Kabul, Dec 29: 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.
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.
"We
have largely failed in our campaign to create a female police force," said a
senior Afghan security official who declined to be identified because of the
sensitivity of the subject.
"Mullahs are against it, and the women are
seen as not up to the job," he added, referring to Muslim
preachers.
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 to talk.
"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.
Dyed russet hair poking out from her black hijab, part of the
female ANP uniform, Lailoma wrung her hands as 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."
Insecurity, opposition to women working out of the home and
sexism deter many women from signing up, said Saboor.
But impoverished
widows sometimes have no choice. A starting salary is about 10,500 afghanis a
month ($210).
The Interior Ministry and foreign organizations responsible
for training the women police - NATO, the European Union and the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP) - say recruitment poses the main challenge to the
force.
"It is just difficult. There is no real history of women in the
police force, there is no precedent, even having an open space for women in
employment is a challenge," UNDP Associate Administrator Rebeca Grynspan
said.
A recruitment campaign of television adverts and posters has not
produced the desired effect in a country where there are huge social and
religious divides between the rural and urban populations. Even fewer join the
national army, where some 350 women serve amongst 190,000.
"Much of the
male leadership don't want to have anything to do with women in the ANP.
Commanders want them out of their units," Saboor said, adding that having 2,500
female police officers could be realistic by end-2014.
Of those who join,
few have prospects for promotion. They often find themselves in police stations
without proper facilities for women, such as toilets or changing rooms which are
vital for the many who hide the fact that they work from their
families.
The sprawling Interior Ministry has only recently started work
on installing toilets for women. "Ten years of this war have passed, and we're
only now building them a toilet," Saboor said with a wry laugh.
For First
Lieutenant Naderah Keshmiri, whose humble yet stern approach helps her pursue
cases of violence against women, life as a policewoman means being
undervalued.
"My male subordinates quickly became generals. But not me.
Where's my promotion?" she asked in a UNDP-backed Family Response Unit, which
she heads.
The UNDP has set up 33 of the units countrywide, which help
increase female visibility in the ANP, with plans to more than double them by
2015.
A Western female police trainer, who spoke on condition of
anonymity, said policewomen are almost always passed over for promotion by their
male commanders.
U.S. lawmakers are hoping to amend a defense bill by
year-end to protect the rights of Afghan women during the security transition.
They want to reduce physical and cultural barriers to women joining the security
forces.
Ethnicity also plays a role: 55 percent of women in the ANP are
ethnic Tajik, Afghanistan's second-largest ethnic group. Recruiting from the
largest and most conservative ethnic group, the Pashtuns, is
difficult.
The Taliban draw most of their support from the Pashtuns, who
dominate the south of the country. Pashtun women make up only 15 percent of the
force.
Hazaras, a largely Shi'ite minority who suffered enormous losses
at the hands of the Taliban, are overrepresented amongst the women, making up 24
percent, according to figures from NATO's training mission in
Afghanistan.
But many of the policewomen are wondering whether their
force can survive.
Lowering her voice, Friba whispered: "As soon as the
foreigners leave, they'll reduce our salaries. This will not happen to the men.
Or perhaps they'll kick us out entirely."
Ends
SA/EN
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» Insight: Once a symbol of new Afghanistan, can policewomen survive?
Insight: Once a symbol of new Afghanistan, can policewomen survive?
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