Guardianweekly
Tuesday December 2nd 2008

A Brave Woman In Afghanistan




Human rights are in crisis in Afghanistan, where fundamentalist warlords hold 
high office and child abuse and gang rapes are on the increase. When Malalai 
Joya, a young female Afghan politician, spoke out against the presence of 'war 
criminals' in the affairs of state, she was expelled from parliament among 
shouts of 'whore' and 'communist'. The recipient of various international 
prizes for bravery, she speaks of her commitment to defend the rights of women 
and children despite numerous attempts on her life



Democracy in Afghanistan is a pretence, says Joya. Photograph: Monica Munich

Death threats are an ongoing feature of my everyday existence and I've survived 
four assassination attempts. I'm targeted because I defend human rights and 
equality for women in a country where rape, forced marriages and inhuman acts 
of child abuse are a fact of daily life. 

Examples range from the 22-year-old woman raped in front of her children by 15 
local commanders of a fundamentalist party, or an 18-year-old who hanged 
herself to avoid being sold to a 60-year-old man, through to a young girl 
kidnapped by warlords and raped in exchange for a dog, and a young teenage girl 
raped by three men who then sadistically cut her private parts. 

I live in hiding and move from one safe house to another, never spending more 
than one night in the same location. It's somehow ironic that the burqa - a 
symbol of female subjugation under the Taliban - has become my disguise. I 
describe the garment as a living shroud that affords some degree of security. 

While my family are in the west of Afghanistan, I live in Kabul because I am a 
member of parliament. But on May 21 last year, I was censored for exercising my 
right of free expression. I was accused of [violating the rules of procedure 
and] insulting parliament.

Although the threats against my life increased after that day, the first major 
incident that drove me into hiding was at the Loya Jirga, the constitutional 
assembly, in 2003, while the eyes of the world's press were upon us. Although I 
was a delegate, I was not allowed to speak. But when I asked to speak for the 
"young generation" of Afghanistan - I was 24 at the time - I was given three 
minutes. After one minute my microphone was cut because I publicly denounced 
the presence of mujahideen warlords, criminals and drug traffickers in the 
assembly. I was branded an "infidel" and there were shouts of "take her out, 
she is a whore, a communist". 

Some fundamentalist women wanted to physically attack me, while the good 
democrat women surrounded me to protect me from the soldiers who had been 
ordered to remove me from the chamber. These women said: "She is our daughter; 
who are you?" I was asked to apologise by the speaker of the assembly but I 
only wanted to stand up and finish my speech. It was then that these democrat 
women stopped me from standing up because they knew I would be forcibly taken 
out and beaten if I did. 

The UN requested that I leave for my own safety, but I said no, I would not 
leave until the meeting was over. They thought that I was afraid, but I was 
not. The UN waited and then ushered me out and whisked me away in a car with 
dark windows to a place of hiding.

With the entire incident filmed and reported by the international media, at 
that moment it appeared that democracy in the Loya Jirga had been exposed as a 
pretence. The warlords saw this and they saw how much support I got from 
outside.

As a war baby, political activism is in my blood. When the Russians invaded 
Afghanistan in 1979 I was four days old. My father was a medical student at the 
time and a democrat. By the time I was four years old, he had a price on his 
head and we had to flee the country. We lived in poverty-stricken refugee camps 
until I was 18, first in Iran and then Pakistan. 

At secondary school in the Pakistan refugee camp, I volunteered to teach 
afternoon literacy classes. There I encountered many orphans and women living 
in the hope that their kidnapped fathers and husbands would reappear. But no 
one knew if their men-folk were alive or dead. I have many memories of their 
suffering. This experience had a profound impact on my life and that was when I 
became a social activist.

Under the present regime - that has illegally banned me from parliament - 
women's rights continue to erode. The rates of self-immolation and suicide due 
to forced marriages, domestic violence and poverty are now higher than ever. In 
the first six months of 2008, 47 cases of self-immolation among women have been 
recorded in a single hospital in the western city of Herat. Gang rapes of young 
girls are reported almost every day, especially in the northern part of 
Afghanistan where pro-US warlords have full power and a free hand. 

The perpetrators of these crimes should have to face the courts. But every day 
they become more powerful. Now the US wants to negotiate with the brutal 
Taliban and share power with them. 

One of the many disturbing cases in which I have tried to help was the rape of 
a four-year-old girl. When small children are raped there is severe internal 
damage. Every few minutes she had to go to the toilet. I told as many people as 
possible about what had happened to her and finally some supporters and one 
hospital said that they would take responsibility for her and even provide her 
with an education. But when her father accepted money from the warlords they 
told him to keep his daughter at home, and he agreed. For two days I cried a 
lot. I told the man that he was not a good father, that he was just another 
kind of criminal. 

A further disturbing case is that of a 12-year-old schoolgirl who was raped by 
three men - one of whom is the son of a member of parliament. His father is 
accused of using his position of power to officially change his son's age from 
23 to 16 so that he could avoid prosecution. Such MPs would not be lawmakers, 
but lawbreakers; they do not want to put law into practice. The police paid 
little attention to the case. The one policeman who did lost his job. 

I have raised these issues many times in parliament, but the politicians remain 
silent. Even the few male and female democrat MPs don't raise these human 
rights issues, especially if they involve women. I challenge them and I know 
that it's risky, but it's important. That's why they expelled me. 

The 12-year-old's father was offered a bribe by the warlords to drop the case. 
He refused. He is very poor but he sold a piece of land to raise enough money 
to fight the case. The warlords made many attempts on his life, but he 
survived. 

He is a good father and there are many other good fathers like him in 
Afghanistan. They want justice, but there is no justice available. That is the 
problem. In one of his interviews on local Afghan TV, he said that if justice 
were not done he would become a suicide bomber and take revenge. 

Sadly, the US seems to be giving a helping hand to these criminal warlords. In 
2001 the US government invaded Afghanistan in the name of democracy, but it has 
betrayed our people by helping to power the bloodiest enemies of these values. 
The horrible regime of the Taliban was replaced by corrupt and brutal warlords 
and former Russian puppets. 

The plight of victims such as these girls is my driving force. I will never 
give up my fight for justice, and I'll continue to try to represent the 
millions of voiceless Afghan people - especially women and children - who are 
still being brutalised by fundamentalist warlords and the Taliban. 

. Malalai Joya was speaking to Saundra Satterlee. For further information visit 
Joya's website at malalaijoya.com.


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