Kabul, Dec 30 : Shortly after Friba joined the Afghan National Police, she gave
herself the nickname "dragon" and vowed to bring law and order to her tormented
homeland.
Five years later, she is tired of rebuffing the sexual advances
of male colleagues, worries the budget for the female force will shrink and
fears the government will abandon them.
Women in the police force were
held up as a showcase for Afghan-Western efforts to promote rights in the new
Afghanistan, born from the optimism that swept the country after the ouster of
the Taliban in 2001.
Images of gun-wielding Afghan policewomen have been
broadcast across the globe, even inspiring a television program popular with
young Afghan women.
But going from the burqa to the olive green uniform
has not been easy.
In interviews with 12 policewomen in districts across
the Afghan capital, complaints of sexual harassment, discrimination and bitter
frustration were prevalent.
President Hamid Karzai's goal is for 5,000
women to join the Afghan National Police (ANP) by the end of 2014, when most
foreign troops will leave the country.
But government neglect, poor
recruitment and a lack of interest on the part of authorities and the
male-dominated society mean there are only 1,850 female police officers on the
beat, or about 1.25 percent of the entire force.
And it looks to get
worse.
Friba, who asked that her second name not be used, says it all
when she runs a manicured finger across her throat: "Once foreigners leave we
won't even be able to go to the market. We'll be back in burqas. The Taliban are
coming back and we all know it."
Conditions for women in Afghanistan have
improved significantly since the Taliban were ousted. Women have won back basic
rights in voting, education and work since Taliban rule, when they were not
allowed out of their homes without a male escort and could be publicly stoned to
death for adultery.
But problems persist in the deeply conservative
Muslim society scarred by decades of conflict. The United Nations said this
month that despite progress, there was a dramatic under-reporting of cases of
violence against women.
Some female lawmakers and rights groups blame
Karzai's government for a waning interest in women's rights as it seeks peace
talks with the Taliban, accusations his administration deny.
Almost a
third of the members of the female force work in Kabul, performing duties such
as conducting security checks on women at the airport and checking biometric
data.
Friba sat in a city police station room decorated with posters of
policemen clutching weapons.
"I am the dragon and I can defend myself,
but most of the girls are constantly harassed," she said. "Just yesterday my
colleague put his hands on one of the girl's breasts. She was embarrassed and
giggled while he squeezed them. Then she turned to us and burst into
tears."
On the other side of Kabul, detective Lailoma, who also asked
that her family name not be used, said several policewomen under her command had
been raped by their male colleagues.
She complained about male
colleagues: "They want it to be like the time of the Taliban. They tell us every
day we are bad women and should not be allowed to work here."
Male
colleagues also taunt the women, she added, often preventing them from entering
the kitchen, meaning they miss out on lunch.
On several occasions, male
colleagues interrupted interviews in what the policewomen said were attempts to
intimidate them into silence.
One male officer entered the room without
knocking three times to retrieve pencils; another spent 20 minutes dusting off
his hat, only to put it back on a shelf. The women switched subjects when the
men came in.
Rana, a 31-year-old, heavy-set policewoman with curly hair,
said policewomen were expected to perform sexual favors: "We're expected to do
them to just stay in the force."
The raping of policewomen by their male
counterparts "definitely takes place," said Colonel Sayed Omar Saboor, deputy
director for gender and human rights at the Interior Ministry, which oversees
the police. "These men are largely illiterate and see the women as
immoral."
Ends
SA/EN
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Female Afghan cops say they are raped, molested by fellow
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