http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/03/world/asia/2-arrested-in-torture-of-afghan-girl.html?_r=1&ref=asia

3 In-Laws of Afghan Girl, 15, Are Held in Her Torture
By GRAHAM BOWLEY
Published: January 2, 2012 
KABUL, Afghanistan — The Afghan girl’s nails had been pulled out, her skin on 
her ear and nose had been twisted with pliers, and she had been kept in a dark, 
filthy basement bathroom without proper food or water for five months by her 
husband’s family for refusing to go into prostitution, Afghan government 
officials said. 

 
Jawed Basharat/Associated Press
Sahar Gul was taken to a hospital on Wednesday in Baghlan Province, north of 
Kabul. 

Follow @nytimesworld for international breaking news and headlines.
But she was finally released by the local police in Baghlan Province, in 
northeastern Afghanistan, last week and will be sent to India for further 
medical treatment, the Afghan Interior Ministry said on Monday. 

The case of the young girl, Sahar Gul, 15, has caused something of a sensation 
in Afghanistan, underscoring the unfinished business of advancing women’s 
rights here. 

Her mother-in-law and her sister-in-law were arrested last week, officials 
said. Her father-in-law was arrested on Monday evening, according to Rahima 
Zarifi, the provincial director of women’s affairs in Baghlan. 

The police are still searching for her husband, Ghulam Sakhi, 30, a soldier in 
the Afghan National Army who served in Helmand Province, the Interior Ministry 
said. He had fled, officials said. 

President Hamid Karzai spoke out about the girl’s plight in a statement on 
Sunday, saying that the case had to be pursued and that the people responsible 
should be arrested. The swift official response may show a new willingness to 
help the plight of young women in this poor country, but it also highlights the 
suffering that officials say is still common. 

Her mistreatment began after she was married six months ago, when she was 14. 
The girl, from Badakhshan Province, and her husband did not know each other 
well, Ms. Zarifi said. 

When her new in-laws tried to force her into prostitution, she refused, and 
they locked her in a downstairs bathroom in their home in Dahiney Ghuri in 
Pul-i-Kumri, the capital of Baghlan Province, Interior Ministry and provincial 
officials said. They would not let her call her family, and denied her food. 
They also beat her with a rod, officials said. 

She was released after her mother traveled to Baghlan and her uncle alerted the 
local police, who forced open the door to the room where she was being kept. 

Munshi Abdul Majid, governor of Baghlan, said the search was continuing for the 
husband and for others responsible for the girl’s abuse. “This is an un-Islamic 
and inhuman act,” he said. 

Jawad Sukhanyar and Sharifullah Sahak contributed reporting. 

++++

http://www.smh.com.au/world/tortured-child-bride-sent-back-to-live-with-her-inlaw-attackers-20120103-1pjhs.html

Tortured child bride sent back to live with her in-law attackers 
Jon Boone
January 4, 2012 
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Afghan girl tortured after refusing prostitution
A 15-year-old Afghan girl is recovering in hospital after months of torture by 
her husband's family, local authorities say.

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KABUL: A 15-year-old Afghan girl who was nearly tortured to death by her 
husband and his family attempted to escape her attackers more than four months 
ago but was sent back home by local authorities, it has emerged.

Sahar Gul, a child bride married off to a soldier called Gulam Sakhi, who then 
tried to force her into prostitution, is being treated for horrific injuries in 
a hospital in Kabul after she was rescued last week.

During her ordeal several of her fingernails were ripped out with pliers and 
one of her ears was badly burned by an iron. Her husband is now on the run, and 
her mother-in-law and sister-in-law have been arrested.

Advertisement: Story continues below 
 
Horrific ... Sahar Gul was beaten by her mother-in-law. Photo: AFP

Her case has caused uproar in Afghanistan and the country's President, Hamid 
Karzai, has vowed that those responsible will be punished.

But disturbing new details about how the local community and authorities 
responded to her abuse have highlighted the ambivalence many Afghans have over 
how far women should be able to exercise the most basic legal rights.

''She ran away to her neighbour's house and told them that her husband was 
trying to make her become a prostitute,'' a local community leader, Ziaulhaq, 
said. '''If you are a Muslim, you must tell the government what is happening to 
me,' she told them.''

Local people said they did take the case to the authorities. When police 
arrived, Sahar's mother-in-law tried to fight them off, screaming that her son 
had ''bought'' the girl who therefore had to do what she was told.

She appeared to be alluding to the dowry paid by Mr Sakhi's family, a sum 
thought to be about $US4000.

Neighbours say the family simply promised to stop hurting her. Ziaulhaq also 
alleged that bribes were paid to government officials to hush up the affair.

Although she emphatically denied money was paid, Rahima Zarifi, the women's 
affairs chief in Baghlan province, said she could not remember the details of 
the case, or why Sahar was sent back home.

The abuse resumed and continued for months until a male relative visited. When 
he found Sahar, who had been starved in a locked basement for weeks, she was 
almost unable to speak.

Fauzia Kufi, an MP who campaigns on women's issues, said that even then local 
authorities attempted to resolve the abuse through ''traditional means''. 

''Basically they wanted the relative to sit down with his sister's abusers and 
work out an agreement,'' she said.

Ms Kufi also claims there was strong pressure not to publicise the case.

Horrific abuse of women is still common in Afghanistan, particularly against 
brides who can be regarded as chattels by their husbands or are exchanged 
between families in order to resolve feuds.

The government is frequently unwilling to enforce laws it has often been forced 
to pass by the country's international backers, and the writ of the state often 
does not run in areas far away from urban centres.

However, the case of Sahar was in Puli Khumri, an important, mid-sized town.

Guardian News & Media


Read more: 
http://www.smh.com.au/world/tortured-child-bride-sent-back-to-live-with-her-inlaw-attackers-20120103-1pjhs.html#ixzz1iWxRoDod






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