Jail may await Afghan women fleeing abuse
Posted by kim on Thursday, March 29, 2012 Under: Public Justice
Jail may await Afghan women fleeing abuse, rape: HRW
KABUL (Reuters) - For Afghan women, the act of fleeing domestic abuse, forced prostitution or even being stabbed repeatedly with a screwdriver by an abusive husband, may land them in jail while their abusers walk free, Human Rights Watch said.
Running away is considered a "moral crime" for women in Afghanistan
while some rape victims are also imprisoned, because sex outside
marriage - even when the woman is forced - is considered adultery,
another "moral crime".
"From the first time I came to this world my destiny
was destroyed," 17-year-old Amina, who has spent months in jail after
being forced into prostitution, told researchers from Human Rights Watch
in a report published on Wednesday.
Despite progress in women's rights and freedom since the fall of the Taliban a decade ago, women throughout the country are at risk of abduction, rape, forced marriage and being traded as commodities.
It can be hard for women to escape violence at home
because of huge social pressure and legal risks to stay in marriages.
"The treatment of women and girls
accused of 'moral crimes' is a black eye on the face of the
post-Taliban Afghan government and its international backers, all of
whom promised that respect for women's rights would distinguish the new
government from the Taliban," the New York-based group said.
"This situation has been further undermined by
President (Hamid) Karzai's frequently changing position on women's
rights. Unwilling or unable to take a consistent line against
conservative forces within the country, he has often made compromises
that have negatively impacted women's rights."
The influential rights organization said that there were about 400 women and girls being held in Afghanistan for "moral crimes", and they rarely found support from authorities in a "dysfunctional criminal justice system".
The plight of a woman called Nilofar illustrates the
problem. She was stabbed repeatedly with a screwdriver in the head,
chest, and arms by her husband who accused her of adultery for inviting a
man into the house, the rights group said.
But afterwards, she was arrested, he was not.
"The way he beat her wasn't bad enough to keep him in
jail. She wasn't near death, so he didn't need to be in prison," the
prosecutor of the case told Human Rights Watch.
"HE WILL KILL ME"
The dire
treatment of women was the main reason Western countries gave for
refusing to recognize the Taliban government as legitimate when it was
in power.
As Afghan and Western leaders seek a negotiated end
to more than 10 years of war, the future for women is uncertain.
The United States and NATO - who are fighting an unpopular
war as they prepare to pull out most combat troops by the end of 2014 -
have stressed that any settlement must ensure the constitution, which
says the two sexes are equal, is upheld.
A law,
passed in August 2009, supports equality for women, including
criminalizing child and forced marriage, selling and buying women for
marriage or for settling disputes, as well as forced self-immolation,
among other acts.
But women, especially in rural areas, lack shelters
to flee abuse while only one percent of police are female, according to
the report based on interviews from October to November with 58 women
and girls as well as prosecutors, judges, government officials and civil
society.
The ordeal for women does not stop with jail though.
Once leaving prison, women and girls face strong social
stigma in the conservative country and may be killed in so-called "honor
killings".
"I just want a divorce. I can't go back
to my father because he will kill me. All my family has left me
behind," 20-year-old Aisha, who was sentenced to three years for fleeing
an abusive husband she was forced to marry, told researchers.
(Reporting by Jack Kimball; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani and Robert Birsel)
In : Public Justice