Helmand, Jan 21 : On 4 November 2006, Nasima, 25, a member of a local women's council,
grabbed the AK-47 from the policeman guarding the council meeting in the Grishk
district of southern Helmand province and killed herself.
She had had
enough of the daily beatings by her husband. Like many other women in Helmand,
Nasima was given away by her family in 2005. Her father owed a huge amount to an
opium dealer and, unable to return the money or provide the quantity of opium he
had promised, he offered his daughter to the smuggler, who already had a wife
and four children. Under Islamic law and in many Muslim countries a man is
allowed up to four wives.
"Nasima was enduring a bitter life in the
family. The family members and her husband considered her as an extra burden,"
Gulalai, head of the local women's council in Grishk district, told
IRIN.
Nasima's case is just one of hundreds of such incidents where women
are traded for debts. Most go unreported in the troubled southern provinces,
where most of the opium in Afghanistan is produced. The practice is also
reported in other provinces, particularly the east and the north, but the stakes
are higher in the south, the heartland for drug trading.
In another case
in the Marja district of Helmand, 18-year-old Saliha considers herself lucky to
be living a relatively peaceful life. "I was 13 when my father married me off to
a 20-year-old man, whose father had given a loan to my parents and they were
unable to return the amount or the quantity of opium," Saliha said.
She
says she is fortunate to be the first wife and only wife for her husband, who is
only seven years older and not double her age, which is common in this part of
the country.
Qais Bawari, acting head of the Afghan Independent Human
Rights Commission (AIHRC) for the southern region, based in Kandahar, said they
received 69 cases of self-immolation and murders from Helmand and Kandahar
provinces in 2006 alone. He said several were related to marriages in exchange
for drugs. "Unfortunately many of the cases of violence against women go
unreported and a very small proportion is reported to us," Bawari
said.
He said people were reluctant to report cases regarding domestic
violence against women for fear of reprisals.
Afghanistan produces more
than 90 percent of the opium available in the world today. Human rights
activists say local drug dealers pay in advance to farmers for their poppy yield
but they often end up giving their daughters to the drug traffickers when they
fail to harvest the expected yield.
The sale of opium is banned in
Afghanistan - but since the fall of the Taliban in 2001, the crop has re-emerged
as a profitable trade. Despite government efforts and international pressure,
poppy farmers are reluctant to give up their crop in return for a less lucrative
alternative in a country where poverty is rife.
Afghanistan and its
female population are at the bottom of the global poverty scale. The country is
the fourth lowest in the world for living standards and third lowest in gender
disparities, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) stated
in August 2006.
Ahmad Shah Mirdad, legal analyst with AIHRC in Kabul,
criticised central government for doing little to stem the growing problems
faced by women in the country.
"Stronger efforts are needed to battle
these awful and discriminatory practices in our communities," Mirdad
said.
Some say the status of women has not changed much since the ousting
of the Taliban, which enforced strict rules on the movement of women and
curtailed their rights. Head of the women's affairs department in Helmand,
Fawzia Ulomi, said more than 20 women and girls had committed suicide over the
past 10 months - most of them had been handed over to dealers instead of drugs,
or to settle family disputes.
Cases of violence are generally kept secret
in rural areas but if the victim or family chooses to complain, tribal Jirgas or
local councils are convened to resolve it. Such cases were rarely referred to
the women's affairs department or other concerned authorities, Ulomi
said.
Ends
SA/EN
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Afghanistan: Girls and women traded for opium debts
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