to police every aspect of women's and girls' lives:
how they dress, how they get around town, what they say," Coursen-Neff said.

FEW JOBS OPEN TO WOMEN

Khan's government has opened few jobs to women and has pressured them not to work
with foreign aid groups or the United Nations (news - web sites). At least one Herati
woman has been arrested for contact with foreign men during her work with an
international organization, the report said.

"Only the doors to the schools are open. Everything else is restricted, " said one Herati
woman quoted in the report.

Among the report's recommendation is for the United States and other countries involved
in Afghanistan to stop military assistance to local commanders, such as Khan, and to
coordinate any future aid through the Kabul government.

The report was the second by Human Rights Watch on Herat. In November the group
accused Khan's forces of abuses and atrocities against political opponents and minorities,
charges his ministers have vigorously denied.

Even President Hamid Karzai's Kabul government has moved slowly, the report said,
noting that the two women cabinet ministers are for women's affairs and health, areas in
which female employment is less controversial.

And men dominate the staff of foreign aid groups, including those for the United Nations,
as they did under the Taliban, the report said.

Latest reports from Afghanistan:

HRW: Sharp Rise in Press Attacks in Afghanistan
An overview of the situation in Afghanistan after ?liberation?
"Climate of fear" rules Afghanistan
UN reports serious rights violations in NW Afghanistan
US Admits 11 Civilians Dead In Bombing Raid On E Afghanistan
Afghanistan: the Taliban's smiling face
Afghan Police Accused of Rights Abuses
Afghan poor sell daughters as brides
Afghanistan has been well and truly betrayed
Afghan Warlords Killing at Will
War 'has ruined Afghan environment'
Film Accuses US of Atrocities at Dasht-i-Leili
British Parliament: "Afghanistan Could Fall Back Into Anarchy"
Afghan Chief Justice Bans Cable TV
Disabled War Vets Accusing the Government of Misusing Aid Donations
Afghan warlords still enforcing Taliban oppression
Why burqas still stifle Afghan women
Change of hat (Eye-witness report from Afghanistan)
US Broke Law in Use Of Cluster Bombs in Afghanistan
US Troops Blamed in Afghan Kids' Deaths
Afghan refugees freeze to death, 41 children die
Old Fears in the New Afghanistan
Self-Immolations on Rise in Afghanistan
Book: U.S. Paid Off Afghan Warlords
Afghan Police Fire on Student Protesters, Killing Four and Wounding 30
Afghan Women Die Giving Birth at Staggering Rate
HRW Reports Rights Abuses by Afghan Governor Ismail Khan
Afghan Girl's Schools Struck by Attacks
Teachers and Students Protest Against Warlords in Takhar Province
Widespread abuse, restrictions on freedom continue
Afghanistan is again the world's largest opium producer, UN
UN rights expert: Afghanistan's cycle of violence not over
Two Killed, 40 Hurt in Attack on Afghan Wedding
Aghan police beat musicians defying ban
Afghan Women Remain Victims of Hope Unfulfilled
Women at risk in Afghanistan
Afghan women still languish
What the future holds for the women of Afghanistan?
"A female worker was gang raped in northern Afghanistan", UN