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Ida Lichter, M.D. <http://huffingtonpost.com/ida-lichter-md> 


Afghanistan: Taliban Talks Will Betray Women's Rights 


Posted: 06/27/11 04:48 PM ET 






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Violent attacks by the Taliban have been increasing. Last month, the
principal of a girls' school near Kabul was assassinated. Yet some observers
would have us believe the Taliban have changed their misogynist ideology and
deserve another chance in negotiations and power sharing.

Last November, when US President Barack Obama tried to "reach out" to
moderate voices among the Taliban, they replied, "We have no moderate
voices."

A leading representative, Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, said freedoms won by
women in the past few years were "corrupting" them, and men and women
shouldn't be in the same room.

Working women have been receiving death threats by letter and phone and one
who refused to be intimidated was murdered.

The Taliban now profess they were never opposed to girls' education, only
co-education. This claim contradicts their systematic burning of girls'
schools, the beating and killing of teachers, and throwing acid in the faces
of little girls going to school. Moreover, a harder line of Taliban fighters
is emerging from the tribal areas, having been recruited as teenagers.

Under the new Afghan constitution, women have equal rights but it seems
unlikely the Taliban would honour this charter. Their brutal treatment of
women, including public floggings, stoning executions for adultery and the
mandatory burka, were widely condemned in the West. Less recognition was
given to psychological injuries that manifested as post-traumatic stress
disorder, depression, self-harm and suicide.

Maltreatment is not limited to the Taliban. Bartering women and their rights
is a widespread cultural practice in family, tribal and political deals, and
includes the Afghan government itself.

In order to gain support from Islamists in the 2009 election, President
Hamid Karzai approved family laws for the Shia community that sanctioned
marital rape, forbade women leaving the house without their husbands'
permission and allowed early marriage for girls. Coalition troops were not
sent to Afghanistan to liberate women; their rights are not part of a border
or strategic dispute, and no soldier would be expected to die for this
cause.

However, women's rights are not a marginal issue and we cannot ignore the
modest gains for which activists fought valiantly over the past 10 years.
Their humble demands were limited to basic human rights such as education
and employment opportunities.

They did not, for example, seek punishment or compensation for alleged
sexual harassment by the chief executive of a department store or the
managing director of the International Monetary Fund.

Women's rights would suffer a severe setback if the Taliban were given a
share of power, possibly in the south of the country. Abandoning women to
the Taliban would also spur imitation by extremists outside Afghanistan,
including Britain, where the "London Taliban" has reportedly threatened to
kill unveiled Muslim women. A Western failure in Afghanistan could stimulate
more attacks from radicals, emboldened by their conviction that religious
fervour was instrumental in defeating a second superpower.

Some women activists have sounded more conciliatory in recent times,
attempting to thwart the punishment they anticipate when foreign troops
leave. Most fear that a hasty drawdown of foreign troops could bring more
chaos and violence, civil war, and even the return of jihadist training
camps. The death of Osama bin Laden has also caused alarm, as the US could
claim their mission to destroy al-Qaeda in Afghanistan was complete.

In order to achieve a respectable exit, Afghan and Western negotiators might
find it expedient to accept promises by the Taliban and go along with the
view that gender culture in the country is too tribal to be changed and
should be respected even if it is harsh on women.

Afghanistan will remain a backward, failed state if half the population is
prevented from contributing to the social, economic and political fabric of
society. In their opposition to misogyny, a pillar of radical Islam, women
also provide a challenge to extremism.

What can be done to safeguard women's rights? Taliban guarantees to promote
rights for women and girls should be considered worthless, due to lack of
coalition leverage.

Women should be included in all talks with the Taliban and gender issues
incorporated in documents for discussion.

US aid could be contingent on protecting the human rights of Afghan women,
and the pace of withdrawal made dependent on the extent to which the Taliban
keep to their word.

Women and children are the main casualties in the war zone, and security
will not improve unless the Pakistani government is prepared to stop the
Afghan Taliban, Haqqani network and Hezb-e Islami from manufacturing
improvised explosive devices on their soil.

Another requirement is a comprehensive settlement of reconciliation and
de-radicalisation that goes beyond the Taliban to include other
paramilitaries and power brokers. Rather than defend the Taliban, it would
be more productive, and consistent with the democratic values of the Arab
Spring, to support the victims of violence, the women's movement and other
reformers in Afghanistan, so that human rights and civil society can seed
and grow.

Ida Lichter is the author of' Muslim Women Reformers: Inspiring Voices
Against Oppression,' published by Prometheus Books, New York. Originally
published in 'The Australian'.

 



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