Legislator
Attacked by Colleagues. [Afghanistan] An
outspoken female legislator was physically
and verbally attacked by her colleagues after saying on the parliament floor that
some of Afghanistan's
mujahedeen leaders were criminals who shouldn't now be lawmakers, officials said Monday.
Malalai Joya, who apparently was unhurt, said several female lawmakers hit her with empty
plastic water bottles and male lawmakers made death threats and lobbed insults at her
after her speech on Sunday. One lawmaker had her hair pulled during the scuffle, another
official said. Moderate lawmakers in the 249-member lower house formed a circle around
Joya to protect her, she and other lawmakers said. "I said there are two kinds of
mujahedeen in Afghanistan.
One kind fought for independence, which I respect, but the
other kind destroyed the country and killed 60,000 people," Joya told The Associated
Press. Shukari Barikzai, another female lawmaker, said Joya's speech accusing some
lawmakers of being warlords was calm and dispassionate, but she was attacked anyway. She
said one female lawmaker pulled the hair of a female colleague protecting Joya. |
Female
Lawmaker Faces Death Threat. [Aghanistan] A young female Afghan lawmaker who once
called powerful tribal leaders "criminals" and complained publicly last week
there are warlords among parliament members now sleeps in a different house every night
after a fresh influx of death threats. Malalai Joya, 28, says her mission is to improve
women's rights and expose criminal lawmakers in Afghanistan. She says she will continue to
speak out despite any danger. Joya received worldwide attention after first making
comments against former warlords at Afghanistan's constitutional council in December 2003.
Last week, she was given her first extended chance to speak in parliament since being
elected in October, she said. "I thought it's good to expose warlords, even in the
national house," the 28-year-old lawmaker told The Associated Press in an interview
Saturday. "When I came into parliament they understood I was this person that I was
two years before." |
Dreaming
Big, More Women Studying in U.S. [Afghanistan] After
fleeing the violence
of Afghanistan
a decade ago, Nadima Sahar now dreams of becoming the country's first woman president.
Sahar and two other Afghan women received degrees from Roger Williams University in Rhode
Island this month, among the first graduates of a program created in 2002 to give Afghan
women a free U.S. college
education. "Seven or eight years ago people would have
thought I was crazy. But now the situation has changed so much," she told Reuters
before receiving a political science degree at ceremony on Saturday presided over by U.S.
first lady Laura Bush. Sahar, 20, remembers when the hardline Taliban seized power in
1996. Women were forced to wear all-enveloping burqas, confined to their homes and beaten
if discovered outside without a male relative. Sahar and her family fled. Arezo Kohistani,
another graduate and former Afghan refugee who calls herself a "child of war,"
wants to become an Afghan ambassador. Mahbooba Babrakzai, who earned a bachelors degree in
financial services, hopes to be finance minister. Back home in deeply conservative Muslim
Afghanistan, women's rights remain in their infancy even after the Taliban were overthrown
by U.S.-led forces in 2001. Education experts estimate the female illiteracy rate at 80
percent or higher. |
21 Rajasthan
Doctors Booked for Female Foeticide. [India] The Rajasthan government has filed police
complaints against 21 doctors alleged to have been involved in the practice of female
foeticide. The director of family welfare, acting on a direction from Health Minister
Digamber Singh, filed complaints against the doctors with the Ashok Nagar police station
of the city late Sunday. "We have filed FIRs (first information reports) against 21
doctors working in various government and private hospitals for violating the
Preconception and Prenatal Diagnostic Techniques (PCPNDT) Act," a health and family
welfare department official told IANS here Monday. "A detailed probe would be
conducted in the case and all the doctors would be punished if found guilty. Female
foeticide is a crime and the government plans to take effective measures to stop it in the
state," Singh said. The matter had come to light after a private TV news network
exposed the doctors running a racket of female foeticide a few weeks ago. |
NGO Unhappy Over
AMU Probe into Harassment of Female Student. [India] Unhappy with the probe by the
Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) into the alleged harassment of a female student for
wearing western clothes, a leading NGO today said the varsity was trying to
"character assassinate" the victim. "We are absolutely shocked at the
investigation report looking into Farha Aziz's case by the women cell set up by the
Aligarh Muslim University. Instead of bringing culprits to the book, the report has
implicated the victim herself," NGO Sahmat said. Even during the discussions with the
authorities, we found their attitude highly objectionable, it said adding they were trying
to character assassinate the student Farah Aziz rather than look into the eve-teasing
incident. They asked the National Commission for Women to intervene in the matter. Farah,
usually sporting a pair of jeans and T-shirt to college, had allegedly drawn the ire of
fellow students who warned her against wearing "western outfits" to college and
stick to the dress code of the university -- a Salwar-Kameez and a Duppatta. On February
two, two motor-cycle borne students had reportedly taken off a shawl she was wearing as a
Duppatta and sped away. |
Hindu Widow Film
Enrages Fundamentalists. [India]
India has
made headlines as an emerging superpower, a
land of high-tech multimillionaires and a vast new market for American goods. But there is
another India too,
and it is not just the one of villages and ox carts that has always
been best known in the West. This is the disturbing India of the Hindu widow, a woman
traditionally shunned as bad luck and forced to live in destitution on the edge of
society. Her husband's death is considered her fault, and she has to shave her head, shun
hot food and sweets and never remarry. In the pre-independence
India of the 1930's, the
tradition applied even to child brides of 5 or 6 who had been betrothed for the future by
their families but had never laid eyes on their husbands. Into this milieu now comes the
director Deepa Mehta with "Water," a lush new film that opened on Friday, about
Chuyia, an 8-year-old widow in the India of
1938. She has barely met her husband but is
banished by her parents to a decrepit widows' house on the edge of the
Ganges. Chuyia is
left there sobbing, in one of the most heart-wrenching scenes in the film, but she insists
her parents will soon return for her. Even as it becomes clear that they won't, Chuyia's
spirited, rebellious streak shines through, and she begins to change the way the other
widows in the house view the world, as the independence movement of Mahatma Gandhi swirls
around them. Chuyia has a particularly powerful effect on two people: Shakuntula, who
begins to question a Hindu faith that subjects women who have lost husbands to such
degrading lives, and Kalyani, a beautiful young widow who has been forced into
prostitution by the head of the widow house. As the film unfolds, Kalyani ignores the
taboos to fall tragically in love with a handsome young Gandhi nationalist. The sorrowful
film is nonetheless a triumph of conscience over blind faith, and a powerful message about
how much, and how little, has changed in India. "I think it's slightly naïve for me
to think that films make a difference," Mehta, the director, said in a telephone
interview from Toronto, where she lives half the year,
when she is not in New Delhi.
"But what it can do is start a dialogue and provoke discussion." The film has
provoked far more than that. In January 2000 Mehta was forced to shut down production of
"Water" in Varanasi, one of
India's
holy cities on the banks of the Ganges,
after Hindu nationalists protested that the film was anti-Hindu. Some 500 demonstrators
took to the streets, ransacked the set and burned Mehta in effigy. She appealed to the
state government for help, but fearing more violence, local officials asked the film crew
to leave. Today there are about 33 million widows in India, according to the 2001 census,
and many in the rural areas are still treated like the outcasts in the film. |
Stolen
Away. [Iraq
] The man on
the phone with the 14-year-old Iraqi girl called himself Sa'ad. He was calling long
distance from Dubai and telling
her wonderful things about the place. He was also about to
buy her. Safah, the teenager, was well aware of the impending transaction. In the weeks
after she was kidnapped and imprisoned in a dark house in
Baghdad's middle-class Karada
district, Safah heard her captors haggling with Sa'ad over her price. It was finally
settled at $10,000. Staring at a floor strewn with empty whiskey bottles, the orphan
listened as Sa'ad described the life awaiting her: a beautiful home, expensive clothes,
parties with pop stars. Why, she'd be joining two other very happy teenage Iraqi girls
living with Sa'ad in his harem. Safah knew that she was running out of time. A fake
passport with her photo and assumed name had already been forged for her. But even if she
escaped, she had no family who would take her in. She was even likely to end up in prison.
What was she to do? afah is part of a seldom-discussed aspect of the epidemic of
kidnappings in Iraq:
sex trafficking. No one
knows how many young women have been
kidnapped and sold since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003. The Organization for Women's
Freedom in Iraq, based
in Baghdad, estimates from
anecdotal evidence that more than 2,000
Iraqi women have gone missing in that period. A Western official in Baghdad who monitors
the status of women in Iraq thinks that figure may be inflated but admits that sex
trafficking, virtually nonexistent under Saddam, has become a serious issue. The collapse
of law and order and the absence of a stable government have allowed criminal gangs,
alongside terrorists, to run amuck. Meanwhile, some aid workers say, bureaucrats in the
ministries have either paralyzed with red tape or frozen the assets of charities that
might have provided refuge for these girls. As a result, sex trafficking has been allowed
to fester unchecked. |
Army Opens Arms for
Women. [Pakistan]
The Pakistan Army has
opened its various wings like its education
and computer branches for women "in keeping with the demands of the modern
times". An Army Selection and Recruitment Centre spokesperson said
in Lahore that
preliminary tests had begun to recruit women in the education corps, computer branch,
Inter Services Public Relations and the legal branch. The response has been very
encouraging as 300 women had registered themselves for the test, reports the Daily Times.
Women candidates appearing for selection held masters degrees, and they would be inducted
as captains and majors after six months' training, the spokesperson said. Women are
already working in the army's medical corps, where 650 are serving as doctors and 2,300 as
nurses. Four other women have been inducted into the Pakistan Air Force as fighter pilots.
|
King Warns Saudi
Media Over Women. [Saudi Arabia] Many Saudis have said they hope the king, who came to
power last year, will loosen strict political and social mores in the ultra-conservative
kingdom which imposes an austere version of Islam called Wahhabism. Newspapers have broken
with tradition and have more frequently begun printing photographs of Saudi women beside
stories, usually with hair covered but faces showing, which many Wahhabi Islamists
consider morally wrong. They have also printed debate about other issues concerning women,
such as whether bans on women driving and working in some retail stores could be reversed,
issues which have raised the ire of many religious conservatives. |
King Cautions Against Pictures
of Women. [Saudi Arabia] Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (AHN) - According to local newspapers,
Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah, under pressure from Islamists to curb reforms, has warned
local media against showing pictures of Saudi women. Breaking with tradition, newspapers
have more frequently begun printing photographs of Saudi women beside stories, usually
with hair covered but faces showing, which many Wahhabi Islamists consider morally wrong.
They have also printed debate about other issues concerning women, such as whether bans on
women driving and working in some retail stores could be reversed, issues which have
raised the ire of many religious conservatives. Newspapers quoted the King asking them to
"go easy on such things" and saying, "There are photographs published in
some newspapers...and one needs to think if he would want his daughter, sister or wife to
appear like that. Of course, no one would." |
Women
Hold the Key to Prosperity or Failure. [Saudi Arabia] In many ways, women in Saudi
Arabia can be their own worst enemies when it comes to issues regarding their changing
role in society. A look at the economic statistics and the important role that women have
to play for this society to progress makes many of the challenges obvious, but the
obeisance many women pay to the status quo and long-standing cultural traditions exact a
price on the pace of progress in Saudi Arabia and the acceptance of a new reality that we
can embrace and watch our children flourish or reject and watch both our society and
standard of living crumble. Ironically, in the worst-case scenario for the future, we
would struggle even to feed or clothe our children, let alone defend our culture or
traditions. It is a harsh appraisal and one that I might not have seen fit to voice had I
not been asked to present a paper regarding the role of women in the media to inform
society about the vision for Saudi women in the future at the first-ever Forum for Women
in Media held April 16 in Riyadh. Held under the patronage of Princess Adelah bint
Abdullah, the forum addressed issues concerning women in media. |
Muslim
Clerics' Anger Delays Plan to Let Women Sell Lingerie. [Saudi Arabia] Saudi Arabia has
postponed plans to replace male sales staff in lingerie shops with women. The move had
been its first cautious attempt to bring more women into the work-place. But even minor
reforms have incurred the wrath of ultra-conservative religious leaders, such as the Grand
Mufti Shaikh Abdel-Aziz al-Sheikh, who has denounced them as "steps towards
immorality and hellfire". In a country that requires women to cover up in public, and
bans them from driving, shop assistants are invariably men - even in stores selling
women's underwear and cosmetics. The kingdom's sole exceptions are the few all-female
shopping centres. King Abdallah's government last year ordered lingerie shop owners to
hire all-female sales staff by next month. In 2007, the policy was to have been extended
to stores selling dresses and abayas (the black robes worn by women for modesty). |
Saudi Women Shy Away From
Exercise. [Saudi
Arabia] Though there are no laws against women exercising outside
their homes, Saudi women, influenced by conservative society and clerics, do not join
aerobics classes and are never seen using walking trails. Two third of Saudi women rarely
exercise and very few encourage their daughters to attend physical education classes.
Hotel gyms and pools are off-limits to women. The Associated Press reports that muttawa,
the religious police, often harass women along the city's walking trails. About 52 percent
of Saudi men and 66 percent of women are obese or overweight, according to Saudi press
reports. |
Lawyer
Shoots Judges. [Turkey]
At least five judges were wounded when an attorney opened fire
in Turkey's top administrative court,
according to the state-run Anatolia news agency. The
court had come under widespread criticism for a recent ruling that said public employees
and teachers cannot wear headscarves while at work. Tansel Colasan, deputy head of the
administrative court, the Council of State, was quoted by The Associated Press as saying
the attacker shouted, "I am the soldier of God," and said he was carrying out
the attack to protest the court decision on headscarves. "These attacks will never
reach their goal," Sezer said, adding that the justice system would not be
intimidated and would fulfill its duty with "loyalty to the secular and democratic
republic." Turkey, a Muslim country, is
a largely secular society and many citizens
have long been suspicious of fundamentalist Islam. However, there are many traditional
Muslims in the country, and many women don traditional religious attire. |
Arab
Media Pledge to Higlight Girls Education. [United Arab Emirates] Engaging
the media towards an ethical and social agenda was the aim of the second Arab Media
Forum, concluded in Dubai Thursday, according to Anis Salem of the UN Childrens Fund
(UNICEF) Middle East and North Africa office. The three-day event, which sought to
encourage the role of the media in advancing childrens rights in the region, was
coordinated by UNICEF in partnership with the World Food Programme, UNESCO, the Dubai
Press Club, Dubai Aid and Humanitarian City and the Arab Institute for Human Rights, along
with other institutions. Organisers promoted the forum as part of an initiative focusing
on specific topics relating to Arab children. The event was a follow-up to the first media
forum on childrens rights, also held in Dubai in December
2004. That event was
attended by more than 50 media experts representing 13 Arab countries. This weeks
forum, attended by some 70 representatives of media and social organisations, concentrated
on the creation of a regional network of UN, social and media organisations devoted to
highlighting issues of gender, education and children's rights. Media representatives from
several countries committed themselves to follow up with reports, interviews and media
campaigns, especially on womens and girls education. |
Government
Waives Girls' Tuition Fees to Boost Female Enrolment. [Yemen] The Ministry of
Education announced on Saturday its decision to waive primary school tuition fees for
female students in an effort to encourage school enrolment among girls. "The goal is
to boost girls' enrolment and ensure they will continue learning," said Education
Minister Abdulsalam al-Jawfi. "We're obliged to bridge the gap between male and
female education mainly in the countryside and work towards achieving our
goal of education for all by 2015." Al-Jawfi added that the decision, which targets
around one million girl students for primary education, was in line
with Yemen's
commitments to promote and expand education among the female population. Tuition for
girls, therefore, which was formerly set at the equivalent of about US $3 per year, will
now be entirely free of charge. "I know school fees weren't that much before, but
they still represented an obstacle for many poor families," said Abdulmalik
al-Kamali, a village teacher. "I'm sure this decision will boost female
enrolment." The move comes within the context of the government's Basic Education
Development Strategy (BEDS), developed in 2002 with the help of the World Bank and donor
countries and agencies. According to Al-Jawfi, girls' enrolment increased last year by 3.5
percent as a result of over 1,300 new education initiatives, including construction of
schools and teacher training. "Yemen prepared a suitable education strategy which has
been reviewed and endorsed by the international community," said BEDS Director
Abdulateef al-Munaifi. "BEDS is targeting education quality, capacity building and
encouraging child enrolment." Nevertheless, an April statement from the UN Children's
Fund (UNICEF) noted that 46 percent of Yemeni children eligible for schooling "are
not given basic education", with primary school enrolment for boys and girls
countrywide standing at about 65 percent and 41 percent, respectively. |