http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2013/05/22/afghan-students-protest-womens-rights-decree/

Afghan students protest women’s rights decree 
 
Afghans chant slogans during a demonstration in Kabul

KABUL: Hard-line Islamist students protested yesterday in the Afghan capital 
demanding the repeal of a presidential decree for women’s rights that they say 
is un-Islamic. It was the latest sign of a backlash against the legal 
protections passed in the 12 years since the toppling of the Taleban regime 
known for its harsh treatment of women. The protest came days after 
conservative lawmakers’ vehement opposition blocked an attempt to cement the 
decree’s provisions in legislation.

Most of international force that ousted the Taleban is now preparing to 
withdraw by the end of next year, and activists fear an erosion of the women’s 
rights will follow if hard-liners pressure the elected government. More than 
200 male students protested in front of Kabul University yesterday against the 
decree on Elimination of Violence Against Women, which includes a ban on child 
marriage and forced marriage, makes domestic violence a crime and says rape 
victims cannot be prosecuted for adultery. It also outlaws “ba’ad,” a 
traditional practice of exchanging women or girls to settle disputes or debts.

Protester Fazel Hadi, 25, said the decree was “imposed by foreigners” and 
violates Islamic Shariah law. Mawladad Jalali, the mullah of the university 
mosque and one of the organizers of the protest, led chants decrying democracy 
in general and the women’s law specifically. “Our main demand is that this law 
should be repealed in the parliament,” he said before leading a brief march 
while police who cordoned off the area looked on. Afghan President Hamid Karzai 
issued the decree on women’s rights three years ago as part of a raft of 
commitments to international donors, but lawmaker and activist Fawzia Kofi 
wanted to pass it in parliament to prevent any future president from reversing 
it.

The brief parliamentary debate Saturday was ended by the speaker after fierce 
opposition from conservative lawmakers who said several provisions – including 
the ban on child marriage and jail time for domestic abuse – violated Islamic 
law. The decree remains in force, but the debate appears to have galvanized 
opposition to it. The United Nations’ mission in Afghanistan this week urged 
the government to do more to enforce the women’s rights decree, saying it is 
only sporadically applied when women report abuse. “It is imperative for the 
development of Afghanistan that women are able to exercise their rights and be 
free from violence in their homes and workplaces,” UN Special Representative 
Jan Kubis said in a Monday statement. In another worrisome sign for activists, 
the international group Human Rights Watch said Tuesday that the number of 
women and girls jailed for alleged loose morals is the highest since the ouster 
of the Taleban, even though most of those detained are victims of abuse and 
have committed no crime under Afghan civil law.

The Taleban imposed their strict interpretation of Islamic law during their 
fiveyear reign, ordering beatings for women failing to wear the full-body burqa 
garment in public, closing girls’ schools and banning women from leaving their 
homes without a male relative. They were toppled in a US-led invasion for 
sheltering the al-Qaeda’s terrorist leadership and now wage an insurgency. 
Human Rights Watch’s Afghanistan researcher Heather Barr said that Afghanistan 
risks losing international aid if it does not meet commitments to uphold 
women’s freedoms. — AP


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