| 1 November 2001 | |
|
Human Rights Watch Says Taliban Mounted "Catastrophic Assault" on Women Says Afghan Women Being Erased from Public Life
By Susan Domowitz
Washington File Staff Writer
Washington -- Human Rights Watch, a non-governmental human rights organization, has
published a comprehensive report on systematic violations of women's human rights in
Afghanistan. Afghan women, according to the report, "have suffered a catastrophic assault on
their human rights during more than twenty years of war and under the repressive rule of the
Taliban."
The report, published on October 29, and entitled "Afghanistan: Humanity Denied," urges the
international community to include full respect and protection for women's rights as an integral
part of any post-conflict reconstruction in Afghanistan.
"The Taliban have sought to erase women from public life through widespread discrimination.
They punish women with public beatings," said LaShawn R. Jefferson, executive director of the
women's rights division of Human Rights Watch. "Any political solution in Afghanistan must not
bargain away accountability for this systematic violence and discrimination."
"Women have borne the lion's share of human rights abuses in Afghanistan throughout the
conflict, and they are in particular danger now," said Jefferson. "Any future political
arrangements in Afghanistan have to take special account of what women have suffered -- and
how that can be remedied."
Human Rights Watch, based in New York, is one of the most influential non-governmental
organizations covering human rights abuses around the world.
The Taliban have banned women from employment in most sectors, and have prohibited
women from going out in public unless they are accompanied by a close male relative. Women
are acutely affected by the restrictions on women's employment and movement. There are an
estimated 40,000 war widows in Kabul alone, and they are deprived of the means to support
themselves and their children, according to the report.
The report says the Taliban have banned the education of girls beyond primary school. The rate
of illiteracy among Afghan women is now over 90 percent.
As the report notes, throughout the Afghan civil war, all sides in the conflict have committed
flagrant violations of human rights law, including violations of women's rights, with impunity.
Historically, the report says, "When the Taliban have felt threatened, they have redoubled their
persecution of women."
"Women living under the Taliban report being in a constant state of fear," Human Rights Watch
says. "The slightest infraction, real or perceived, of gender-specific norms or mores as
expressed by the Taliban edicts can and often does lead to summary beatings by the Religious
Police."
Most women interviewed by Human Rights Watch had either been beaten or had witnessed
other women being beaten, and many of their testimonials are included in the report. A woman
doctor who left Kabul in January 2001 recounted the risks she had taken simply to get to work
at her hospital. She worked long shifts and so took her infant son, whom she was
breastfeeding, with her to work.
"My husband hailed a taxi to take my child and me to the hospital. Five minutes later, a
Religious Police car stopped the taxi. He made me get out of the taxi. I was lucky my husband
told the taxi driver I was a doctor. The taxi driver told the Taliban that he was taking me to the
hospital. There were three Taliban. One of them beat the driver with a yellow cable that was
pretty wide. I was scared. He asked me why the holes in my chadari (burqa) were so big. Why
are you alone in the taxi? I asked, "Are you going to beat me?" I put my child away in the car
and told them, "Beat me, but do not hurt the child." He beat me. I hid my face. He hit me
several times on the back and arms. I had bruises."
An educated widow who left Kabul in June 2001 told Human Rights Watch about the difficulties
she faced in trying to earn a living by tailoring women's clothes in her home.
"The Taliban asked my customers, 'Why are you going to her house? Are you going to gather
and make plans against us?' I had a board outside which read, 'Tailoring for women and
children.' Three times they came and warned me, and I told them, 'I am a widow, what should I
do?' the third time they took board down and said that if I do not stop this work they will kill me.
They accused me of making plans against the Taliban. They said, 'Everyone should sew their
own clothing; our wives sew their own clothes. God will assist you, if you do everything as God
wishes.' It was the Religious Police, and I was forced to close four months ago, and leave for
Pakistan."
To see the Human Rights Watch report, "Afghanistan: Humanity Denied," click here.
Return to Democracy and Human Rights |
This site is produced and maintained by the U.S. Department of State's Office of International Information Programs (usinfo.state.gov). Links to other Internet sites should not be construed as an endorsement of the views contained therein. |
IIP Home | Index to This Site | Webmaster | Search This Site | Archives | U.S. Department of State |