Afghan women march against violence
KABUL, Afghanistan—Dozens of Afghan activists and supporters marked
Valentine's Day by marching in Kabul on Thursday to denounce violence
against women amid reports that domestic abuse is on the rise.
Afghan
women have made great strides in education and official circles since
the days under Taliban rule, when they had to wear all-encompassing
burqas and were not allowed to go to school or leave their homes without
a male relative as an escort. But they still face widespread domestic
violence, forced marriages and other problems.
"Violence
against women has to be eliminated or at least reduced in Afghanistan,"
rights activist Humaira Rasouli said after walking from the landmark
Darul Aman Palace just outside Kabul to an area in the city near parliament. "Unfortunately ... the violence against women rate is increasing day to day." Organizers
said some 200 people, men and women, participated in the march, which
was planned by several Afghan rights groups as part of a global domestic
violence awareness campaign called One Billion Rising.
Past
protests supporting women's rights have been attacked by hecklers and
men throwing stones, and riot police with helmets and shields stood
guard on Thursday.
Underscoring the security concerns,
protesters had badges and the public was not invited to join. But the
march remained peaceful and many women welcomed the support of men along
the way.
"It was very successful because usually protests don't get so many people," said Manizha Wafeq, one of the organizers.
In
August 2009, Afghanistan enacted an Elimination of Violence Against
Women law that criminalized child marriage, selling and buying women to
settle disputes, assault and other acts of violence against women.
But
a U.N. report issued late last year found that Afghan women still face
frequent abuse despite an increase in the prosecution of abusers.
Violence against women also remains largely under-reported because
of cultural taboos, social norms and religious beliefs in the conservative Muslim society.
Examples
cited in the report included a woman strangled by her husband because
she gave birth to girls instead of boys and a 15-year-old girl who filed
a complaint about repeated beatings by her husband and father-in-law
only to be told by prosecutors to withdraw it or risk imprisonment
herself.
In July, some 50 women and men also took to the
streets of Kabul to protest the public killing of an Afghan woman
accused of adultery. A video of her gruesome, execution-style killing
showed the woman being shot multiple times in Parwan province, north of
the Afghan capital, as people stood nearby, smiling and cheering.
The
Afghanistan Independent Human Rights commission also recorded more than
4,000 cases of violence against women from March 21 to Oct. 21 last
year, but most were not reported to police.
"Women don't have
a bright future and the government isn't doing enough to protect them,"
said Faryaa Hashimi, a 20-year-old student at the march. "We are
calling on the international community and Afghan government to protect
the women."
An
Afghan woman holds a banner referring to a global domestic violence
awareness campaign called One Billion Rising during a march calling for
the end of violence against women, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, Feb.
14, 2013. Dozens of Afghan activists have marked Valentine s Day by
marching in Kabul to denounce violence against women. Concern has risen
after rights organizations last year found that Afghan women are
frequently victims of violence despite a law against it and increased
prosecution of abusers. ((AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq))
Afghan
women carry a banner during a march calling for end of violence against
women, in Kabul, with the Darul Aman palace seen in the background,
Afghanistan, Thursday, Feb. 14, 2013. Dozens of Afghan activists have
marked Valentine s Day by marching in Kabul to denounce violence against
women. Concern has risen after rights organizations last year found
that Afghan women are frequently victims of violence despite a law
against it and increased prosecution of abusers. ((AP Photo/Musadeq
Sadeq))
———
Associated Press writer Amir Shah contributed to this report.
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