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Politics : Idea Of The Day -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (48317)4/17/2005 11:03:25 PM
From: JD  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50167
 
The sound of progress:

"...there's nothing in Shariah (Islamic law) that says women can't do business."

...Rahmani started making clothes during years as a refugee in neighboring Pakistan. She returned to Afghanistan last year, and with a $35,000 loan from her brother in the United States, set up shop in a cramped, two-story terrace...
...Seven months later she employs 70 women...


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Afghan Women Break Mold, Go Into Business

KABUL, Afghanistan, Apr 17, 2005 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- A growing number of Afghan women are going into business, capitalizing on new opportunities in a thriving, yet still male-dominated economy three years after the fall of the Islamist government.

A scattering of small textile and handicraft workshops, boutiques, beauty parlors and even a soccer ball factory - run by women and employing women - have sprung up around the capital. Afghanistan's first female business association - set up with foreign funding 18 months ago - says it has 500 members.

Barred from education and jobs during the five years of Taliban rule, women now have the right, at least on paper, to pursue careers of their choosing. But this is a male-dominated society where 86 percent of women are illiterate.

U.N. figures say the per-capita income of Afghan women is only about one-third of men's. A survey of 360 rural households by a Kabul-based research group found that less than 2 percent of women owned land in their own right.

Mina Sherzoy, head of the government's department of Women's Entrepreneurship Development, said that women needing startup money typically must turn to a male relative.

"There are barriers, and they will be lifted slowly," she said. "We are recovering from war and devastation and Taliban repression. ... But there's nothing in Shariah (Islamic law) that says women can't do business."

Sara Rahmani, businesswoman, picks a brown burqa-style dress from the rack, and holding it in front of her face, shows with a broad smile how she refashioned it for post-Taliban Afghanistan.

The all-covering shroud that was mandatory under the hard-line regime has become a flowing gown, with head uncovered and the eye-level gauze dropped to the chest - though not too low. It's on sale now for $30 at her Kabul showroom.

Rahmani started making clothes during years as a refugee in neighboring Pakistan. She returned to Afghanistan last year, and with a $35,000 loan from her brother in the United States, set up shop in a cramped, two-story terrace.

Seven months later she employs 70 women, 10 doing machine stitching on site and 60 others doing embroidery by hand at home. She also employs two Afghan men - a tailor to teach the workers and an English-speaker to help with marketing and shopping for fabric.

Her company, Sara Afghan, is still struggling to make ends meet, but is busy with orders from two American clients for 100 blouses and 100 sets of duvet covers and sheets, from which Rahmani hopes to make about $2,000 profit.

"We have two orders, so we should be OK to pay salaries and rent for the next two months. God willing, after that, more business will come," she said. "A lot of poor women are praying for me."

Across town, another cottage industry makes quality leather balls for soccer, volleyball and handball - hand-stitched by about 130 women working from home, many of them widowed during a quarter-century of war.

Aziza Mohmmand, 45, who ran a secret girls' school at her house during the Taliban rule and heads an Afghan aid group to help women, said she got the idea two years ago when she saw a young boy on a Kabul street trying to sell a homemade ball.

"At the start, it was a struggle. We had so many footballs, we'd spent lots of money and we couldn't seem to sell them," she said in her office, above the din of a generator driving a leather-cutting machine.

"But demand gradually picked up. Before Ramadan (last November) we discovered for the first time we were actually out of stock."

Her company produces more than 1,000 balls a month sold under the name of the aid group Humanitarian Assistance for Women. It supplies balls to local markets and the Afghan Olympic association. A German aid group has helped fund training of the work force, and now the factory can at least cover its costs.

The women earn 32 Afghanis (64 cents) for each ball they stitch. A novice can take two days to stitch a ball, but those with experience can make up to four a day. The balls sell for about $6 each.

"Before this we had no job," said 16-year old Morsal, a returned refugee, stitching a ball outside her simple house with plastic sheeting covering the windows. "I'm happy we got training and have this skill.

By MATTHEW PENNINGTON Associated Press Writer



To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (48317)4/18/2005 3:00:27 PM
From: IQBAL LATIF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50167
 
April 18- 1980: Zimbabwe achieved its independence from the United Kingdom.

1966: American basketball star Bill Russell became the first black coach of a major professional sports team (the Boston Celtics) in the United States.

1955: Albert Einstein died in Princeton, New Jersey.

1945: American war correspondent Ernie Pyle was killed during the U.S. forces' campaign on Okinawa during World War II.

1775: American patriot Paul Revere rode from Charlestown, Massachusetts, to Lexington to warn colonists of the approach of British troops.

1506: Pope Julius II laid the first stone of the new St. Peter's Basilica in Rome.

San Francisco damaged in earthquake


1906: Early this morning, San Francisco was rocked by an earthquake caused by slippage along the San Andreas Fault. The earthquake started a fire that destroyed the central business district of the city. Damage was also severe in other towns situated near the fault. Most of the approximately 700 people killed were in San Francisco.





Clarence Darrow


Clarence Darrow, born this day in 1857, was well-known as a defense lawyer, public speaker, debater, and writer. Among Darrow's high-profile court appearances were the trial of Richard Loeb and Nathan Leopold for the murder of 14-year-old Robert Franks in Chicago and the Scopes Trial, in which Darrow defended a Tennessee high-school teacher who had broken a state law by presenting the Darwinian theory of evolution.


"To think is to differ."

Clarence Darrow, remark during the Scopes Trial, 1925