|
Amnesty International - Report
- ASA 11/11/99
November 1999 Afghanistan Women in Afghanistan: Pawns in Men's Power Struggles |
The disastrous consequences of two decades of civil war have weighed heavily on the women of
Afghanistan. While the "battles of death are played out by men, women have responsibility for the
battles of life"
See footnote 1
1
. Through years of fighting, destruction and displacement, Afghan women have
struggled to support and sustain their families. Injury, death and the loss of family breadwinners have
forced women into assuming a greater role in providing for their dependents; a role which has
become increasingly more difficult as war has impoverished the country and adversely affected socio-
economic development in all areas, even those far removed from frontline fighting.
Women have rarely played an active part in the fighting, but they have been targeted nonetheless.
Alongside the general hardship and suffering experienced as a result of the war, women in
Afghanistan have been subjected to a range of human rights abuses perpetrated against them by the
many different parties to the Afghan conflict. Indiscriminate bombing and shelling of residential areas
and the extensive use of landmines has cost
the lives of hundreds of thousands of men,
women and children. Women along with
men have been the victims of deliberate and
arbitrary killings and "disappearances". In
addition to this, women have been subjected
to gender specific human rights abuses, such
as rape and sexual assault, forced marriage
and prostitution.
The violence directed against women during
the Afghan conflict can be located on a
continuum of human rights abuses that
Afghan women have been, and continue to
be, subjected to as a result of their status in
society. Traditionally, the lives of Afghan
women have been controlled by their male
relatives. Notions of honour and shame
underpinning cultural norms and practices
emphasise female modesty and purity.
During the last two decades, but particularly
between 1992 and 1995, armed guards have used these norms as weapons of war, engaging in rape
and sexual assault against women as an ultimate means of dishonouring entire communities and
reducing people's capacity to resist military advances.
Alongside the violence perpetrated against women by members of armed Mujahideen groups, all
Afghan political groups have used the status of women as a political tool to claim legitimacy or
popularity vis a vis other factions. The cultural constraints existing for women, which are bound up
with interpretations of tradition and religion, have repeatedly been raised to the political level by
Afghan armed groups. Invoking religion and Afghan culture, most armed groups have made
pronouncements about appropriate behaviour for women, imposing restrictions on their freedom of
movement and access to employment and education in areas they controlled. Women have been
publicly harassed, intimidated and beaten for carrying out activities deemed by armed guards to be
'un-Islamic'. Most consistent and stringent in their enforcement of restrictions on women is the
Taleban, an armed political group who currently control all major towns and cities in Afghanistan
including the capital, Kabul. Women living in urban areas have been most immediately affected, as
more liberal attitudes in town and cities had previously increased opportunities for women in
education and work. In contrast, in rural areas where women's lives are already constrained by
custom, the impact of administrative restrictions has been felt less. For educated, professional women,
however, the loss of freedoms gained over previous decades has been hard to bear.
OVERVIEW OF THE HUMAN SITUATION FOR WOMEN DURING THE PAST 20 YEARS
Historical Background
[
Women student at Kabul University in the 1970s © Sean Sprague / Panos Pictures.
]
A number of attempts have been made by different Afghan governments throughout the 20th century
to improve the status of women as part of efforts to modernise the country. Significant reforms
favouring women were introduced in the 1920s, 1960sSee footnote 2
2
and then following the establishment of a
communist government in 1978. The government of the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan
moved to prohibit
traditional practices which
were deemed feudal in
nature, including banning
bride price and forced
marriage. The minimum
age for marriage was also
raised. Education was
stressed for both men and
women and widespread
literacy programmes were
set up. Such reforms
however were not
universally well-received,
being viewed by many
Afghans - particularly in
rural areas - as the
imposition of secular
western values considered
to be alien to Afghan
culture and un-Islamic. As
had happened earlier in the
century, resentment with the government's programme and the manner in which it was imposed,
along with widespread repression, provoked a backlash from tribal and Islamic leaders.
The years 1979 to 1992
During the ten years of fighting that followed the Soviet invasion, serious human rights abuses were
reported, forcing millions of Afghans to flee the country. Civilians in rural areas where most of the
fighting took place were targeted by Soviet and Afghan troops apparently in reprisal for the actions of
armed opposition groups. Men, women and children were killed in these attacks and people's homes
and livelihoods destroyed. In towns and cities, students and teachers, some of them women, were
arrested for opposition to the government, including for participating in largely peaceful
demonstrations. Amnesty International reported in 1986 that thousands of political prisoners were
detained on account of the non-violent exercise of their fundamental human rights, such as freedom
of expression and freedom of association. Many were tortured, including women prisoners who
testified to being forced to witness the torture of male prisoners.
The years 1992 - 1995
Following the collapse of the pro-Soviet government and the failure of the Mujahideen groups to
agree to power-sharing arrangements, the nature of the civil war in Afghanistan changed. With the
fragmentation of political power and territory under the control of different militias, lawlessness
spread all over the country. Alliances and hostilities between the warring factions were often based on
personal loyalties, some of which were purely tactical and short-lived. As territory changed hands
after long battles, local populations were subjected to violent retaliatory punishments by the
victorious forces.
After the Soviet withdrawal in 1989, fighting
continued between government and opposition
forces until the communist government finally
collapsed in 1992. The fall of the government did
not bring peace, however, as the loosely allied
and fractious Mujahideen groups started fighting
each other for control of territory and
administrative institutions. Despite the formation
of a coalition interim government, central
political authority was weak and unstable, and
Afghanistan plunged into lawlessness.
At the end of 1994, a new political and military
force - the Taleban - emerged on to the scene.
Stating as their aim to rid Afghanistan of corrupt
Mujahideen groups, the Taleban have succeeded
in capturing large areas of country from opposing
armed groups. They are now said to control
around 80 per cent of Afghanistan. Fighting
however continues between the Taleban and
opposition forces and the political situation
remains
volatile.
Women were often treated as the spoils of war.
Many women were raped by armed guards during
the period 1992 - 1995. Rape of women by armed
guards appeared to be condoned by leaders as a
method of intimidating vanquished populations and
of rewarding soldiers. In March 1994 a 15-year-old
girl was repeatedly raped in her house in Kabul's
Chel Sotton district after armed guards entered the
house and killed her father for allowing her to go to
school. "They shot my father right in front of me. He
was a shop-keeper. It was nine o'clock at night.
They came to our house and told him they had
orders to kill him because he allowed me to go to
school. The Mujahideen had already stopped me
from going to school, but that was not enough. They
then came and killed my father. I cannot describe
what they did to me after killing my father..."
Several Afghan women reportedly committed
suicide to avoid such a fate. In one case, a father
who saw Mujahideen guards coming for his
daughter reportedly killed her before she could be
taken away. Scores of Afghan women were
abducted and detained by Mujahideen groups and
commanders and then used for sexual purposes or
sold into prostitution. Some were victimised for
belonging to a particular religious or ethnic group or
by commanders or guards allied to an opposed
faction. A woman told Amnesty International that
her 13-year-old niece was abducted by the armed
guards of a warring commander in late 1993. "They
said their commander wanted her. They took her
away. She was resisting and screaming, but they dragged her away. We were frightened that if we did
anything we all would be killed. They would kill any girl who refused to go with them."
At the same time, in certain parts of the country, women were also prevented from exercising some of
their fundamental rights - including the rights to association, freedom of expression and employment -
by Mujahideen groups who considered such activities to be un-Islamic for women. Mujahideen
guards were reported to have stopped women from working outside their homes, or from attending
health and family planning courses organised by non-governmental agencies. Educated women
particularly working in the fields of education and welfare were repeatedly threatened by Mujahideen
groups. However, given the unorganised structure of Mujahideen groups and the unstable alliance
that made up the interim government after the collapse of the communist government in 1992, the
application and enforcement of restrictions on women was unsystematic and inconsistent. In Kabul,
for instance, despite the intermittent pronouncements by the interim political authorities restricting
women's rights, women continued to play a significant part in public life, working in government
departments and the health and education sectors. This participation was precarious, however,
depending as it did on the whims of the political authorities at the time.
1995 onwards
With the emergence of the Taleban and their military success against opposing factions, the nature of
the conflict and human rights situation in Afghanistan has shifted once again. In contrast to the
Mujahideen groups of the past, the Taleban appeared as a more cohesive force in 1994 and 1995,
bringing a degree of order to areas of the country brought securely under their control and winning
support from traditional Afghan families.See footnote 3
3
Their policy of disarming opposition groups resulted in a
reduction in acts of banditry and extortion. However, despite the improvements brought by the
Taleban in some aspects of personal security, serious human rights abuses have continued to be
reported in Taleban-controlled
areas.
[
Afghan woman who has fled to Pakistan
]
In the context of the ongoing
fighting there have been reports
of the Taleban militia carrying
out indiscriminate killings and
deliberate and arbitrary killings
on a mass scale. In parts of the
country where their authority
has been subject to challenge
there have also been reports of
arbitrary and unacknowledged
detention of civilians. In
addition, the enforcement of
their interpretation of Islamic
law has resulted in the loss of
fundamental rights and freedoms
previously enjoyed by sections
of Afghanistan's civilian
population.
The rigid social code imposed by the Taleban includes severe restrictions on women's freedom of
movement, expression, and association. A multitude of edicts announced by the Taleban have barred
women from employment outside the home except in the health sector, discontinued education for
girls, and imposed a strict code of clothing for women in public, ordering them to be veiled from head
to foot. The restrictions have most immediately affected educated, working women living in the
towns. However, the impact of the restrictions is felt much wider, affecting the poor, uneducated
women too, as well as boys and girls, other family members, and ultimately the long-term
development prospects for Afghanistan.
The most deleterious consequences of the Taleban's edicts can be seen in the areas of health and
education. Although female health professionals were given special dispensation to continue working
under strict guidelines, the Taleban's policies relating to the segregation of female patients and
workers has resulted in women's access to healthcare - which was already inadequate - being further
reduced. A number of home visit mid-wife and widow's health schemes have been shut down, as
Afghan female staff have been barred from working outside approved health structures. Attempts by
the Taleban authorities in September 1997 to centralise women's hospital services in Kabul would
have further limited women's healthcare provision until protests by international aid agencies
prompted a reversal in the policy. Not only was the proposed hospital to which women were meant to
go for treatment not equipped and not functioning, but its central location would have made it difficult
for women to reach given the restrictions on their mobility.
[
A woman begs on the streets of Kabul, 1998
©RAWA
]
Great concern has been expressed about the edict preventing girls from going to school, which is
considered by many as weakening Afghanistan's prospects for economic and social development.
Moreover, it is not only girls education which has been affected: due to the fact that around 40 per
cent of teachers were female, the ban on female employment has also affected the education of boys.
The Taleban has responded at various times saying schooling for girls would be reinstated when
peace and security is
achieved, or when
they have taken
control of the whole
country, or when they
have sufficient funds
to implement
segregated education.
However, whether the
Taleban will live up
to these promises
remains to be seen. In
the southwest of
country where the
Taleban have been in
uncontested control
for several years, the
restrictions on
women's education
are still in force.
Some initiatives have
been taken to get around the Taleban ban by setting up home-based schools for girls. These have been
supported by the UN and international non-governmental organisations and operate in some Taleban-
controlled areas. However, in Kabul, home-based schools along with vocational training programmes
for women were closed by the Taleban administration in June 1998. The head of the Department for
the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice (DPVPV) accused the schools of spreading anti-
Taleban propaganda.
Many people judged to have defied the Taleban's codes on appropriate behaviour or dress have had
to endure the pain and humiliation of summary beatings in public by members of the DPVPV.
Women have been lashed on the back of the legs by young Taleban guards for not being properly
clothed _ for showing their ankle or wearing the wrong colour shoes. A group of Afghan women
working for an international aid agency in Kabul were beaten and insulted in front of a crowd in May
1997, even though they had special permission from the authorities to continue working with the aid
agency.
It is an irony that although the Taleban purport their policies on women are in place to
ensure the physical protection and dignity of women, many women now cite fear of being beaten
by the Taleban as their main security concern.
This argument is untenable, however. As many commentators point out, Islam is not a uniform and homogenous code.
Islamic law is not a given, but depends crucially on human interpretations which are shaped by cultural and ethnic
differences, historical contexts, as well as political policy. It is therefore a matter of some choice which interpretation
individuals or authorities apply. There are many different legal systems and governments in the Islamic world. There are
also many Muslim individuals, organisations and countries who have disputed the Taleban's interpretation of Islam saying
that it paints a negative picture of the religion.
Moreover, whilst the Taleban for the most part maintain that the international system of human rights and Islamic values are
incommensurable, they have on occasion adopted a universalist position when it has suited their political purposes. One
such example is when the Taleban accused neighbouring Iran of forcibly returning thousands of Afghan refugees, stating
that such an act was violative of international conventions on refugees.
AID, HUMAN RIGHTS AND INTERNATIONAL RESPONSIBILITY
The implications of the Taleban's
discriminatory gender policies have brought
the connections between relief assistance,
development and human rights sharply into
focus. Most international aid agencies
working in Afghanistan operate on a basis
that relief assistance will be provided in a
non-discriminatory manner, promoting the
participation of both men and women. The
Taleban's edicts have therefore challenged
some of the international aid agencies' core
operating principles. In response most aid
organisations have tried through negotiations with the Taleban to obtain agreements to ensure that
assistance is delivered in accordance with the principles of neutrality, impartiality and universality. In
a few instances aid agencies have taken the decision to suspend their programmes where agreement
has not been reached, although many are understandably reluctant to resort to this step, particularly
with regard to life-sustaining humanitarian assistance work.
Efforts have been made by the UN to coordinate the work of international organisations in
Afghanistan to ensure more integrated approach to peace-building initiatives and assistance
programmes, in addition to defining a principle-based approach on the issue of gender discrimination.
The UN Strategic Framework for Afghanistan recognises the complementarity between the UN's
political and assistance strategies in Afghanistan, and stresses the point that the international response
to the situation in Afghanistan can afford no " ... 'disconnects' between the political, human rights,
humanitarian and development aspects.."See footnote 4
4
. Work to develop and implement the strategy, however,
has been slowed down due to the reduced UN presence in Afghanistan after international staff were
withdrawn from the country following the murder of a UN military adviser in Kabul in August 1998.
The work of the UN and international non-governmental organisations in Afghanistan has also been
affected by a reduction in the amount of money made available by the international community for
projects in Afghanistan. The UN Special Envoy for Afghanistan, Lakhdar Brahimi, described the
response to the UN's 1999 annual appeal for funds as disappointing. The appeal launched in
December 1998 for 113 million dollars needed to meet Afghan commitments in 1999 had raised just
14 million dollars by the end of March. The shortfall in funds from the international community has
in part been put down to donor fatigue after 20 years of continuous assistance, but concern over
human rights (along with narcotics and criminal activity) have also been a factor.
CONCLUSION
AND RECOMMENDATIONS
The status of women in Afghanistan has been, and continues to be used by armed groups as a political
tool in their struggles to secure and maintain power. Most armed groups have imposed restrictions on
women in the name of religion and culture as a means of consolidating their own position and
legitimacy. At the same time, acts of violence perpetrated against women - public beatings, rape and
sexual assault - appear to have been used as instruments of intimidation, humiliation and coercion, of
women and the wider population. The repression of women symbolises not only their vulnerability,
but also the powerlessness of
their male relatives to protect
them.
[
Afghan refugee mother and child at Nasir Bagh refugee camp. © AWC.
]
Today, the treatment of
women in Afghanistan is
receiving much international
attention. The Taleban's
discriminatory gender policies
have been heavily criticised by
outside governments,
intergovernmental
organisations, and non-
governmental organisations.
Whilst the Taleban's response
has been to vigorously defend
their position, the opposition
alliance fighting the Taleban in
the northeast have sought to
protray themselves as defenders of women's rights, although whether this is anything more than an
opportunistic attempt to garner international support remains to be seen. They themselves have
committed human rights abuses.
This pattern of using the status of women to accrue political advantage must be broken.
If the aims of peace and development are ever to be realised in Afghanistan, then women's
fundamental human rights must be respected. It is now recognised the world over that progress, social
justice, the eradication of poverty, sustained economic growth, and social development all critically
depend on the full participation of women on the basis of equality in all spheres of society. As agreed
by the governments participating in the Fourth UN World Conference on Women in Beijing in 1995,
local, national, regional and global peace is attainable and is inextricably linked to the advancement of
women. In the Platform for Action, world governments pledged to take all necessary measure to
prevent and eliminate violence and discrimination against women which are major obstacles to the
advancement and empowerment of women.
Responsibility for breaking the pattern of human rights abuses against women in Afghanistan lies
with Afghan armed groups and Afghan women and men themselves. But the international community
has an important role to play in support of this process.
Recommendations to Afghan Armed Groups:
*
Afghan armed groups are urged to adhere to international norms and standards relating to the
protection of human rights, including women's rights.
*
Armed groups should take steps to ensure that their members, and members of armed groups
allied to them, are prevented from perpetrating acts of violence against women, such as
beatings, rape and sexual assault during armed conflict, as well as forced marriage and
abduction.
*
Restrictions placed on women which violate their fundamental rights to freedom of
movement, employment and association should be withdrawn. Amnesty International
believes that women detained or otherwise physically restricted solely by reason of their
gender are prisoners of conscience.
Recommendations to the International Community:
*
The international community and particularly those governments with influence over the
warring factions in Afghanistan should bring pressure to bear on the armed groups to respect
women's fundamental human rights in all circumstances.
*
Outside governments that have provided arms, or continue to provide arms, and political
support to the warring factions in Afghanistan have a particular responsibility to ensure that
violations of women's human rights, as well as other civilians, are brought to an end.
Governments must end transfers of equipment and training to military forces in Afghanistan
which could be used to commit or facilitate human rights abuses.
*
Donors are encouraged to support the efforts of international aid agencies and UN agencies
on the ground who are providing humanitarian and development assistance which facilitates
the participation and empowerment of women, and helps to secure their fundamental human
rights.
Other countries with influence that have attended UN meetings on Afghanistan: Egypt, France,
Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, Turkey, UK
and the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC).
Afghanistan Support Group brings together main donors and organizations working in Afghanistan.
These countries overlap with the UN groupings: Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy,
Netherlands, Sweden, Britain, the US, Australia, Russia, Canada, Norway, Japan, and the EU's
executive commission.
.
YOUR OWN GOVERNMENT
.
THE EMBASSIES OF PAKISTAN, SAUDI ARABIA, IRAN, AND THE USA IN YOUR OWN COUNTRY
.
THE TALEBAN
:
Alhaj Mullah Mohammad Rabbani Salutation: Dear Mullah Rabbani
(Chairman of the Taleban Caretaker Council)
Embassy of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan
House No 8, Street No. 90
G-6/3 Islamabad
Pakistan
and
Mullah Mohammad Omar Salutation: Dear Mullah Omar
(leader of the Taleban)
Embassy of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan
House No 8, Street No. 90
G-6/3 Islamabad
Pakistan
.
THE UNITED FRONT (ANTI-TALEBAN ALLIANCE):
Embassy of the Islamic State of Afghanistan
31 Prince's Gate
London
SW7 1QQ
United Kingdom