http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=4373&Itemid=212


      Can Afghan Women Keep their Gains?        
      Written by David Cortright     
      Wednesday, 28 March 2012  




       
      How will she dress when she grows up? 
As the US-led coalition prepares to hand over, women are at peril

The Obama administration is under mounting pressure to accelerate the 
withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan. The US-led coalition plans to hand 
over security responsibility to Afghan forces by 2014. The military withdrawal 
shouldn’t mean that the international community walks away from Afghanistan 
entirely, however, or ceases support to local civil society –especially when it 
comes to preserving the hard-won rights of Afghan women. How is this possible?

To search for answers, my colleague at Notre Dame University’s Kroc Institute 
for International Peace Studies Sarah Smiles Persinger and I authored the 
report Afghan Women Speak, based on dozens of interviews in Afghanistan with 
female parliamentarians, activists, researchers, health workers and NGO 
leaders. This past October I visited Kabul to assess the latest developments.

All the women we interviewed said they want the war to end. They cannot secure 
their rights in a militarized environment. The longer the war continues the 
more they are threatened by the Taliban and male reactionaries in the Kabul 
government. Woman favor peace negotiations, but they do not want an agreement 
that revokes laws, like the 2009 Elimination of Violence Against Women Act, or 
that fails to sustain vital services for women. 

What do women recommend? The first and most obvious need is continued support 
for the economic and social development programs that have already improved the 
lives of Afghan women and children. “Invest in Afghan youth”, said a woman 
leader, “not in corrupt leaders.” With development funding from USAID, the 
World Bank and European Union member states, millions of women have acquired an 
education and gained access to health care. 

These achievements are among the few bright spots of the international mission 
in Afghanistan. They must be sustained as foreign troops withdraw. Improved 
education is a priority. In 2002 only 900,000 boys attended primary school. 
Today more than seven million girls and boys are enrolled in school. School 
attendance rates have increased sevenfold over the past decade. Girls now 
comprise 37 per cent of the student population. 

More than 4,000 new schools have been built, many through cooperation between 
international programs and local civil society. The number of teachers has 
increased from 20,000 (all men) in 2002 to more than 150,000 today (almost 30 
per cent women). 

Progress also has been achieved in lowering Afghanistan’s rates of maternal and 
child mortality. Since 2001 the number of health facilities and trained health 
workers has increased tenfold. More than 3,000 women have been trained as 
midwives, a sevenfold increase. According to the latest Afghan government 
figures, based on a survey conducted with support from USAID and the UN, the 
rate of children dying before age 5 has dropped from one in five to about one 
in ten. The risk of a woman dying in childbirth has dropped from one in eleven 
to one in 50. These rates are still shockingly high, but the trends are moving 
in the right direction. The improvements of the last decade translate into 
hundreds of thousands of lives saved among Afghanistan’s most vulnerable 
people. 

Despite these gains, much work remains to be done. In rural communities, where 
most Afghans live, health care remains primitive and preventable disease is 
prevalent. Primary school attendance has increased, but secondary school and 
higher education remain unavailable to most Afghan youth. Social development 
programs must continue even as military expenditures begin to decline. 

A second priority is to preserve women’s political rights. Women are equal 
before the law in Afghanistan today, and 25 percent of the seats in parliament 
are reserved for females. The best guarantee against these rights being rolled 
back is ensuring that women have a seat at the table in peace negotiations. 
Only a handful of women are members of Afghanistan’s High Peace Council, which 
is responsible for guiding the reconciliation process with the Taliban. Western 
policymakers must pressure the Afghan government to ensure that women are 
included more meaningfully in high-level decision-making forums. Secretary of 
State Hillary Clinton has shown exemplary leadership in advocating for Afghan 
women’s rights. Other US and Western officials should follow her lead. 

Afghan women want peace, but they need continued support for their social and 
political rights. The withdrawal of troops must not come at the expense of a 
commitment to development and human rights. 

(David Cortright is the Director of Policy Studies at Notre Dame’s Kroc 
Institute for International Peace Studies. This article was written for the 
Common Ground News Service www.commongroundnews.org.) 



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