Dear Friends:


This news is from the Independent UK this morning (08 03 2012). My personal 
view is that this is just one side of the coin. In cities like Kabul, I am told 
Anglo-American schools for girls are flourishing. Be that as it may, my 
observation is immaterial, I know, to my savvy netters; Here is it:
-bhuban


[Back to the bad old days: Karzai beats retreat on women's rights]


President gives support to religious edict that reads :'Men are fundamental, 
women are secondary.





President Hamid Karzai has backed guidelines issued by Afghanistan's religious 
council that relegate women to the position of second-class citizens, raising 
questions about whether British soldiers should continue to put their lives at 
risk for a government that seems prepared to sell out on the issue in order to 
engage the Taliban in a peace deal.

The Afghan leader endorsed the repressive guidelines on Tuesday, the same day 
that six British soldiers were killed in an explosion in Helmand province. "Men 
are fundamental and women are secondary," the 150-member Ulema Council said in 
a statement that was subsequently posted on Mr Karzai's own website. It also 
said that men and women should not mix in work or education, and that women 
must have a male guardian when they travel.
Mr Karzai's endorsement, which came on the eve of International Women's Day 
today, is seen by critics as a huge step back in the effort to promote women's 
rights after the Taliban was displaced by the US invasion of the country in 
2001.
Under the Taliban, girls were banned from going to school and women were not 
allowed to leave their homes without a male relative as an escort.
Activists add that the new clerics' code of conduct is unconstitutional and 
that President Karzai's endorsement sets a worrying precedent for negotiations 
with the Taliban.
A spokesman for the British embassy in Kabul said: "We support women's rights 
in Afghanistan. We have made clear that any political settlement should be 
inclusive and address the concerns of all Afghan citizens. Our strategy remains 
to work with those in Afghan society who are advocating reform, in order to 
build support for full application of the Afghan Constitution, which upholds 
equal rights for both men and women."
The clerical guidelines are not legally binding and are described as 
"voluntary" for women who are devout. But if the rules became the norm, they 
would prevent male and female volunteers at organisations such as Young Women 
for Change (YWC) working together to empower women across Afghanistan.
YWC was set up last April by two young Afghan women, Noorjahan Akbar and Anita 
Haidary, but quite early on the founders realised they would be able to be much 
more effective if they got men involved.
The collaborative approach was one of the reasons Tayeb Khan, 22, decided to 
become a volunteer five months ago, an unusual move for a young Pashtun man in 
Afghanistan. "When I saw the organisational structure, men and women working 
together in a friendly environment, I wanted to come and be part of it," he 
said.
To mark International Women's Day, YWC is opening a female-only internet café 
in Kabul that will be dedicated to Sahar Gul, the teenage girl who was tortured 
and kept for months in her husband's dank cellar after refusing to enter into 
prostitution.
Many internet cafés in Afghanistan are full of men browsing internet porn and 
are off-putting to women.
Zafar Salehi, a 24-year-old YWC volunteer, struck a decidedly different note to 
the one implied by the guidelines backed by President Karzai. He said: "Now 
women can get connected with the world without harassment."
Another YWC volunteer, Mohammad Jawad, told The Independent: "Unless you let 
the other 50 per cent of society participate in society you will never progress 
and never develop."










 
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