http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/16/world/asia/16afghan.html?_r=1&ref=global-home


Afghan Women Protest New Restrictive Law 

 
Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images for The New York Times
About 300 Afghan women, facing an angry throng three times that number, walked 
the streets of the capital on Wednesday to demand that Parliament repeal a new 
law that introduces a range of Taliban-like restrictions on women, and permits, 
among other things, marital rape. 



By DEXTER FILKINS
Published: April 15, 2009 
KABUL, Afghanistan - The young women stepped off the bus and moved toward the 
protest march just beginning on the other side of the street when they were 
spotted by a mob of men.

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  Should the international community threaten to withhold aid if Afghanistan 
enforces laws that curtail women's rights?

"Get out of here, you whores!" the men shouted. "Get out!"

The women scattered as the men moved in.

"We want our rights!" one of the women shouted, turning to face them. "We want 
equality!"

The women ran to the bus and dove inside as it rumbled away, with the men 
smashing the taillights and banging on the sides.

"Whores!"

But the march continued anyway. About 300 Afghan women, facing an angry throng 
three times larger than their own, walked the streets of the capital on 
Wednesday to demand that Parliament repeal a new law that introduces a range of 
Taliban-like restrictions on women, and permits, among other things, marital 
rape.

It was an extraordinary scene. Women are mostly illiterate in this impoverished 
country, and they do not, generally speaking, enjoy anything near the freedom 
accorded to men. But there they were, most of them young, many in jeans, 
defying a threatening crowd and calling out slogans heavy with meaning.

With the Afghan police keeping the mob at bay, the women walked two miles to 
Parliament, where they delivered a petition calling for the law's repeal.

"Whenever a man wants sex, we cannot refuse," said Fatima Husseini, 26, one of 
the marchers. "It means a woman is a kind of property, to be used by the man in 
any way that he wants."

The law, approved by both houses of Parliament and signed by President Hamid 
Karzai, applies to the Shiite minority only, essentially giving clerics 
authority over intimate matters between women and men. Women here and 
governments and rights groups abroad have protested three parts of the law 
especially.

One provision makes it illegal for a woman to resist her husband's sexual 
advances. A second provision requires a husband's permission for a woman to 
work outside the home or go to school. And a third makes it illegal for a woman 
to refuse to "make herself up" or "dress up" if that is what her husband wants.

The passage of the law has amounted to something of a historical irony. Afghan 
Shiites, who make up close to 20 percent of the population, suffered 
horrendously under the Taliban, who regarded them as apostates. Since 2001, the 
Shiites, particularly the Hazara minority, have been enjoying a renaissance.

President Karzai, who relies on vast support from the United States and other 
Western governments to stay in power, has come under intense international 
criticism for signing the bill into law. Many people here suspect that he did 
so in order to gain the favor of the Shiite clergy; Mr. Karzai is up for 
re-election this year.

Responding to the outcry, Mr. Karzai has begun looking for a way to remove the 
most controversial parts of the law. In an interview on Wednesday, his 
spokesman, Homayun Hamidzada, said that the legislation was not yet law because 
it had not been published in the government's official register. That, Mr. 
Hamidzada said, meant that it could still be changed. Mr. Karzai has asked his 
justice minister to look it over.

"We have no doubt that whatever comes out of this process will be consistent 
with the rights provided for in the Constitution - equality and the protection 
of women," Mr. Hamidzada said.

The women who protested Wednesday began their demonstration with what appeared 
to be a deliberately provocative act. They gathered in front of the School of 
the Last Prophet, a madrasa run by Ayatollah Asif Mohsini, the country's most 
powerful Shiite cleric. He and the scholars around him played an important role 
in the drafting of the new law.

"We are here to campaign for our rights," one woman said into a loudspeaker. 
Then the women held their banners aloft and began to chant.

The reaction was immediate. Hundreds of students from the madrasa, most but not 
all of them men, poured into the streets to confront the demonstrators.

"Death to the enemies of Islam!" the counterdemonstrators cried, encircling the 
women. "We want Islamic law!"

The women stared ahead and kept walking.

A phalanx of police officers, some of them women, held the crowds apart.

Afterward, when the demonstrators had left, one of the madrasa's senior clerics 
came outside. Asked about the dispute, he said it was between professionals and 
nonprofessionals; that is, between the clerics, who understood the Koran and 
Islamic law, and the women calling for the law's repeal who did not.

"It's like if you are sick, you go to a doctor, not some amateur," said the 
cleric, Mohammed Hussein Jafaari. "This law was approved by the scholars. It 
was passed by both houses of Parliament. It was signed by the president."

The religious scholars, Mr. Jafaari conceded, were all men.

Lingering a while, Mr. Jafaari said that what was really driving the dispute 
was not the Afghans at all, but the foreigners who loomed so large over the 
country.

"We Afghans don't want a bunch of NATO commanders and foreign ministers telling 
us what to do."


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