Women in Afghanistan:
What Next?
Are there any people on earth more wretched than the women
of Afghanistan?
As if poverty, hunger, drought, ruined cities and a huge refugee crisis weren't
bad enough, under Taliban's rule they can not work, they can't go to school,
they have virtually no healthcare, they can't talk and laugh loudly, they can't
leave their houses without a male escort, they are beaten in the streets if
they lift the mandatory burqa even to relieve a coughing fit. No high heels
(that lust - inducing click- click! to God's men), no white socks. Windows must
be painted over so that no male passerby can see the dreaded female form
lurking in the house. (This particular stricture, combined with the burqa, has
led to an outbreak of osteomalacia, a bone disease caused by malnutrition and
lack of sunlight.)
Until September 11, this situation received little
attention in the West - far less than the destruction of the giant Buddha
statutes of Bamiyan. Cultural relativism and a post-modern unwillingness
together with the mainstream media's effort to 'cover' things up were all
responsible. The notion that the plight of women in Afghanistan is a matter of culture
and religion and not for westerners to judge was widespread across the
political spectrum. Now, finally the world is paying attention to the Taliban
and the women of Afghanistan.
Now westerners have also experienced the bloody taste of political Islam. Now
the connections between political Islamic groups and the suppression of women
are plain to see. Now they see the connection of political Islam in Iran, Afghanistan, Sudan, Algeria and Egypt with
misogyny, terrorism and atrocities in the Middle East,
Afghanistan,
Pakistan
and New York.
Now, the same media and intellectuals talk about the
notorious Northern Alliance as Afghan women's
friend. They brush aside the fact that Northern Alliance
warlords are themselves Islamic gangsters and drug smuggling groups that not
only considerably restricted women when they held power from 1992 to 1996, but
also plunged the country into civil war and committed atrocities, leaving the
population exhausted and ruined. In 1990, a group of 80 Afghan mullahs in
Peshawar - all of whom were from the seven parties that made up the
Western-backed Mujahedin 'government in exile' issued a fatwa (a religious
decree) stating that women were not to wear perfume, noisy bangles, or western
clothes. Veils had to cover the body at all times from head to toe and clothes
were not to be made of material, which was soft or rustled. Women were not to
walk in the middle of the street or swing hips, they were not to talk, laugh or
joke with strangers or foreigners - restrictions similar to the Taliban's.
What Next?
Women's fate together with the fate of the people in Afghanistan
should not be abandoned to the Northern Alliance
or a so-called moderate faction of the Taliban and Luya Jergah. The freedom of
people and women in Afghanistan
from the monstrosity of Taliban, other political Islamic groups and Islamic
terrorism is the task of freedom-loving people and egalitarian movements all
over the world. Progressive and freedom-loving movements should see the
liberation of women and people in Afghanistan as their own task and not allow a
so-called moderate faction of Taliban or the Northern Alliance backed by the
USA, UK and reactionary governments in the region, to take power and further
ruin more lives and commit atrocities. We should not allow the political
Islamic movement to continue their murderous history and brutality against
women.
Progressive and humanitarian forces must resolutely and
actively support the secularist, progressive movement of the region. They must
put pressure on Western governments to end their support for right-wing,
Islamic and reactionary governments in the region. They must demand an end to
any wheeling and dealings between the West and governments in the region,
particularly Pakistan
and Iran,
in imposing another ethnic, reactionary and Islamic group on the people of Afghanistan and
continuing the oppressive plight of women in this country. The UN and Western
governments must be put under pressure to guarantee a situation for the Afghan
people to freely choose and establish their political system. Guarantees of
political freedom, civil and individual rights, secularism, abolition of
existing anti-women laws and equal rights between men and women are minimal
requirements.
More than twenty years of civil war,
suppression, the slavery of women and atrocities is enough. It is time for the
women of Afghanistan
to enjoy a life worthy of human beings. It is time for women to be free of
poverty, indignity, restrictions and humiliation and enjoy their rights.