Middle East

Muslim Women: Customs and Conflicts. [Afghanistan] Masuda Sultan was 16 when her Afghan parents arranged for her to marry a doctor almost twice her age. She saw him just once before they were ritually joined, when she was 17, in an Islamic nikkah ceremony that was held in a hotel in Flushing, Queens.  By her account in her new memoir, "My War At Home" (Washington Square Press), the marriage was a blunder from the first.  Although Sultan had grown up in New York, before the wedding night her mother asked her to follow an old custom: provide the new in-laws with a blood-stained cloth as evidence of her virginity.  Once married, she writes, her husband rarely spoke to her, insisted she remain subservient and discouraged schooling beyond college.  After three years, feeling despondent to the point of swallowing a bottle of his Valium, she walked away and returned to her parents' Queens home. And yet, Sultan, in an interview, said she wrote the book to enlighten outsiders about the virtues of an arranged marriage, like the confidence newlyweds have in a decision by their elders and the domestic bolstering a wife receives from her husband's family.  "It's upsetting that people see your culture as backward, who say to me 'You poor victim,'" she said.  "I think Westerners have a simplistic idea about arranged marriage.  Mine didn't work out, but that was not the case for everyone, and it's not necessarily backward to do that."  That contradiction captures how much Sultan, like many immigrants, oscillates between two worlds, in her case that of a traditional Afghan daughter and an urbane graduate of Harvard's Kennedy School of Government who has ventured to Afghanistan some 10 times to fight for the rights of women.  She has great affection for Afghans, but also misgivings about some traditions.  That conflict is her memoir's recurring leitmotif.
NCW Approaches Government Over Rising Crimes Against Women.  [India] In the wake of the murder of a mother-daughter advocate duo in Delhi, the National Commission for Women (NCW) on Monday approached the Centre seeking urgent steps to be taken, that include increasing the number of women in police and setting up more police helplines.  NCW Chairperson Girija Vyas has written to the UPA Chairperson, the Prime Minister, and the Home Minister on the need for taking steps to ensure safety of women, especially in the metros like Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata and Bangalore.  The Commission has also written to Delhi Police Commissioner K K Paul in connection with the sensational murder of a mother and daughter in a posh South Delhi area, seeking an action-taken report in the case within three days.  The NCW Chairperson met UPA chief and Congress President Sonia Gandhi on Monday, and the issue of growing incidence of crime against women came up for discussion at the meeting.  "We have demanded an increase in the number of women personnel in the police and asked for steps to be taken to sensitise the force towards women's issues.  Right now, women comprise less than three per cent of the police force," Vyas said.
40% of AIDS Patients are Women.  [India] Comprising 40 per cent of India's HIV infected population, women in the country are gradually becoming more susceptible to the disease, UN experts said here on Friday.  "Women are biologically more susceptible to HIV infection.  Besides, gender disparities, lack of education and trafficking of women are making the situation worse," said Archana Tamang, chief of the women's human rights and human security unit, United Nations Development Fund for Women.  India has over five million AIDS / HIV infected people, including over two million women. Tamang said:  "We need to be focussed to create awareness among women between the ages of 15 and 29."
ILO Favors Skill-Based Education for Indian Women.  [India] The International Labor Organization (ILO) Monday called for providing skill-based education to women in India for their empowerment.  "In the face of distress, women have proved that they are pillars of strength in a sea of chaos and suffering.  But what we need the most is providing skill-based education to them for independence," said Leyla Tegmo Reddy, director of ILO India.  Reddy said ILO has been working with the affected communities to contribute to reconstruction of livelihoods, through extension of skills development, social protection and promoting linkages with local development initiatives.
Noted Actress and Former MP Launches Drive Against Female Foeticide [India] Spearheading a campaign against female foeticide, noted actress and former Rajya Sabha MP Shabana Azmi has said that more than introduction of laws, there should be a 'tiered system' in society to bring about an attitudinal change to tackle the skewered sex-ratio.  "Statistics have belied the notion that education leads to awareness.  We see that in supposedly affluent areas such as South Delhi and South Mumbai, the female sex ratio has dropped significantly.  In an upmarket area like Colaba in South Mumbai, the ratio of girls to every 1000 boys born has dropped from 913 to 830," she told newspersons at a press conference on Saturday.
Sex Selection Doctor Jailed.   [India] A doctor in India and his assistant have been sentenced to two years in prison for revealing the sex of a foetus and then agreeing to abort it.  This is the first time medical professionals have been jailed in such a case.  Under Indian laws, ultrasound tests on a pregnant woman to determine the gender of the foetus are illegal.   It has been estimated that 10m female foetuses may have been terminated in India in the past 20 years.  Dr Anil Sabhani and Kartar Singh were caught in a sting operation in the northern state of Haryana.  Government officials sent in three pregnant women as decoy patients to find out if the clinic would carry out abortions based on sex selection.
Orissa Tribal Women Take to Protecting State's Forest Cover.  [India] The lush greenery surrounding a remote village in Orissa owes its existence to the blazing dynamism of a small group of tribal women, a movement that began more than 15 years ago and is today reaping the fruits of their labour.  Balda village, with its mud huts and stone pathways, stands as a testimony to the unwavering grit of their womenfolk.  The docile-looking women, who roam around the village pathways in their traditional attire, have snatched axes, fought with the hardened wood mafia and even kept night vigil to save their forest cover.  The movement began in 1995 by Radha Pandia almost by chance.  “We did not have much forest area because very often the mafia were cutting the trees that had affected the area.  Now we protect forest ourselves and are able to earn our livelihood also from it.  We get firewood from the fallen leaves and branches,” says Pandia. Pandia's group, which has now grown to encompass nearly 100 other tribal women, educates people on the importance of saving their environment.
Streets Turn Smoky as Women Cook Holy Offering.  [India] Around a million women sat in serpentine queues around the Attukal Bhagavathi shrine here on Monday, stirring their pots and pans to cook a holy offering of rice even as the streets filled up with smoke.  The unique occasion was the penultimate day of the 10-day Attukal Pongala festival when women offer a kind of porridge, traditionally called 'pongala', to the temple goddess in the hope of receiving her blessings.  So popular has the festival become that women from all walks of life, be it celebrities or housewives, take part in it.  Leading heroine Chippy said she has been coming to the festival ever since she was a student.  "My belief is that each time I come here and take part in the pongala, the goddess takes care of all our needs till the next pongala."

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