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Sahar Gul, Tortured Afghan Girl, Will Be Sent To India For Medical Treatment

Afghanistan Torture

By RAHIM FAIEZ and PATRICK QUINN   01/ 2/12 08:02 AM ET   AP

KABUL, Afghanistan -- A 15-year-old Afghan girl severely tortured for months by her in-laws in an attempt to force her into prostitution will be sent to India for medical treatment, an Afghan official said Monday.

Sahar Gul's mother-in-law and sister-in-law were arrested and her husband was being sought, said Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqi.

The case has shocked Afghanistan, though rights activists say serious abuses against women and girls in the conservative society are common. President Hamid Karzai has said that whoever used violence against Gul will be punished.

According to officials in northeastern Baghlan province, the in-laws kept Gul in a basement for six months, ripped her fingernails out, tortured her with hot irons and broke her fingers. Police freed her last week.

The public health and women's affairs ministers visited Gul, who is now in a Kabul hospital.

She was freed from a basement at her husband's home last week after her uncle called the local police.

"It is a violent act that is unacceptable in the 21st century," Sediqi told reporters. "We are thankful of Sahar Gul's uncle."

He added that "if the police had not arrived in time she may have died."

He did not provide details on the treatment she would seek in India. But many Afghans with serious injuries or illnesses prefer to go to India or Pakistan for care because of poor medical services in Afghanistan.

Gul was married about seven months ago. Jawad Basharat, spokesman for the provincial police chief in Baghlan, said an arrest warrant had been issued for her husband, who is serving in the Afghan army.

"After police found out about the small girl Sahar Gul they took action and found her in the basement of the house in very bad condition," Basharat said. "Her nails were pulled out, she has injuries in all parts of her body, there are signs of burning on her body, she was suffering from different kinds of injuries."

He said that her mother-in-law and other members of the family were reportedly involved in what he described as "criminal activities," which he said included selling alcohol and prostitution.

According to preliminary reports, Basharat said, "they tried to force her into prostitution and she did not agree. This was one of the reasons that they detained her in the basement for six months."

Rahima Zarifi, the provincial director of women's affairs in Baghlan, said a commission had been set up under Karzai's orders to investigate the case.

"According to the neighbors in the area, Sahar Gul's in-law's were not good people. Besides selling alcohol, they were involved in prostitution and that is why they put pressure on Sahar Gul to join with them. She was not happy with it and that is why they put her in the basement, detained her for six months and tortured her," Zarifi said. "They pulled out her nails. You can see the signs of torture and abuse all over her body, several types of torture and abuse. They even burned her with hot irons."

Health Minister Suraya Dalil said that despite progress in women's rights, work remained to be done.

"This is the very most extreme case that we have seen. That a child, that a girl child has been abused, has been physically abused, psychologically abused. It is an issue that shows that we are still need to work a lot with regard to education, with regard to awareness, with regard to social and economic development," Dalil said.

Despite much progress since the fall of the Taliban 10 years ago, women's rights in Afghanistan remain a problem area in a country with a strict patriarchal culture

Under Taliban rule, girls' schools were banned and women could only leave the house accompanied by a male family member.

A U.N. report issued in November found that a 2009 law meant to protect Afghan women from a host of abusive practices, including rape, forced marriage and the trading of women to settle disputes was being undermined by spotty enforcement.

The Law on the Elimination of Violence Against Women was passed in August 2009 and had raised hopes among women's rights activists that Afghan women would get to fight back against abuses that had been ignored under Taliban rule. The law criminalized many abuses for the first time, including domestic violence, child marriage, driving a woman to resort to suicide and the selling and buying of women.

Yet the report found only a small percentage of reported crimes against women are pursued by the Afghan government.

Between March 2010 and March 2011, prosecutors opened 594 investigations involving crimes under the law. That's only 26 percent of the 2,299 incidents registered by the Afghan human rights commission, the U.N. report said. Prosecutors filed indictments in only 155 cases, or 7 percent of the total number of crimes reported.

Sometimes victims were pressured to withdraw their complaints or to settle for mediation by traditional councils, the report said. Sometimes prosecutors didn't proceed with mandatory investigations for violent acts like rape or prostitution. Other times, police simply ignored complaints, the report said.

___

Associated Press writer Ahmad Massieh Neshat contributed to this report.

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KABUL, Afghanistan -- A 15-year-old Afghan girl severely tortured for months by her in-laws in an attempt to force her into prostitution will be sent to India for medical treatment, an Afghan official...
KABUL, Afghanistan -- A 15-year-old Afghan girl severely tortured for months by her in-laws in an attempt to force her into prostitution will be sent to India for medical treatment, an Afghan official...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dzadzey
Afflicting the comfortable
08:51 AM on 01/28/2012
So, we are supporting a government that allows such atrocities as this as a matter of course. Time to airlift every woman and girl out of that benighted country and allow them to fend for themselves.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Anne Mccormick
12:10 AM on 01/06/2012
right! and once that girl lands in india the government there should not send her back; ever. if ever there was a reason to grand political asylum this is it.
sheilabbl
Just living, loving, and letting go...
11:24 PM on 01/04/2012
What horrifies me isn't the story, I know these sorts of things go on, I am horrified by the comments of Americans who believe that this single story defines all the people in Afghanistan. There are people in Afghanistan, in Iraq, in Iran, in Egypt who do not abuse others. People who cherish their loved ones. Real families who love each other. THESE are the people who we go to war to help. These are the people who are not in the news and who do not garner media attention!
Imagine the headlines today in Iran or another Muslim country. Police shoot and kill a middle school student. What about the headline, Disabled trapped in a sub basement for 6 months so their disability checks can be taken? Do you think that people in other countries do not judge ALL of us by the headlines they read? Do you really think they are reading about 4 firemen race to the aid of a dog in a frozen river?
Try to think critically instead of just reacting to what the media feeds us. There are very good people all over the world and not just in the United States. While we have severely sick individuals who kill children, torture women, set arson we also have many more people who go out of their way to do good and open their hearts to others. While you sit in judgement of others remember they can also sit in judgement of you.
08:30 PM on 01/05/2012
I'm sorry, but if this story does not horrify you, and you clearly state it does not, then no amount of logical, rational argument by me is going to help you see the silliness of your posting.
sheilabbl
Just living, loving, and letting go...
10:36 PM on 01/05/2012
Then my logic clearly escapes you who seems to have been unaware that these horrors have existed forever and I have known about them forever. Am I horrified that such would happen? Of course but I am not surprised. I am surprised that so few people were aware of such and horrified that so many people believe that ALL people in Muslim countries are the same way. I have very good friends who were born all over the world including Iraq, Iran, India, Pakistan and they are as diffierent as the monsters in this story as, I assume, you or I.
09:07 PM on 01/04/2012
Good sites to help women- If you would like to give:

http://www.amnestyusa.org/our-work/issues/women-s-rights/

http://www.womenforwomen.org/

Each one can reach one....God bless You all!
07:53 PM on 01/04/2012
This is atrocious!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!What can we women here do to help?
09:04 PM on 01/04/2012
Bless your heart Lori!! Lori...I agree with you...Look at these sites: I belong to these, and they are great ministries!!! If you would like to give:

http://www.amnestyusa.org/our-work/issues/women-s-rights/

http://www.womenforwomen.org/
12:33 PM on 01/04/2012
As we say in the South, "Lord have mercy ..." My heart aches.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Karen StovallStringer
Legerdemain with a 24k pyrite-plated, shiny object
04:09 PM on 01/04/2012
No, no. It's, "Lawd 'a mercy." ;p
05:01 PM on 01/04/2012
your mama must-a raised you right!
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
11:08 AM on 01/04/2012
The third world.....I'm never surprised but always amazed. They are back in the 1200's and all the firepower in the free world will not change them. I jsut feel sorry for the cases of other such abuse that go unpublicized.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Luuke
08:08 AM on 01/04/2012
Wake the moderator
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Luuke
08:02 AM on 01/04/2012
Women are their worst enemies in Muslim countries.....prove me wrong
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The Knocker
a mind is a terrible thing to waste
03:05 PM on 01/04/2012
So what you are saying is the fact that Christian Americans are raping their women every two minutes doesn't really count.

"Every 2 minutes, someone in the U.S. is sexually assaulted.

Here's the math. According to the U.S. Department of Justice's National Crime Victimization Survey --there is an average of 207,754 victims (age 12 or older) of rape and sexual assault each year.

There are 525,600 minutes in a non-leap year. That makes 31,536,000 seconds/year. So, 31,536,000 divided by 207,754 comes out to 1 sexual assault every 152 seconds, or about 1 every 2 minutes."
http://www.rainn.org/get-information/statistics/frequency-of-sexual-assault
09:50 PM on 01/04/2012
No, those who rape women in America are not Christians, just as those who rape women in Muslim countries are most likely not real Muslims (not knowing the religion, I can't say that definitively). Living in a Muslim country doesn't make you Muslim nor does living in a somewhat Christian country make you a Christian.

But that is beside the point the Luuke is trying to make. I think he/she is saying the women in the Muslim countries can tend to stand in the way of their own betterment.
DoesItMatter
empty micro bio
07:34 AM on 01/05/2012
It is not just in the Muslim countries, it is true even in India.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Luuke
02:04 PM on 01/05/2012
uh ?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
channel80
"The Meek Shall Inherit the Earth"
09:24 PM on 01/03/2012
While I feel sorry for the women of this country, "ideaville" has the right idea. Our country has enough problems without trying to solve everyone else's. In Pakistan they still stone women to death for the slightest infraction. It's such a backward way to live but we can do nothing to change their way of life. That is for them to do.
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ideaville
I have sexdaily, I mean dyslexia, Danm!
07:50 PM on 01/03/2012
We don't seem to realise that it is their way of life. We think Muslim women must be being controlled by their men because we don't want to admit they are just as backward as their menfolk.
We need to stop wasting lives helping them and just leave them to get on with it.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kepowell5
03:55 PM on 01/04/2012
Heartless
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ideaville
I have sexdaily, I mean dyslexia, Danm!
04:37 PM on 01/04/2012
No, just not prepared for the cost of change.
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ideaville
I have sexdaily, I mean dyslexia, Danm!
07:42 PM on 01/03/2012
So our leaders have sacrificed hundreds of young lives to defend the right of the Afghans to force their young women into prostitution. I really cannot think of another country filled with such sub-human detritus. The answer must surely be to cull the adult population and start again with the kids.
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capnamerca
Things that hurt teach ! ! !
10:37 PM on 01/06/2012
There are plenty of other countries where women are treated as chattel. And not all of them are muslim countries.
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ideaville
I have sexdaily, I mean dyslexia, Danm!
04:26 AM on 01/07/2012
What's your point?
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MyIrishEyes
Are Smilin!
07:40 PM on 01/03/2012
I wonder if this is what the women of Egypt have to look forward to now that the extreme Islamists are winning the elections?

And to think the country thought that they would be able to keep a secular modern government. All that blood shed and those Egyptian patriots lives - for what? To sell their wives and daughters into this slavery>
11:14 AM on 01/04/2012
Anyplace where there are extremists of any kind, even here in the USA, there will be situations of abuse and oppression. Look around at changes trying to be forced on women here in the USA...it starts with healthcare for women being cut, then limited access to abortions, then cuts in education funding and daycare, then reduction in SS and Medicare, and it goes on and on....all the same, oppress women because men have no clue about the REAL problems in the USA or any other country too! Men with NO real control try to control women first.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The Knocker
a mind is a terrible thing to waste
05:21 PM on 01/03/2012
Send to India for treatment, so does this mean Indian don't suffer from cultural misogyny.

"Woman burnt alive for dowry

TNN Dec 13, 2011, 02.37AM IST
Tags:

Colonelganj|
Chamanganj police|
Bajaria

KANPUR: A 22-year-old newly woman was allegedly burnt alive for dowry allegedly by her husband and in-laws in Bajaria on Sunday night. A complaint against the in-laws and husband has been lodged by the woman's family members.

The case was registered on the basis of a complaint lodged by woman's father Gulab Chandra Sonker of Colonelganj. He stated that his daughter Lakshmi got married to Deepak, son of Bacchan Lal, a resident of Bajaria.
http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-12-13/kanpur/30511581_1_dowry-husband-and-in-laws-lakshmi"
09:49 PM on 01/03/2012
Yes, but given the population, dowry deaths are not that common. She was probably sent to India so she could get modern health care for her injuries. I hope she can stay there permanently somehow instead of returning home - what is there for her there now?
11:16 AM on 01/04/2012
Nothing happens to prevent future abuses so it continues. This is 2012, people.....get into the present and leave your tainted, violent past behind. It got you nowhere. Look around at how and where you live and the condition of your day to day lives!! Geez....