http://www.dawn.com/2011/02/12/when-being-a-woman-is-a-crime.html

When being a woman is a crime
Irfan Husain (1 hour ago) TodayWHEN news emerged about a 14-year-old girl being 
flogged to death in Bangladesh earlier this month, the world reacted with shock 
and horror. When I dug a little deeper, I discovered that the truth was even 
worse than the story reported in the media. 

According to Dhaka's The Daily Star - the newspaper that first broke the story 
- young Hena Akhtar was raped by her cousin, Mehbub. When his wife Shilpi saw 
them together, she, her sister and her aunt inflicted unspeakable horrors on 
Hena for hours until she was incapable of standing up. Shilpi then went to the 
village council and asked them to 'arbitrate' between her and her husband and 
to punish Hena for adultery.

The council, led by the local madressah teacher Maulana Saiful, then pronounced 
their verdict in the form of a fatwa: Hena was to be flogged 101 times by a 
relative of Shipli's, while Mehbub was to receive 200 blows from his father. To 
add insult to grave injury, Hena's father was ordered to pay a fine of 50,000 
takas. In the event, Mehbub received 10 strokes, while Hena collapsed after 
being lashed 80 times. The scourge used on her was a wet gamchi, a towel 
twisted to form a rope with a knot at the end. She was carried to a hospital 
where she was soon pronounced dead.

The Dhaka High Court, taking suo moto notice of The Daily Star story, ordered 
an enquiry. Thus far, the cleric, Shipli and sundry others have been arrested, 
while Mehbub is on the run. Fortunately, the new government in Bangladesh has 
rejected Islamic punishments and fatwas, so there's a real chance that the 
criminals involved in the case might actually be punished, unlike in Pakistan 
where they invariably get off scot-free after torturing and killing with 
religious or tribal licence.

Oddly, most of the victims of these crimes are women who are made the 
repositories of male 'honour'. According to the United Nations Population Fund, 
around 5,000 Muslim women around the world are victims of honour killings; most 
of them are murdered by family members. Women's groups in the Arab world put 
the figure at four times this number.

While many of these crimes go unreported, the international media often carries 
terrifying accounts of young girls being murdered by their fathers and brothers 
with the connivance of their mothers. Their crime? Refusal to marry somebody 
their families have chosen for them, selecting their own husbands, or, horror 
of horrors, having a boyfriend or lover.

One Baloch member of Pakistan's parliament asserted the right of his tribesmen 
to continue this tradition in the name of ancient tribal law. Others have 
justified the mistreatment of women in the name of their interpretation of 
Islam. Thus, both the Taliban and the Saudi religious police punish women if 
even an inch of skin is visible from under their all-enveloping burkas. When a 
women's hostel was ablaze in Saudi Arabia a few years ago, girls rushing to 
escape the flames in their nighties were forced back into the building by the 
police as they were not deemed to be fully dressed. Many of them burned to 
death.While this is an extreme example, the sad fact is that such horror 
stories are endemic in the Muslim world. This is not to suggest that women do 
not suffer indignities and exploitation elsewhere. But in many Muslim 
countries, religion is successfully invoked in defence of outrageous male 
chauvinism. Indeed, women are all too often denied any legal redress or 
community support despite being brutally mistreated.

All too often, even when they have been the victims of rape, they are accused 
of fornication or adultery, letting their male attackers off the hook. In Iran, 
Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, a 42-year old widow and mother of two, was 
sentenced to death by stoning for allegedly having an illicit relationship.

After being incarcerated for five years and enduring 99 lashes for this 
'crime', she was sentenced to death by stoning by a judge who cited his 
'personal knowledge' in passing sentence, rather than relying on four witnesses 
as required under Islamic law. Fortunately, the Iranian government has 
responded to the international outcry by declaring that Ms Ashtiani will not be 
stoned to death after all. However, she's still in jail, and might well be 
hanged.

Men in socially backward societies - a condition that characterises most Muslim 
countries - find that they are powerless to control external factors. But they 
can exert control over their sisters, daughters and wives. In the animal and 
the human kingdoms, there is a need to kick those below you in the pecking 
order. All too often, men frustrated with their lot take it out on their women.

This macho bullying has been institutionalised in tribal and religious law in 
many societies. But while other communities have evolved, and women have 
achieved equal rights, this still remains a distant dream in most Muslim 
countries.

Many Muslims are fond of stating the obvious: Islam accorded many rights to 
women in a benighted era when they had no rights at all. While this is 
certainly true, the reality is that the world has moved on, while the position 
of women in large parts of the Islamic world remains frozen in time.

In this day and age, to suggest that a woman's testimony is equal to half a 
man's is surely an anachronism. Or that she can inherit only a portion of what 
her brother does. While these concessions might have been revolutionary 
centuries ago, they are now viewed as discriminatory.

Then there is the whole question of forcing millions of women into stifling 
garments that cover them from head to toe, and restrict vision and movement. 
While the Quran does not require any such clothing - calling only for modest 
attire - many Muslim men feel their easily offended honour is best protected by 
placing their women in these uncomfortable and impractical outfits.

The Urdu word for 'woman' is 'aurat'. This is derived from the Arabic word 
'awrah' that can mean 'genitalia, weakness, deficiency, imperfection'. No 
wonder a woman is required to be covered at all times.

irfan.hus...@gmail.com


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