Middle East

Female Candidates Face Problems in Electioneering.  [Afghanistan] Several female constants for the upcoming legislative and provincial council elections complained they were facing host of problems in carrying out their election drive.  A meeting of 84 women candidates was held here last night during which they discussed the upcoming elections in detail.  They observed that besides threats and other problems, their posters were also been torn and removed from walls and vehicles.
Daughters Pay the Price in Poppy War.  [Afghanistan] In the thirsty hills of Nangarhar Province, debt is a way of life.  Every autumn, sharecroppers take loans from drug traffickers to plant their poppy crops.  After every harvest, they repay them in poppies, which are turned into heroin.  This year, an eradication effort has sharply cut Nangarhar's poppy cultivation, but the sharecroppers' debts remain.  Now, some of the region's poorest farmers say they are being forced to repay traffickers with the only thing they have left: their daughters.  Some Afghans refer to the practice as "giving bad," a traditional method of conflict resolution in which a murderer, a thief or a debtor is forced by tribal elders to give a daughter or sister as payment to the victim's family.  Others describe the practice as a marriage transaction.  In a culture of arranged marriages, where a groom usually pays the father of a bride $200 to $5,000 depending on her social status and skills, a man can cancel his debt by arranging for his daughter to marry the lender or the lender's relative.  The practice of giving away a daughter to pay a debt is expected to increase sharply after the aggressive campaign against poppies, especially if farmers feel they have no alternative but to continue to plant in areas that could be hit hard by the eradication programs, and thus risk not having enough income to repay loans they took out to finance their crops.  Hangama Anwari, a human rights activist working to persuade communities to stop human trafficking, said the victims often live out the rest of their lives in isolation and shame, treated as servants even if they are wives.
Suicide Blast By Woman Kills 8 Others; 57 Are Hurt.  [Iraq] A woman walked up to the gate of a new army and police recruitment center in Tal Afar, a northern city, and blew herself up, killing 8 people in addition to herself and wounding 57, hospital and security officials said.  The bomber, who The Associated Press reported was dressed in men's clothing, struck at 10:45 a.m. outside the gate of a building that houses the new recruitment center and an American military office that processes compensation forms for Iraqis, the officials said.  She detonated her belt of explosives, spraying metal balls into a crowd that had gathered, awaiting a security check.  Suicide bombers in Iraq are rarely women, though there has been at least one other.  During the American invasion in 2003, a woman driving an explosive-packed vehicle blew herself up near an American checkpoint in Anbar Province in western Iraq.
'Dead Women' Elected in Pakistan.  [Pakistan] The women were elected in two separate constituencies of Upper Dir district of North West Frontier Province (NWFP).  A quota system for women at the elections was intended to boost their representation at a provincial level.  But the elections were marred by violence and claims of vote-rigging.  Reports suggest that one of the women has been dead for 13 years and the other for three years.
Turkish Women Blast Karen Hughes With Iraq War Criticism.  [Turkey] A group of Turkish female activists confronted Undersecretary of State Karen Hughes with heated complaints about the U.S.- led invasion of Iraq , turning a session designed to highlight the empowering of women into a raw display of the anger at U.S. policy in the region.  "This war is really, really bringing your positive efforts to the level of zero," said Hidayet Sefkatli Tuksal, an activist with the Capital City Women's Forum.  She said it was difficult to talk about cooperation between women in the United States and Turkey as long as Iraq was under occupation.  Hughes, a longtime confidant of President Bush tasked with burnishing the U.S. image overseas, has generally met with polite audiences -- many of whom received U.S. funding or consisted of former exchange students -- during a tour of Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.

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