-Caveat Lector-

http://www.nytimes.com/2001/10/19/opinion/19GOOD.html?search
pv=nytToday

October 19, 2001
The Rifle and the Veil
By JAN GOODWIN and JESSICA NEUWIRTH

 Anyone who has paid attention to the situation of women in
Afghanistan should not have been surprised to learn that the
Taliban are complicit in terrorism. When radical Muslim movements
are on the rise, women are the canaries in the mines. The very
visible repression of forced veiling and loss of hard-won freedoms
coexists naturally with a general disrespect for human rights. This
repression of women is not about religion; it is a political tool for
achieving and consolidating power.

Sher Abbas Stanakzai, then the Taliban regime's deputy foreign
minister, admitted as much in a 1997 interview. "Our current
restrictions of women are necessary in order to bring the Afghan
people under control," he said. "We need these restrictions until
people learn to obey the Taliban."

In the same way that many Islamic extremist crusades use the
oppression of women to help them gain control over wider
populations, the Taliban and Osama bin Laden are now employing
the tactics of terrorism to gain control.

The Taliban did not start the oppression of Afghan women, nor
have they been its only practitioners.

In 1989, Arab militants working with the Afghan resistance to the
Soviet Union based in Peshawar, Pakistan — and helping to
finance the resistance fighters — issued a fatwa, or religious ruling,
stating that Afghan women would be killed if they worked for
humanitarian organizations. At that time, a third of the Afghan
population of 15 million were displaced from their homes, and many
were heavily dependent on humanitarian groups for food and other
necessities. Among the 3.5 million of these refugees who were then
living in Pakistan, many were war widows supporting their families
by working for the aid groups. After the fatwa, Afghan women going
to work were shot at and several were murdered. Some
international aid groups promptly stopped employing Afghan
women, and though many women were infuriated, most complied
after being intimidated by the violent attacks. Soon afterward,
another edict in Peshawar forbade Afghan women to "walk with
pride" or walk in the middle of the street and said they must wear
the hijab, the Arab black head and body covering and half-face veil.
Again, most women felt they had no choice but to comply.

In 1990, a fatwa from Afghan leaders in Peshawar decreed that
women should not attend schools or become educated, and that if
they did, the Islamic movement would meet with failure. The
document measured 2 feet by 3 feet to accommodate the
signatures of about 200 mullahs and political leaders representing
the majority of the seven main mujahedeen parties of Afghanistan.
The leading school for Afghan girls in Peshawar, where many
Afghan refugees still lived, was sprayed with Kalashnikov gunfire. It
closed for months, and its principal was forced into hiding.

When an alliance of mujahedeen groups took over in Kabul in
1992, it forced women out of news broadcasting and government
ministry jobs and required them to wear veils. But it was the Taliban
who institutionalized the total oppression of women after Kabul fell
to them four years later, and who required the total coverage of the
now familiar burqa.

Now, as Afghans, Pakistanis and Americans look to the future of
Afghanistan, most plans call for a broad-based new government
giving representation to all of Afghanistan's ethnic groups and
major political parties, including the Taliban. No one, however, has
called for the participation of women, even though women, after
many years of war, now almost certainly make up the majority of
the adult Afghan population.

Afghan women gradually gained rights in the first decades of the
20th century. Women helped write their country's Constitution in
1964. They served in parliament and the cabinet and were
diplomats, academics, professionals, judges and even army
generals. All of this happened well before the Soviets arrived in
1979, with their much-touted claim of liberating Afghan women.
Many of the forces now opposing the Taliban include signatories of
the later fatwas that deprived Afghan women of their rights. History
is repeating itself.

Any political process that moves forward without the representation
and participation of women will undermine any chances that the
principles of democracy and human rights will take hold in
Afghanistan. It will be the first clue that little has changed.

Jan Goodwin is author of "Price of Honor," a book on women and
Islamic extremism. Jessica Neuwirth is president of Equality Now,
an international women's rights group.
--

Best wishes

I believe you find life such a problem because you think there are
the
good people and the bad people....You're wrong, of course.  There
are,
always and only, the bad people, *but some of them are on
opposite
sides.*
ůThe Patrician, character in  _Guards, Guards_, Terry Pratchett
[TP's *italics*]

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