Dear Friends:

I posted an email this morning with this heading:Twisted concept of honour 
leading to murders of three teenage daughters and former spouse in Canada.

Tonight I got another news of a brutal death in Afghanistan: Afghan woman 
strangled to death after giving birth to a girl.

In this context in my earlier email I wondered if an international agency could 
be entrusted with the task of rooting out such evils from the subcontinent. Now 
I understand such an agency exists. .

The following news is from the Times of India today.

-bhuban

An Afghan woman has been strangled to death, 
apparently by her husband, who was upset that she gave birth to a second 
daughter rather than the son he wanted, police said on Monday. <BR><BR> It was 
the latest in a series of grisly examples of subjugation of women that have 
made 
headlines in Afghanistan in the past few months -- including a 15-year-old 
tortured and forced into prostitution by in-laws and a female rape victim who 
was imprisoned for adultery. <BR><BR> The episodes have raised the question of 
what will happen to the push for women's rights in Afghanistan as the 
international presence here shrinks along with the military drawdown. NATO 
forces are scheduled to pull out by the end of 2014. <BR><BR> In the 10 years 
since the ouster of the Taliban, great strides have been made for women in 
Afghanistan, with many attending school, working in offices and even sometimes 
marching in protests. But abuse and repression of women are still common, 
particularly in rural areas where women are still unlikely to set foot outside 
of the house without a burqa robe that covers them from head to toe. <BR><BR> 
The man in the latest case, Sher Mohammad, fled the Khanabad district in Kunduz 
province last week, about the time a neighbor found his 22-year-old wife dead 
in 
their house, said District Police Chief Sufi Habibullah. Medical examiners whom 
police brought to check the body said she had been strangled, Habibullah said. 
<BR><BR> The woman, named Estorai, had warned family members that her husband 
had repeatedly reproached her for giving birth to a daughter rather than a son 
and had threatened to kill her if it happened again, said Provincial women's 
affairs chief Nadira Ghya, who traveled to Khanabad to deal with the case. 
Estorai gave birth to her second daughter between two and three months ago, 
Ghya 
said. Officials did not have a family name for either Sher Mohammad or Estorai. 
<BR><BR> Police took the man's mother into custody because she appears to have 
collaborated in a plot to kill her daughter-in-law, Habibullah said. Ghya, who 
visited the man's mother in jail, said that she swears that Estorai committed 
suicide by hanging. Police said they found no rope and no evidence of hanging 
from the woman's wounds. <BR><BR> Boy babies are traditionally prized much more 
highly than girls in Afghanistan, where a son means a breadwinner and a 
daughter 
is seen as a drain on the family until she is married off. Even so, a murder 
over the gender of a baby would be rare and shocking if proved true. <BR><BR> 
The US Embassy issued a statement Monday praising the Afghan government for 
recent declarations supporting women's rights in the wake of the latest abuse 
cases that have garnered media attention. <BR><BR> "The rights of women cannot 
be relegated to the margins of international affairs, as this issue is at the 
core of our national security and the security of people everywhere," the 
statement said. It did not address the killing of the young woman in Kunduz. 
 
 

I
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