Krn orang2 Islam doyan ngembat cowok cantik, maka auloh nyediain cowok2
cantik di sorga.

Atau kebalik, krn auloh nyediain cowok2 cantik di sorga, maka orang2 Islam
jadi doyan ngembat cowok2 cantik?

Islam itu emang agama bejad dan biadab, bukan?


http://www.rawa.org/temp/runews/2013/09/18/afghanistan-s-dancing-boys.html


IRIN, September 18, 2013
Afghanistan’s dancing boys "When you don't have a strong central government
or rule of law, and the culture of impunity exists and laws are not
implemented, many things happen."

Sexual exploitation of boys, in particular the practice of "bacha bazi"
(literally boy play) in which boys are "owned" for dancing and sex, remains
one of the least talked about abuses in Afghanistan.

It is an age-old custom, banned by the Taliban when they were in power, but
now undergoing a resurgence.

"Before, bacha bazi was in some special areas, but now it is everywhere. It
is happening in Takhar [province] and the rest of the north," the child
rights commissioner at the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission
(AIHRC), Suraya Subhrang, told IRIN.

"When you don't have a strong central government or rule of law, and the
culture of impunity exists and laws are not implemented, many things
happen."

The influence of warlords, wealthy merchants and illegal armed groups
supports demand, while poverty and the sheer number of displaced children
drives the supply of exploitable boys. They are released when they are aged
around 18, but their future is often bleak.

They are usually enticed or abducted when they are still children and held
as property by an "owner".

Many "owners" vehemently deny they sexually abuse the boys, but after a
bacha performance, the boys can end the evening being abused by a group of
men.
[image: Afghan dancing boys in a gathering]
Afghan dancing boys in a gathering. (Photo:
afghanwriter.blogspot.com/2011/03/dancing-boys-of-afghanistan.html)

A former commander in the Northern Alliance, opposed to the then Taliban
government, who did not wish to be identified, told IRIN he had kept a
14-year-old bacha for two years. He had not given the boy a salary but paid
all of his expenses, which amounted to US$300-400 a month. "There are two
types of boys: those who can dance well and are kept for entertainment, and
those who can't and are kept only for sexual purposes. I kept my boy for
sex," he said.

Campaigners say they repeatedly come across cases of exploitation but the
perpetrators have little awareness of child rights, or that they are
involved in coercion and sexual violence.

DVDs of young boys dressed as women performing at weddings and other events
are available on the streets of Kabul or via YouTube.

*Efforts to raise awareness *

In 2009, the UN tried to raise awareness of the issue, but Afghanistan is a
highly conservative country, where homosexuality is taboo, heterosexual
relations are strictly controlled and bacha bazi has deep cultural roots.
"If as much attention went into bacha bazi [as women's rights] I am sure
you would see a difference, but no one speaks about it," said an analyst
who asked not to be named.

"It is time to openly confront this practice and to put an end to it.
Religious leaders in Afghanistan appealed to me to assist them in combating
these activities. Laws should be passed, campaigns must be waged and
perpetrators should be held accountable and punished," the
Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations, Special Representative for
Children and Armed Conflict, Radhika Coomaraswamy, told the General
Assembly.

The UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) has highlighted the practice a number of
times, said spokesman Alistair Gretarsson, including in the recent Report
of the Secretary-General to the Security Council.

Gretarsson and other aid workers told IRIN the victims are generally
extremely reluctant to report abuse for fear of stigma, honour killings or
reprisals. In some cases, the boys - not the perpetrators - are charged
with homosexuality or other crimes. "The boy will never say, 'This person
had sex with me,' said an Afghan aid worker in eastern Nangarhar province.

"In the district areas of Nangarhar there are no awareness programmes or
education on this issue, which is one of the main reasons why people are
involved in this practice." For significant change to take place, say
campaigners, traditional people of standing in local communities -
religious scholars, tribal elders and government officials - will need to
take a stand against the abuse of boys.

*Life of a bacha *

The practice thrives in rural areas among powerful officials and militia
commanders - those with enough money and influence to ignore and escape the
justice system. But it also exists in cities among the rich and powerful
elite.

"We were not taking the boys by force, they were coming themselves," said
the man from Kunduz province. "[They] would mostly choose the... [man] who
is most powerful to stay with, but if you abuse them or don't pay them
enough they will leave you for someone else."

A 17-year-old bacha boy from an impoverished village in Sangin district,
southern Helmand province, told IRIN, "My parents know what I am doing but
they do not have much to say because the men who keep boys have so much
power - they fear no one." He said keeping boys is so prevalent in the
south that there are "no problems" associated with the practice.

The boy said he liked what he was doing, but the most obvious reason seemed
to be money - raising the question of how willing the "consent" can be in
the case of an adolescent from a poor background.

"I was unemployed and they offered me things I don't have," he said. "The
men that have bachas have to be able to provide everything necessary for a
good life - for example, money, a car, beautiful clothes, and things like
this. I have everything I need now, compared to my home in the village,
which had nothing."

Some boys have sexual relations with just one man, while others have sex
with multiple partners, said the former commander from northern Kunduz
province. "It all depends on the boy. There might be a group of five or 10
men who can sleep with him... but the boy does not allow everyone."

But analysts point out that many bacha boys have been kidnapped, traded as
a valuable commodity, and threatened with the death of family members
should they try to escape.

The glamour associated with bacha and the focus on "dancing" hides the
undercurrents of sexual violence and paedophilia. In most villages, people
know who the bacha are. They become "famous", said the aid worker in
Nangarhar province.

The money, clothes and nearness to power can give them status among their
peers, but the rape and abuse they have endured can also stigmatize them in
the wider community. Being marked out and known encourages their
exploitation by, among others, members of the Afghan security forces
stationed in the countryside.

"The Afghan army... go into a district for six or seven months; it is not
their home; they are young, some newly married, and can't go without sex
for seven months, so they [use money, clothes, gifts to] motivate the boys
and girls in the area," said the aid worker.

In rural Afghanistan it is forbidden for men and women to be seen together
in public. Men and women caught having sex outside of marriage can be put
to death. "Mingling of men [and boys] is less conspicuous," said Thomas
Ruttig of the Afghanistan Analysts Network's (AAN). "It looks as if boys
are forced into becoming 'dancing boys' in most of the cases, probably also
being unaware what it involves."

Like the former commander from Kunduz, most men who keep boys have wives.
During the day they may be with the boy and at night they return home. It
is not uncommon for such men to wed their daughters to their former 'boys'
and then continue the relationship surreptitiously, according to Subhrang
of AIHRC.

The former commander says he now knows he did wrong, but when he runs into
the bacha he once owned, the boy never mentions their previous
relationship. "He doesn't have the courage because he is too ashamed."

Category: Children <http://www.rawa.org/temp/runews/category/children>, HR
Violations <http://www.rawa.org/temp/runews/category/hr-violations> -
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