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Exclusive: How my brother tried to kill me in 'honor attack'
By   Anna Coren,  CNN
April 4, 2013 -- Updated 1741 GMT (0141 HKT) CNN.com 
Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) -- It's cold and raining in Kabul 
and the pothole-filled dirt roads have turned into a sea of mud. We 
drive up to the gateway of a high-walled compound. A soldier brandishing an 
AK-47 stands guard outside the building. We've come to a women's 
shelter to meet Gul Meena -- a 17-year-old girl from Pakistan who 
shouldn't be alive.
My crew and I are ushered 
into a room and sitting on a wooden chair slouched over is small, 
fragile Gul Meena. Her sullen eyes turn from the raindrops streaming 
down the window outside and towards us as we enter the room.
Gul's bright coloured 
headscarf is embroidered with blue, red and green flowers and covers 
most of her face. She nervously plays with it and gives us a glimpse of a 
frightened smile from underneath the fabric. Her guardian Anisa, from 
the shelter run by Women for Afghan Women, touches her head and gently 
moves the headscarf back. That's when we see the scars etched deeply 
into her face.
This Pakistani girl's life of 
misery and suffering began at the tender age of 12, when instead of 
going to school she was married to a man old enough to be her 
grandfather. She says: "My family married me off when I was 12 years 
old. My husband was 60. Every day he would beat me. I would cry and beg 
him stop. But he just kept on beating me." 
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When Gul told her family what was 
happening, they responded in a way that shocked her. "My family would 
hit me when I complained. They told me you belong in your husband's 
house -- that is your life."
After five years of abuse, Gul 
Meena met a young Afghan man and finally gathered the courage to leave 
her husband in Pakistan. In November 2012 she packed up some belongings 
and they made their way across the border into Afghanistan to the city 
of Jalalabad.
READ MORE: Afghanistan's future: 5 burning questions 
Gul knew she was committing the 
ultimate crime according to strict Islamic customs -- running away from 
her husband with another man -- but she also knew she didn't want to 
continue living the life she had since her marriage.
"I'd tried to kill myself with 
poison several times but it didn't work. I hated my life and I had to 
escape. When I ran away I knew it would be dangerous. I knew my husband 
and family would be looking for me but I never thought this would 
happen. I thought my future would be bright," she says.
Days later her older brother 
tracked them down. Armed with an ax, he hacked to death Gul Meena's 
friend, and then struck his own sister 15 times -- cutting open her 
face, head and parts of her body.
Gul Meena shows me these scars -- 
taking off her headscarf, her finger gently running up and down the 
raised, freshly healed skin. She touches her head where the blade hit 
her and then shows me the deep cuts that were made to the back of her 
neck and her arms. It's clear to me she desperately tried to fight off 
her brother before she passed out.
Assuming she was dead, her brother 
escaped back to Pakistan. Authorities are yet to catch him, but his 
family denies that he tried to kill Gul. 
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Hearing the commotion, a passer-by 
discovered Gul Meena lying in a pool of blood in her bed, and rushed her to the 
Emergency Department of Nangarhar Regional Medical Centre.
With part of her brain hanging out 
of her skull, neurosurgeon Zamiruddin Khalid held out little hope that 
the girl on his operating table would survive.
READ MORE: Why U.S. can't deliver women's rights to Afghanistan 
"We took her to the operating 
theatre and she'd already lost a lot of blood. Her injuries were 
horrific and her brain had been affected -- we didn't think she would 
survive", says Khalid as he shows us photos of Gul's injuries before he 
sewed up the wounds. In one photo her face looks like a piece of meat 
that has been hacked apart.
Khalid said: "We are very thankful to almighty God that Gul Meena is alive -- 
it really is a miracle."
But Gul's troubles were far from 
over. While she'd received life-saving treatment from the doctors and 
staff at the hospital, she had no one to care for her on the outside. 
Gul had been disowned by her family and despite the government and 
authorities knowing that she was alive and receiving care at the 
hospital, they wanted nothing to do with her due to the stigma and 
circumstances surrounding her attack.
For two months Gul stayed in the 
hospital thanks to the generosity of doctors who donated the money to 
pay for her medicine. Finally the American-Afghan organization Women for Afghan 
Women was informed of Gul's situation and took her in, 
transporting her back to a shelter in Kabul to give her the love and 
care she so desperately needed.
"When she first came to us she 
couldn't talk or walk she was barely conscious -- she couldn't eat by 
herself. She had to wear a diaper. If we hadn't got her when we did, she 
wouldn't have survived," says Manizha Naderi, the executive director of Women 
For Afghan Women.
Gul Meena is one of thousands of 
women living in shelters across Afghanistan -- many of them victims of 
attempted honor killings. Tragically this practice still exists in a 
number of cultures, including certain tribes in Afghanistan and 
Pakistan.
U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki Moon 
recently expressed concern over the 20% increase in civilian casualties 
among women and girls in Afghanistan in 2012. Moon said: "I'm deeply 
disturbed that despite some improvements in prosecuting cases of 
violence, there is still a pervasive climate of impunity in Afghanistan 
for abuses of women and girls."
READ MORE: UN: Civilian deaths fall in Afghanistan; first drop in 6 years 
The U.N. claims that 4,000 cases of violence against women and girls were 
reported to the Afghan Ministry 
of Women between 2010 and 2012.
While there are 14 women's shelters in Afghanistan, all of them are funded by 
the international community, 
and the concern is that once international forces pull out of 
Afghanistan at the end of 2014 this funding will disappear. What will 
that mean for the thousands of women who rely on their services like 
uneducated, illiterate, homeless Gul Meena?
Naderi says: "If we send her to her family, she's going to be killed. As far as 
her family is concerned 
she's dead. That's the problem for all our women. It's a scary time for 
Afghanistan and especially for Afghan women, in particular the women in 
our shelters because we don't know what's going to happen. If they leave here, 
for most of them it will be a death sentence."
Gul Meena doesn't think about the future -- and in fact, she wishes she had 
died the day she was attacked.
"I've tried to kill myself several 
times since arriving at the shelter but they won't let me. When I look 
at the mirror I put one hand to the side of my face. People tell me not 
to do that ... but I'm so ashamed."
© 2013 Cable News Network.   Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.  All Rights 
Reserved. 
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