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width="1" height="1" //divp They were walking to school in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, a
group of teenage girls discussing a test they had coming up, when two men on a motorcycle sprayed
them with a strange liquid. Within seconds a painful tingling began, and there was an unusual smell
as the skin of 16-year-old Atifa Biba began to burn. /ppHer friend rushed over to help her,
struggling to wipe the liquid away, when she too was showered with acid. She covered her face,
crying out for help as they sprayed her again, trying to aim the acid into her face. The weapon was
a water bottle containing battery acid; the result was at least one girl blinded and two others
permanently disfigured. Their only crime was attending school. /ppIt was not an isolated incident.
For women and girls across Afghanistan, conditions are worsening - and those women who dare to
publicly oppose the traditional order now live in fear for their lives./ppThe Afghan MP Shukria
Barakzai receives regular death threats for speaking out on women's issues. Talking at her home in
central Kabul, she closed the living room door as her three young daughters played in the hall.
"You can't imagine what it feels like as a mother to leave the house each day and not know if you
will come back again," she said, her eyes welling up as she spoke./pp"But there is no choice. I
would rather die for the dignity of women than die for nothing. Should I stop my work because there
is a chance I might be killed? I must go on, and if it happens it happens."/ppBarakzai receives
frequent but cryptic warnings about planned suicide attacks on her car, but no help from the
government. Officials advise her to stay at home and not go to work, but offer nothing in the way
of security assistance, despite her requests. She said warlords in parliament who received similar
threats were immediately provided with armoured vehicles, armed guards and a safe house by the
government./ppAfghan women are feeling increasingly vulnerable as the security situation worsens
and a growing number of western and Afghan officials call for the Taliban to join the
government./pp"We are very worried that, now the government is talking with the Taliban, our rights
will be compromised," said Shinkai Karokhail, an outspoken MP for Kabul. "We must not be the
sacrifice by which peace with the Taliban is made."/ppUnder Taliban rule, up until 2001, women were
not allowed to work and were forbidden from venturing outside the home without a male escort.
/ppAfghan women who defy traditional gender roles and speak out against the oppression of women are
routinely subject to threats, intimidation and assassination. An increasingly powerful Taliban
regularly attacks projects, schools and businesses run by women. /ppSix weeks ago,
Lieutenant-Colonel Malalai Kakar was assassinated in her car on her way to work in Kandahar. She
was Afghanistan's highest-ranking female police officer and a fierce defender of women's rights.
Only five feet tall, she was known to have beaten men she found to be abusing their wives. Another
senior female police officer was killed in the province of Herat in June./ppstrongSafe
house/strong/ppTalking to the Guardian at a safe house on the outskirts of Kabul, Mullah Zubiallah
Akhond, a Taliban commander from the southern province of Uruzgan, said the group's attacks on
women were always political and not based on any desire to target or punish women specifically.
/ppHe condemned the acid attack on the group of schoolgirls in Kandahar, and insisted the Taliban
were not involved. "We support the education of girls, but separate from boys. We would not attack
schoolgirls. We only target those working with the government."/ppThe Taliban's regional commands
have varying attitudes toward women, but all those fighting under the Taliban banner are committed
to enforcing their interpretation of sharia law, which forbids women from working or leaving the
house without a male escort./ppThe Islamist group is just one of the many threats facing
Afghanistan's few outspoken female MPs. "Our parliament is a collection of lords," said Barakzai.
"Warlords, drug lords, crime lords."/ppIn parliament, she says, she is often greeted with screams
of "kill her" when she stands up to speak, and she has had no shortage of personal threats from
fellow MPs. /ppThey visit her privately to tell her she will be killed if she continues to speak
out on such issues as the right of a woman to have a personal passport (separate from the standard
"family passport") or against compulsory virginity tests for young women, and the right of a man to
have custody of a child at two years old. It is not only men who oppose women in parliament - both
Barakzai and Karokhail have faced obstruction from other female MPs on key women's
issues./ppKarokhail said that, of the 68 women in the 249-strong parliament, only five were vocal
on women's issues. The majority of women in parliament vote in favour of more traditional
legislation that often rules against women's rights./ppSome women now fear the parliament is
becoming more conservative towards women. "Talibani ideas are natural among our people,
particularly their vision about women," said Barakzai. /ppAccording to Afghan commentators,
President Hamid Karzai, desperate to win next year's elections, has been bringing former mujahideen
commanders into parliament in the hope they will support him at election time. /ppMost of these
former jihadi commanders share the Taliban's ideas about women and are expected to support
legislation that will once again limit women's freedom. In addition, according to the Taliban
commander, the group has a growing number of MPs in parliament lobbying for their policies./ppIn
much of the country, especially rural areas, women remain subservient to the men in their family
and rarely venture out of their homes. Even in the relatively liberal capital, Kabul, it is common
to see women robed in blue burkas trailing five paces behind their husbands./ppIt is difficult to
gauge how the worsening situation in the country is affecting women, but according to a recent
study by the UN, some 87% of them suffer abuse in the home. Afghan human rights groups are
documenting cases of "honour" killings, forced abortions and rape, and a database is now being
constructed by the UN./ppNajla Zewari, who works for the UN's gender and justice unit, believes
violence against women is increasing, fuelled by growing frustrations caused by the economic crisis
and lack of security. She said there had also been a sharp increase in rapes by men who claimed
they could not afford to pay the dowry needed to marry. After the public shame of an attack, the
victim is usually outcast and the rapist is then the only man who will have the woman as his
wife./ppIt is crimes like this that make many Afghans nostalgic for the harsh justice of Taliban
rule. Barakzai countered: "Women were safe, in one sense, under the Taliban - but they were kept as
slaves, they were not allowed to do what they wanted even in their own home."/ppAs the Taliban
strengthen, the future for women in Afghanistan looks bleaker. Barakzai said women's rights, once
heralded as the great success of post-invasion Afghanistan, had been sidelined and might suffer
more in the struggle to find a solution to the fighting./ppLast week, a council of 400 women
politicians met in Kabul to discuss this possibility and prepare ways to counter it. Karokhail
said: "Our biggest fear at the moment is that the return of Talibani ideas to government will wind
back the gains we have made in these last years."/pdiv style="float: left; margin-right: 10px;
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