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Afghanistan: Hundreds Of Women, Girls Jailed For 'Moral Crimes'

Posted: 03/28/2012 10:09 am

(Kabul) – The Afghan government should release the approximately 400 women and girls imprisoned in Afghanistan for “moral crimes,” Human Rights Watch said in a new report released today. The United States and other donor countries should press the Afghan government under President Hamid Karzai to end the wrongful imprisonment of women and girls who are crime victims rather than criminals.

The 120-page report, “‘I Had to Run Away’: Women and Girls Imprisoned for ‘Moral Crimes’ in Afghanistan,” is based on 58 interviews conducted in three prisons and three juvenile detention facilities with women and girls accused of “moral crimes.” Almost all girls in juvenile detention in Afghanistan had been arrested for “moral crimes,” while about half of women in Afghan prisons were arrested on these charges. These “crimes” usually involve flight from unlawful forced marriage or domestic violence. Some women and girls have been convicted of zina, sex outside of marriage, after being raped or forced into prostitution.

“It is shocking that 10 years after the overthrow of the Taliban, women and girls are still imprisoned for running away from domestic violence or forced marriage,” said Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch. “No one should be locked up for fleeing a dangerous situation even if it’s at home. President Karzai and Afghanistan’s allies should act decisively to end this abusive and discriminatory practice.”

The fall of the Taliban government in 2001 promised a new era of women’s rights. Significant improvements have occurred in education, maternal mortality, employment, and the role of women in public life and governance. Yet the imprisonment of women and girls for “moral crimes” is just one sign of the difficult present and worrying future faced by Afghan women and girls as the international community moves to decrease substantially its commitments in Afghanistan.

Human Rights Watch interviewed many girls who had been arrested after they fled a forced marriage and women who had fled abusive husbands and relatives. Some women interviewed by Human Rights Watch had gone to the police in dire need of help, only to be arrested instead.

“Running away,” or fleeing home without permission, is not a crime under the Afghan criminal code, but the Afghan Supreme Court has instructed its judges to treat women and girls who flee as criminals. Zina is a crime under Afghan law, punishable by up to 15 years in prison.

Women and girls interviewed by Human Rights Watch described abuses including forced and underage marriage, beatings, stabbings, burnings, rapes, forced prostitution, kidnapping, and murder threats. Virtually none of the cases had led even to an investigation of the abuse, let alone prosecution or punishment.

One woman, Parwana S. (not her real name), 19, told Human Rights Watch how she was convicted of “running away” after fleeing a husband and mother-in-law who beat her: “I will try to become independent and divorce him. I hate the word ‘husband.’ My liver is totally black from my husband… If I knew about prison and everything [that would happen to me] I would have just jumped into the river and committed suicide.”

Human Rights Watch said that women and girls accused of “moral crimes” face a justice system stacked against them at every stage. Police arrest them solely on a complaint of a husband or relative. Prosecutors ignore evidence that supports women’s assertions of innocence. Judges often convict solely on the basis of “confessions” given in the absence of lawyers and “signed” without having been read to women who cannot read or write. After conviction, women routinely face long prison sentences, in some cases more than 10 years.

Afghanistan’s 2009 Law on the Elimination of Violence Against Women makes violence against women a criminal offense. But the same police, prosecutors, and judges who work zealously to lock up women accused of “moral crimes” often ignore evidence of abuse against the accused women, Human Rights Watch said.

“Courts send women to prison for dubious ‘crimes’ while the real criminals – their abusers –walk free,” Roth said. “Even the most horrific abuses suffered by women seem to elicit nothing more than a shrug from prosecutors, despite laws criminalizing violence against women.”

Abusive prosecution of “moral crimes” is important to far more than the approximately 400 women and girls in prison or pretrial detention, Human Rights Watch said. Every time a woman or girl flees a forced marriage or domestic violence only to end up behind bars, it sends a clear message to others enduring abuse that seeking help from the government is likely to result in punishment, not rescue.

The plight of women facing domestic violence is made still worse by archaic divorce laws that permit a man simply to declare himself divorced, while making it extremely difficult for a woman to obtain a divorce, Human Rights Watch said. The Afghan government made a commitment to reform these laws in 2007 under its National Action Plan for Women in Afghanistan, and a committee of experts drafted a new Family Law that would improve the rights of women. This new law, however, has been on hold with the government since 2010, with no sign of movement toward passage.

“It is long past time for Afghanistan to act on its promises to overhaul laws that make Afghan women second-class citizens,” Roth said. “Laws that force women to endure abuse by denying them the right to divorce are not only outdated but cruel.”

By maintaining discriminatory laws on the books, and by failing to address due process and fair trial violations in “moral crimes” cases, Afghanistan is in violation of its obligations under international human rights law. United Nations expert bodies and special rapporteurs have called for the repeal of Afghanistan’s “moral crimes” laws. The UN special rapporteur on violence against women has called on Afghanistan to “abolish laws, including those related to zina, that discriminate against women and girls and lead to their imprisonment and cruel, inhuman, and degrading punishment.” The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child has urged Afghanistan to “[r]emove so-called moral offences as a crime and release children detained on this basis.”

“The Afghan government and its international partners should act urgently to protect women’s rights and to ensure there is no backsliding,” Roth said. “President Karzai, the United States, and others should finally make good on the bold promises they made to Afghan women a decade ago by ending imprisonment for ‘moral crimes,’ and actually implementing their stated commitment to support women’s rights.”

 

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iflew
Pro Publiae Bonae
06:29 PM on 03/29/2012
For men to be this abusive to their mother, sisters, and wives they must have some deepseated fear of being discovered to be homosexual, attracted to and only able to admire other men. Shakespeare a great judge of human nature said of one of his characters Lady Mcbeth that she protested too much. Her protests were to proclaim her innocence and in part to convince herself she may not really be guilty of a murder. Taliban abuse of women is the type of abuse a weakling will do against someone not able to defend themselves. Homosexuals afraid of being detected can be expected to act like those who stone women.
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pacrimco
08:41 AM on 03/29/2012
You can't force Democracy down the barrel of a gun. The culture of Afghanistan is their own business. The answer to these world problems is for education to win out over ignorance. For the cost of a few bunker buster bombs, we could have easily helped to educate thousands of Afghan men, women and children. The emphasis being on "help." Cultural change is a slow, grinding process and MUST come from within. As long as some folks are willing to die for what they believe in, no amount of guidance or force from the outside world will create significant change. Let's focus on helping the Afghans to see the vision and to find their own way out of darkeness. Lasting change must come from within.
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Drg40
Representative Democracy is all we have.
03:01 AM on 03/29/2012
Trouble is, whenever I see an article designed to whip up the feminists into a very reasonable fury I wonder what the originators of the story are trying to upstage in the meeja. Since the UK/USA invaded Afghanistan opiate production in that county has risen from zero under the Taliban up to 70% of the total world output, AIUI. These numbers feed directly into shattered lives, prostitution, violence and organised crime all over the world.
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Elizabeth Schwartz
Barack 2012, Hilary 2016!
10:34 PM on 03/28/2012
Still haunted by the film "Osama" -- it's very difficult to walk away from this situation (but I personally don't believe we're in Afghanistan - or anywhere - for humanitarian reasons). Friends who have been to Afghanistan are horrified by the thought of the Taliban's regaining power there. Whether new laws wind their way through male courts or they just dispense with formality and torture women, the world hates women and we are seeing it as a global pandemic.
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OH canada
08:57 PM on 03/28/2012
that's right because men in the western world don't kill women /rape/abuse and under pay them. less get distracted from globalist agenda . this is just pure propaganda
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sibyl9
Cloaking Device Engaged
09:15 PM on 03/28/2012
In the western world, those men usually go to jail/prison.
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OH canada
11:43 PM on 03/28/2012
really??!!! you don't know the thing about law .. more times than not they end up walking free just to do it all over again
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rtgmath
There has got to be a better way!
08:48 PM on 03/28/2012
We have been in Afghanistan for over 10 years. The only thing that can be said about the results of the war is that things are every bit as bad as they were when we started, on average.

Well, that isn't completely true. There weren't so many deaths. A lot more of our soldiers were alive and unharmed before we went in. The American economy wasn't as drained of resources. Gas was cheaper. Shia and Sunna weren't killing each other in Iraq. There weren't so many refugees.

So our going in has done something at least.

Let's be honest. We've had our moments. When we went in the Afghan government was corrupt. Now, after years of work, and spending military equipment, money, and lives of soldiers and civilians ... the Afghan government is still corrupt. We built schools for girls -- which can't be used because the girls get bombed, gassed, or shot. Little girls of age 8 and 10 were "married" to pay debts -- and still are. The Afghan economy is certainly better. Instead of selling things they produce themselves in the market they sell things stolen from the US military. So we have improved their morals and their morale! We have built roads -- no, we have spent money to build roads, roads which never got built. And we have bombed and killed innocent civilians.

What are we there to do, again? Make a difference?
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12:53 AM on 03/29/2012
You forgot the drug trade mate. That was on its @rse, but I believe it's thriving now! The war on drugs becomes the war for drugs!
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tallen
panem et circenses
07:37 PM on 03/28/2012
This goes on to a greater or lesser degree in nearly all the muslim nations.
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caseyjosh
faber est quisque fortunae suae. aut viam inveniam
07:53 PM on 03/28/2012
This goes on in every nation
07:30 PM on 03/28/2012
Anyone else swallowing the story that we are there, in part, to help the women?  We can't make a difference unless enough of the people there want it.  Reason 29,365 as to why we need to leave and let the Afghans decide how they want to live.  They are strong and resilient people, let them fight for the rights that they themselves want.  I find the culture on inequality and sexism to be abhorrent but in reality, we cannot change that no matter how much money we throw at it or how many lives are lost.
09:51 PM on 03/28/2012
D.a.m.n right.

This article is just an attempt to pull at peoples heartstrings for money. Yesterday we had to get out because we were the Devil.

Today we must stay for the children. Please send money.
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pacrimco
08:44 AM on 03/29/2012
Agreed. The change must come from within.
07:29 PM on 03/28/2012
The above isn't recent news, it's been in the press for some years now but it is still harrowing to read. Religion was mentioned in some of the posts below, so i thought i would add by saying that the Afghan Government, judiciary might to a bit better if they bothered to read the Quran and Hadith in a language that they understood. If they did, the prisons would be filled with men. As for the Imams, HP posted an article this month/last month about an American Muslim initiative which teaches the Imams what the Quran and Hadith actually says, remember, these are in Arabic and the Afghani's mostly speak Pashtu. The article reported positive steps regarding treatment of women to the point that a man who forced his daughters into marriage and who now live a life of misery was filled with remorse and demanded from the Imams why he was not told that the way he raised his family was not permissible and a violation in God's eyes. The Imams replied that there is still hope.Peace. A s a by the way, it always puzzled me as to why we went to Afghanistan in the first place, especially when the men re 9/11 were from Arabia. Peace.
07:55 PM on 03/28/2012
I wasn't puzzled as to why we went because initially it was clearly stated that it was to get bin laden and stop the terror training camps and al qaeda.  However, later, people seem to equate the taliban with al qaeda and while they are both reprehensible, they aren't the same.  The taliban was not our stated goal in going there, they did become the excuse later when the first goal wasn't fully achieved.  We got bin laden and have disrupted the training camps, we could leave now and it need not look like a defeat.  It's up to the Afghan people to decide how they want to live, even if we find it disgusting.
10:39 PM on 03/28/2012
CAB - the reason was oil. The much needed pipeline exiting through Afghanistan is now complete. Think of the true price of oil when you fill up your tank.
mortonrchrd
How you gonna get down that hill
06:45 PM on 03/28/2012
You think that's bad, once US troops exit, the Karzai regime will be lucky to last 30 days. Then you can expect revenge killings on the scale of the Khmer Rouge.
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12:56 AM on 03/29/2012
Well that's what happened when the Russians left, but it took 2 years. I think 30 days is generous for Karzai, who won't stay longer than our troops do, unlike Najibullah.
fredgladys
Your Micro-bio is empty, I know, stop nagging.
06:23 PM on 03/28/2012
The grand plan of importing democracy and equality to Afghanistan is doomed to failure. I commend the ideal but the reality says 'get the hell out of there'.
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08:12 PM on 03/28/2012
Do you really think, that was the plan?
I thought plan was, to get Laden and get out.
fredgladys
Your Micro-bio is empty, I know, stop nagging.
03:33 PM on 03/29/2012
I don't believe the plan was pure philanthropy, there was probably an idea of creating a buffer, watching and checking Pakistan as well.
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Ernie Evil
Smiting the false prophets
05:25 PM on 03/28/2012
Anxious about Nov? Women should makes sure that their passports are up to snuff, in the rare chance that cons take over the USA.
06:51 PM on 03/28/2012
Maybe they could immigrate to some countries where women have more freedom like under the Palestinian Authority, or under Assad, or Amadenijadd, or Hugo Chavez, or maybe the Castro Brothers. All the people loved by the posters here on the HP.
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Ernie Evil
Smiting the false prophets
08:11 PM on 03/28/2012
lol.. That definitely takes the cake on the "making stuff up" category. I've been checking up on HP comments and I don't recall any of it stating that they are fans of your compadres.
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12:57 AM on 03/29/2012
Pure fantasy and just plain dumb!
05:15 PM on 03/28/2012
And it's our soldiers lives and money that props all this up.

We should pack up and leave now. Why should more of our soldiers be killed and maimed supporting this savagery when every sane person knows that when we do leave, this 'Government' is doomed.

Why two years down the line and now now?
06:53 PM on 03/28/2012
You don't know much about Afghanistan do you? If this government falls, it will got to the Taliban making the lives of women there exponentially more tragic. Under the Taliban, women were jailed for just failing to wear a Burqua----do you not know any of this?
07:59 PM on 03/28/2012
It was and still is tragic.  Perhaps the degrees are different but at the end of the day, the Afghan people will have to decide how they want to live and no amount of trying to re-engineer their culture and tradition is going to change that.  We need every American deployed and every dollar here at home to rebuild our country.  How are we to ever make a difference anywhere else when we are falling apart?
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08:22 PM on 03/28/2012
Move there, and look after them, baby.
Be a man or a women.