http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2012/09/27/women-suffer-behind-veil-of-silence-in-malis-north/

Women suffer behind veil of silence in Mali’s north 
 
GAO: This picture shows a young veiled girl studying in a classroom in Gao, 
northeastern Mali. — AFP

GAO, Mali: It was just six months ago that Toula, a young woman from Gao in 
northeastern Mali, could swim and do her laundry in the nearby Niger River. Not 
anymore. Since late March, her dusty desert town and others like it across 
Mali’s massive north have been under the control of hardline Islamists who have 
imposed tough sharia law. “These barbarians have refused everything. They don’t 
want to see girls bathing,” says Toula who, like other residents, asked her 
last name not be used.

The freedoms formerly enjoyed by Toula and other women in Gao, previously one 
of the region’s most cosmopolitan and lively towns, disappeared almost 
overnight. Most noticeably, women are now forced to wear the hijab, a broad 
scarf that covers the entire head and neck but leaves the face exposed. “I 
can’t stand how I am at the moment, covered in a veil from head to toe. It’s as 
if I was in prison,” 15- year-old Aicha said. Toula and Aicha were part of a 
group of girls and young women who recently spoke to AFP in Gao, one of the key 
cities to have been seized by the country’s Islamist advance after a March 22 
coup in the capital Bamako left Mali’s army in disarray. “We are no longer free.

That’s all there is to it. Nobody for the moment wants to free us,” Toula said. 
“I don’t want sharia. Mali is a secular country and should stay that way.” Mali 
this week asked the United Nations for authorization for a West African-led 
military force to seize back the massive north, an area larger in size than 
France or Texas. When that mission could begin has not been agreed. All the 
girls who spoke to AFP said they have been living a nightmare since the 
introduction of sharia law.

Among the many new restrictions: They cannot smoke or drink alcohol and 
anything considered “haram”, or against Islamic law, is forbidden, including 
publicly listening to Western music or having sex outside marriage. 
Transgressors have suffered punishments unthinkable in the West. Suspected 
robbers in Gao have had hands and feet amputated. In the small town of 
Aguelhok, the armed Islamist group Ansar Dine (Defenders of the Faith) publicly 
stoned an unmarried couple to death, and have whipped smokers and drinkers. 
Three main Islamist groups control northern Mali, though other armed rebels are 
also playing a role. Gao is ostensibly under the control of the Movement for 
Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO), an offshoot of Al-Qaeda in the 
Islamic Maghreb, but is under the de facto control of another Al- Qaeda-linked 
boss from Algeria. Ansar Dine and Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) itself 
are the other main players, but delineations between the groups are often 
porous.

SUFFERING IN SILENCE “We are totally against the implementation of sharia. But 
we can’t say that in public, for security reasons,” says Mimi, her eyes hidden 
behind a black veil. Her neighbor fled town “because she could no longer handle 
the situation. Even at 45 degrees (Celsius, 113 Fahrenheit), we have to dress 
up as if it was cold. It’s just too much,” Mimi said. Another of the girls, 
Fatoumata, said they send supportive texts to each other as they endure the new 
regime. “Keep well, thanks to God this will end,” one message states. —AFP


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