http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/02/world/asia/afghan-women-see-hope-in-the-ballot-box.html?_r=0


Afghan Women See Hope in the Ballot Box
By ROD NORDLANDAPRIL 1, 2014 

Photo 
 
Afghan women cheered for Habiba Sarobi, a candidate for vice president in 
Saturday’s election, as she spoke in Kabul on Monday. Credit Bryan Denton for 
The New York Times 
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KABUL, Afghanistan — Mariam Wardak is one of those young Afghans with her feet 
in two worlds: At 28, she has spent much of her adult life in Afghanistan, but 
she grew up in the United States after her family fled there. She vividly 
remembers the culture shock of visits back to her family’s village in rural 
Wardak Province a decade ago.

“A woman wouldn’t even show her face to her brother-in-law living in the same 
house for 25 years,” she said. “People would joke that if someone kidnapped our 
ladies, we would have to find them from their voices. Now women in Wardak show 
their faces — they see everybody else’s faces.”

Ms. Wardak’s mother, Zakia, is a prime example. She used to wear a burqa in 
public, but now has had her face printed on thousands of ballot pamphlets for 
the provincial council in Wardak. She campaigns in person in a district, 
Saydabad, that is thick with Taliban.

She has plenty of company in this year’s elections, scheduled for Saturday. 
Another 300 women are running for provincial council seats around the country, 
more than ever before. And for the first time, a woman — Habiba Sarobi, the 
former governor of Bamian Province — is running for vice president on a leading 
national ticket.

Photo 
 
Habiba Sarobi, at center, during the Afghan national anthem in Kabul. Credit 
Bryan Denton for The New York Times 
There is finally the sense here, after years of international aid and effort 
geared toward improving Afghan’s women’s lives, that women have become a 
significant part of Afghan political life, if not a powerful one.

But their celebratory moment is also colored by the worry that those gains 
could so easily be reversed if extremists come back into power, or if Western 
aid dwindles. Those concerns have added urgency to this campaign season for 
women who are fighting to make their leadership more acceptable in a still 
deeply repressive society.

“It’s an exciting and terrifying point, because the international presence has 
actually empowered the women here, and when they leave, some of those women 
will be concerned,” said Mariam Wardak, who is working on Ms. Sarobi’s campaign 
as well as her mother’s.

One notable change is simply that there have been more women speaking from the 
dais during rallies, including the wives of two of the more prominent national 
candidates. That is a novelty that has drawn crowds in a country where most 
male public figures keep their wives in traditional seclusion — including 
President Hamid Karzai, despite his promises to women’s groups years ago that 
she would be a visible part of Afghan life.

Afghans have been particularly intrigued by Ms. Sarobi’s emergence as a running 
mate for the presidential candidate Zalmay Rassoul. She is not just a token 
name on a presidential ticket, but a campaign draw in her own right, as her 
stirring speeches have added a much-needed shot of crowd appeal to Mr. 
Rassoul’s otherwise staid and low-energy campaign.

Last Thursday, thousands of men and a few hundred women in the northern city of 
Mazar-i-Sharif cheered wildly for Ms. Sarobi, after only polite applause for 
the presidential candidate.

“She pretty much rocked the show,” said Haseeb Humayoon, a Rassoul campaign 
aide.

Ms. Sarobi explained, “People want some change, and a woman on the ticket is a 
change for them.”

Fawzia Koofi, a politician and rights advocate, at one point said she would be 
running as a presidential candidate in this election, but she missed by a year 
the minimum age of 40 when candidates were registered. She recalled the days 
when politically active Afghan women were relegated to chanting slogans from 
behind privacy screens. “A woman for vice president? Eleven years ago, even 
dreaming about this was impossible,” Ms. Koofi said.

On the campaign trail, all of the eight presidential candidates still in the 
race have at least paid some lip service to supporting causes important to 
women — even Abdul Rab Rassoul Sayyaf, an extremely traditionalist Pashtun 
candidate and warlord who as a member of Parliament was a bitter opponent of a 
law intended to criminalize violence against women.

For his part, Mr. Sayyaf said he would “reconsider his past actions in view of 
respect for women’s rights.”

Most of the candidates have appeared at women’s groups to answer questions, and 
participated in debates on women’s issues. “This time from the beginning all of 
them have been talking about women’s rights,” said Hasina Safi, head of the 
Afghanistan Women’s Network, a coalition of women’s groups. “They have really 
figured out that women count.”

Partly that is because women have become particularly well-organized in recent 
years, nurtured by generous international funding for their organizations and 
causes, and requirements by donors that projects should be gender-sensitive, 
with such measures as equal-opportunity units, gender equality training and 
guaranteed employment of a percentage of women.

Photo 
 
Women who came to hear Ms. Sarobi, running mate for the presidential candidate 
Zalmay Rassoul. Credit Bryan Denton for The New York Times 
That has helped improve their political clout, despite disappointing results in 
voter registration drives. The actual percentage of women registered to vote 
has not changed appreciably, about 35 percent of the total, since previous 
elections. But tougher controls on voting will make illegal proxy voting — 
where men especially in conservative areas cast the votes allotted to the adult 
women in their households — harder to get away with.

And with years of set-asides for women running for Parliament and provincial 
council seats, women have become accustomed to some share of the power. 
Provincial councils are also being contested in the vote on Saturday, with 20 
percent of the seats set aside for women.

About 300 women are running for such seats nationwide, which the Independent 
Election Commission says is the highest number ever. Even in conservative 
Kandahar Province, a tenth of the candidates are women.

Before her husband became president, Mrs. Karzai was a practicing gynecologist, 
and activists believed that she would make a powerful role model for a 
generation of girls who were finally allowed full schooling in Afghanistan. 
Instead, she has remained in seclusion over the past decade, and some believe 
that that has reinforced the traditional view of Afghan women as subservient, 
forbidden to go out without their husbands’ permission. When Mrs. Karzai 
registered to vote for the first time, in 2004, it was done in private.

“He promised so many times to bring his wife out and he never did,” said Mariam 
Nabizada, a Kabul political activist for Mr. Rassoul’s campaign and for Ms. 
Sarobi. Now that issue no longer looms so large, she said: “With a female 
running mate, it has encouraged more women than ever to participate.”

Still, Afghan women are suspicious about what is to come after Western 
officials turn away from Afghanistan, and about what agenda the country’s 
political power players are truly pursuing.

Particularly worrisome, to Ms. Mosawi and other women, has been the refrain 
from many of the presidential candidates about the need to make peace with the 
Taliban, whose government famously confined women to their homes and banned 
them from most work.

“They’re all talking about peace with the Taliban, which is a big danger for 
us,” she said. “We’re not hearing assurances about preserving all the 
achievements of women in these years.”

Many women are quick to note that little has changed outside of the cities; in 
rural Afghanistan, where most women live, women are still little more than the 
property of their brothers, fathers and husbands.

A victory for Ms. Sarobi and other candidates would certainly help, Ms. Wardak 
said. “If women do as well as they hope in this election, it will be a huge 
self-esteem boost.”

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