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NEWS & LETTERS, March 2002 

Lead article

Women fight terror and war in South Asia and the Middle East

by Maya Jhansi

A global women's movement has made itself heard over the din and violence of Bush's so-called "war on terrorism" following the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York. The fall of the Taliban brought women from around the world to Brussels to take part in a parallel conference to the official Summit on Afghan Women. Women from Belgium, Croatia, France, India, Italy, Jordan, Morocco, Netherlands, Pakistan, Palestine, Somalia, Tajikistan, Tunisia, Turkey, United Kingdom and the United States expressed their support for Afghan women by declaring that "Afghanistan is everywhere."

Yet no sooner had the interim government been installed in Afghanistan under the dubious leadership of Hamid Karzai, than Bush and his allies dropped women from the international agenda as they searched new areas of the world to bomb. Despite condemnations of the treatment of women by the Taliban, the issue of women's rights was not on the agenda of Secretary of State Colin Powell's foreign visits.

BUSH ABANDONS AFGHAN WOMEN

Likewise, Bush, who signed the Afghan Women and Children Relief Act of 2001, decided to withhold the $45 million that Congress had approved for the United Nations Population Fund, which distributes much needed birth control and birthing kits to war-torn Afghanistan. Afghan women have an average of seven children. According to the TORONTO STAR, contraception is not available, and 17 pregnancies per woman are common, beginning at age 15. Of the 1.5 million refugees who fled Afghanistan when Bush's bombing campaign began, 375,000 were women of reproductive age, and 56,000 of them were pregnant.

As the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA) has pointed out, the future of women in Afghanistan remains uncertain. Factional fighting in several areas of the country, instability in Kandahar and Kabul, as well as widespread looting and banditry are beginning to wear away the confidence of Afghans in the ability of the interim government, installed on Dec. 22, to move the country toward democracy.

Reports of rapes and abuse continue. The International Federation of the Red Cross reported that girls in the western part of the country, some as young as 10, were being sold as "brides" for as little as 100 kilograms of flour. While the Taliban's involvement in the trafficking of Afghan women was long reported by Afghan refugees fleeing Afghanistan, more details are emerging following the regime's collapse.

Government officials and witnesses report that the Taliban routinely kidnapped women from Tajik, Uzbek, Hazara and other ethnic minorities to be sold to brothels or used as sex slaves and "wives" for Al Qaeda soldiers. As many as 600 women have been reported missing in one region of Afghanistan.

Women are still vulnerable to sex trafficking, and the prospect for justice for the thousands of abducted women remains dim under the new leadership. The only solution offered by Sima Samar, the deputy prime minister and minister of Women's Affairs, was her pledge to build orphanages to protect young orphan girls from abduction.

Bush's abandonment of Afghan women is hardly surprising or unexpected. But the courageous work of RAWA, their principled stand against all fundamentalists, and the support they have received from thousands of women in the U.S. and around the world signal a new awareness and new opening for women to take their lives back into their own hands.

AFGHANISTAN IS EVERYWHERE

Women from many parts of the world find themselves in a new situation. On the one hand, the attention that feminists and activists have brought to abuses of women by fundamentalists has weakened fundamentalism, especially in places where it has a hold on state power. In Pakistan, for example, feminists are seizing this moment to push the self-declared President Musharraf to reform laws that clearly discriminate against women as part of his agenda to "democratize" Pakistan from above. In Bangladesh, the international feminist outcry has pressured the new Prime Minister, Khaleda Zia, brought to power by an alliance with fundamentalists, to propose tougher legislation against acid attacks.

On the other hand, fundamentalists have become increasingly more extremist. Nothing shows this better than the sentencing of Safiya Husseini in northern Nigeria to death by stoning for adultery. Safiya's stoning is scheduled for mid-March, delayed long enough for her to wean her baby. Although Nigeria has a long history of conflict between the Islamic north and the Christian and animist south, the imposition of sharia is a new development in state politics. As the NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE put it, "Between one-third and one-half of Nigeria's [population] will find themselves living under a judicial system with which Mullah Muhammed Omar, the ousted Taliban leader, would find little to quibble" (Jan. 27, 2002).

In another less publicized case, an 18-year-old woman, Abok Alfa Alok, was recently sentenced to death by stoning for adultery by a criminal court in Sudan. Both women's cases are under appeal, but to save their lives the global women's movement needs to come to their defense more vocally.

Elsewhere, in South Asia and the Middle East, women continue to fight against female genital mutilation, domestic violence, honor killings and other forms of violence against women. The numbers are staggering. According to the newsletter of Women Living Under Muslim Law, Bangladesh tops the world's charts in violence against women. Forty-seven percent of women in Bangladesh are victimized by male partners or family members. Bangladesh is followed by India, where 40% of women are similarly abused by men they are married or related to. An estimated 5,000 women are murdered each year in India in dowry-related incidents.

Women are also fighting against the widespread practice called "honor" killings. In these cases women are murdered by family members for transgressing social or religious codes, and murderers are rarely brought to justice by courts influenced by fundamentalist hatred of women.

- In Pakistan, three women a day become victims of honor killings, usually murdered by male members of their families, including their husbands, fathers, and brothers.

- In the Gaza strip and West Bank, two-thirds of all murders were most likely honor killings, according to UN agencies.

- In Jordan, an average of 23 women are murdered every year in the name of "honor."

- In Yemen, an Al Qaeda stronghold, 400 honor killings are believed to have taken place in 1997.

- In Bangladesh, there was a four-fold increase in reported disfiguring acid attacks between 1996-1998.

- In Turkey, an estimated 200 girls and women are murdered in the name of honor each year.

Human rights groups note that the figures are inconclusive because so few crimes are reported or convicted. According to Human Rights Watch, in 2001, judges in Turkey trying "honor" killing cases often reduced the penalties for perpetrators, holding that the victim had "provoked" the murder by transgressing codes of conduct imposed on women by society.

In Jordan, there has been a vocal grassroots public awareness and signature campaign since 1999 run by the Jordanian National Committee to Eliminate the So-called Crimes of Honor, but the government has so far failed to repeal the law that allows for a reduced sentence for the perpetrators of "honor crimes."

Women's liberationists argue that "honor" killings are not unique, but lie on a continuum of violence against women across cultures. They are calling for an international response to "honor" killings. Grassroots activists have planned over 800 actions all over the world in conjunction with V-Day, a global movement to end violence against women organized by the author of "The Vagina Monologues," Eve Ensler. Amnesty International will launch a similar campaign in 2003.

WAR AND POLITICS

Women's efforts to combat violence unfold in the context of a war-torn world. While Bush's bloodthirsty hounds search out new lands to prolong his "war on terror," South Asia stands on the brink of possible nuclear war. The nuclear threat in that region should not be underestimated. India's rejection of General Musharraf's offer to make South Asia a nuclear free region and to sign a no-war pact exposes India's continuing efforts to build up its nuclear arsenal. A recent CIA report to Congress concludes that both Pakistan and India "continue to acquire nuclear technology."

It is against this nuclear threat that women in South Asia persist in their battles for a more humane world. Following the September 11 attacks, a coalition of South Asian feminist organizations released a statement in which they wrote:

"Religious fundamentalism and military aggression are two sides of patriarchy, that aim to seek control and wield power over women and other oppressed sections. The women's movement opposes the forces of religious fundamentalism whether they are from the U.S. or Afghanistan or from India or Pakistan because fundamentalist forces in essence trample upon all democratic and women's rights and seek to reverse the gains made by women's liberation movements."

With more than a million troops amassed along the border between India and Pakistan, the tensions between Hindu and Islamic fundamentalist groups run high. Communalist sentiment is being whipped up in various regions of India between Christians and Hindus as well.

In the state of Orissa the rape of a woman and the ensuing prosecution is embroiled in the conflict between Hindus and Christians. The woman, a Hindu, was raped by two men, at least one of whom is believed to be a Christian. In that same region, an Australian missionary and his son were set on fire by Hindu fundamentalist thugs two years ago.

However, voters dealt a serious blow to the ruling right-wing Hindu fundamentalist party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), in the recent state assembly elections, showing that many Indians oppose the government's militarism and communalism.

LESS SANCTUARY IN SECULAR STATES

Women are becoming more vulnerable to fundamentalist policies, not alone in the Sudan or Saudi Arabia, where the state openly imposes religious laws, but also in places like India, which claim to practice democracy.

There exist in many places two types of laws—one set of laws for women and the family and another set of laws for the public sphere. Personal and family laws in places like India and Algeria have stripped women of the basic rights of inheritance and ownership as well as of divorce.

Countries like Egypt, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh have nationality laws on the books that deny women the right to transfer citizenship to their children. Despite years of protest by women's groups in Egypt, in May 2000 the government dismissed a parliamentary plea to reform the nationality law. Laws such as these deny women a national identity in the very lands that they fought to liberate from colonialism.

In the face of such reaction and violence, women continue to battle for a more human world, struggling against war, nuclear weapons, religious and ethnic hatred, and to protect the environment against the ravages of global capital. Women are raising questions about nationalism and about what it means to be human in this increasingly violent world.

Looking at women's struggles in the Middle East and South Asia shows us that we can't separate the personal from the political. Women fight for new human relations in the home, where they might face violence or even death, at the same time that they challenge warmongering and jingoism at the national and global level. Freedom and anti-war movements everywhere need to listen to these women, so we can work out a more comprehensive vision of social transformation to counter the future of permanent war being offered to us by Bush, Bin Laden and other fundamentalists around the world.

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