|
“Your country is now embarking on a process to create
credible and accountable institutions in which all Afghans
are represented. These are decisions for Afghan men and women
to make. The role of the United Nations is to assist and encourage
this process. But, I would like to take this opportunity to
say to all Afghans: there cannot be true peace and recovery
in Afghanistan without a restoration of the rights of women.”
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan in his statement to the Afghan
Women’s Summit for Democracy (Brussels, 4 to 5 December 2001)
Afghanistan is a country of approximately 23 million which,
after three years of severe drought, 23 years of war and devastation
and five years under the Taliban authorities, has been left
as one of the poorest countries in the world. Afghanistan
has the second highest maternal mortality rate in the world.
Even before the Taliban came to power, Afghanistan had high
maternal and child mortality rates and a very low literacy
rate for women. But women participated economically, socially
and politically in the life of their societies. Women helped
to draft the 1964 Constitution. In the 1970s, there were at
least three women legislators in the Parliament. Up to the
early 1990s, women were teachers, government workers and medical
doctors. They worked as professors, lawyers, judges, journalists,
writers and poets.
After the Taliban’s rise to power, women and girls were systematically
discriminated against and marginalized, and their human rights
were violated. This resulted in the deteriorating economic
and social conditions of women and girls in all areas of the
country, in particular in areas under Taliban control. Women
and girls continued to be severely restricted in their access
to education, health care facilities and employment. During
the Taliban’s rule, only about 3 per cent of girls received
some form of primary education. The ban on women’s employment
also affected boys’ education, as the majority of teachers
had been women. Poor health conditions and malnutrition made
pregnancy and childbirth exceptionally dangerous for Afghan
women.
The Taliban’s policies also severely limited women’s freedom
of movement. Women could travel only when accompanied by a
male relative, which put a particular strain on female-headed
households and widows. In May 2001, a decree was issued by
the Taliban, banning women from driving cars, which further
limited their activities. The resulting seclusion of women
to the home constituted a form of solitary confinement and
also created obstacles to women meeting with each other. Women
were harassed and beaten by the Taliban if their public appearance
was perceived to be in contradiction with Taliban edicts.
Women’s removal from the public space also meant that women
could not play any role in the political process and were
excluded from all forms of formal or informal governance.
Afghan women suffered domestic and other types of violence
for the past 25 years, not just under the Taliban regime.
Despite many years of concern about the situation of Afghan
women, it is only now, under conditions of extreme tragedy,
political violence and destruction, that the situation has
propelled Afghanistan and the plight of its women and girls
firmly back into the global spotlight. For the first time
outside of the setting of the United Nations and of the international
community, there is a groundswell of concern, from Parliaments
to First Ladies, from entertainers and media stars to non-governmental
organizations, all calling for the full recognition of the
rights of women and girls in Afghanistan.
Actions
by the international community
The United Nations Charter proclaims the equal rights of men
and women. Two years ago, the groundbreaking United Nations
Security Council resolution 1325 (2000) called for an end
to impunity for war crimes committed against women and girls,
but also recognized the need to increase women’s role in peace
negotiations and in peace-building. The United Nations has
urged the Afghan parties to bring women into every stage of
the political process; and the UN is recruiting Afghan women
as quickly as it can to help to provide humanitarian assistance.
The United Nations and its family of organizations have had
a long interest in Afghanistan. UNICEF set up its first office
there 52 years ago. The situation of Afghanistan, in general,
and the situation of women and girls in particular, have remained
under intense scrutiny by several United Nations bodies, including
the Security Council, the General Assembly, and several of
the Economic and Social Council’s functional commissions and
expert bodies, in particular the Commission on Human Rights,
the Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human
Rights, and the Commission on the Status of Women.
In November 1997, Angela E.V. King, the Special Adviser to
the Secretary-General on Gender Issues and Advancement of
Women, led an inter-agency gender mission in Afghanistan,
to specifically address issues related to discrimination against
women and girls under the Taliban. The mission made a set
of recommendations aiming to improve the gender situation
within Afghanistan and in the United Nations system, so as
to better serve the needs of Afghan women. One such recommendation
was the appointment of a senior UN adviser on gender in Afghanistan.
Most recently, on 30 January 2002, the 26th session of the
Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women
issued a statement of solidarity and support for Afghan women,
which stated, among other things, that “The participation
of Afghan women as full and equal partners with men is essential
for the reconstruction and development of their country.”
The Committee also called upon all parties concerned to respect
internationally recognized principles, norms and standards
of human rights, particularly the human rights of women, in
all their actions and activities, which the Committee considered
essential to achieve peace and stability in Afghanistan.
The first Integrated Mission Task Force, which was established
at UN Headquarters to advise the Special Representative of
the Secretary-General for Afghanistan, Lakhdar Brahimi, included
a gender specialist from the Division for the Advancement
of Women. Three Executive Committees, reporting to the Secretary-General,
on Peace and Security, Humanitarian Affairs and the United
Nations Development Group (UNDG), have been meeting regularly
and have drawn up strategic recovery plans on the political
process, humanitarian assistance and reconstruction of Afghanistan,
including gender perspectives. In addition, the UNDG and Executive
Committee on Humanitarian Affairs formed a Sub-Group on Gender
in Afghanistan, to monitor developments on the ground in order
to devise strategies to ensure that a gender perspective was
mainstreamed in the peace negotiations and the reconstruction
process.
On 14 November 2001, in its resolution 1378, the Security
Council expressed its strong support for the efforts of the
Afghan people to establish a new and transitional administration
leading to the formation of a government, which would be broad-based,
multi-ethnic and fully representative of all the Afghan people,
and should respect human rights regardless of gender, ethnicity
or religion.
The Special Adviser to the Secretary-General on Gender Issues
and Advancement of Women continued to address the situation
of women’s rights in Afghanistan in meetings with the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General and other senior officials
within the United Nations system, in inter-agency consultations
and in meetings with representatives of non-governmental organizations.
She also facilitated contacts between Afghan women and women’s
organizations and the UN
system and supported the organization of the Afghan Women’s
Summit in Brussels, and follow-up meetings with the Secretary-General
and members of the Security Council in an Arria Formula meeting.
She also called on Afghan women to return to their country
and former jobs, including in the civil service and elsewhere.
Today, as the reconstruction and rehabilitation of Afghanistan
continues, a number of United Nations entities continue to
be actively involved in improving the situation of women and
girls in Afghanistan. Some examples include the following:
-
The UN has launched a large-scale drive to immunize Afghan
children against measles - a major, yet preventable, killer
disease among the young. Measles is responsible for an estimated
40 per cent of all vaccine-preventable childhood deaths
in Afghanistan, killing about 35,000 Afghan children each
year. The $8 million effort, which is being organized by
WHO and UNICEF, aims to vaccinate up to 9 million Afghan
children. A UNICEF spokesperson called the immunization
drive "one of the best gifts we can give to the children
of Afghanistan."
-
In late September 2001, responding to the grave health
emergency facing Afghan women, the United Nations Population
Fund (UNFPA) mounted its largest-ever humanitarian operation.
Thousands of pregnant women were among the Afghan civilians
who fled their homes and massed along the country’s borders.
The lack of shelter, food and medical care, and unsanitary
conditions posed a serious risk to these women and their
infant children. To provide displaced Afghan women with
lifesaving reproductive health care services, UNFPA prepared
to pre-position emergency relief supplies in the countries
bordering Afghanistan. These were intended both for the
large anticipated influx of refugees—into Pakistan, Iran,
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan—and for distribution
inside Afghanistan, if possible.
During the Taliban's rule of Afghanistan, bakeries sponsored
by the World Food Programme (WFP) represented one of the
few job opportunities open to women; WFP bakery projects
employed 300 women in Kabul and 100 women in Mazar-I-Sharif
before September 2001. Taliban efforts to prevent employment
of women in a survey of beneficiaries caused WFP to threaten
to close down 130 bakeries that fed 280,000 people, including
women and children. The situation was resolved by the authorities
agreeing to allow women hired by the Taliban Health Ministry
to conduct the survey. Today, WFP is currently assisting
about six million people in Afghanistan. Beginning in April
2002, the focus will shift from relief to recovery, with
particular emphasis on school feeding for education. WFP
school feeding projects are set to expand and cover hundreds
of thousands of students, half of them girls, to encourage
enrolment and decrease drop-out rates. Food assistance will
also be given to women attending non-formal education, particularly
technical skills and literacy training.
Women’s
role in the rehabilitation and reconstruction of Afghanistan
Since September 2001, Afghan women have begun to increase
their activities. Numerous events were organized during the
last few months by and with Afghan women’s organizations inside
and outside Afghanistan, such as panel discussions, conferences
and international meetings, in order to ensure that the experiences
and needs of Afghan women would receive the needed attention
in all efforts directed at the post-Taliban Afghanistan.
For the first time in many years, new opportunities have been
presented for women to reclaim their rights as active participants
in the governance, as well as in the rehabilitation and reconstruction
of Afghanistan. Schools for girls are being reopened, and
young women are enrolling in universities. Women are seeking
to return to their former jobs as teachers, doctors and civil
servants. Radio and television broadcasts in Kabul once again
feature woman commentators.
The United Nations Talks on a transitional government for
Afghanistan began in Bonn on 27 November under the leadership
of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General Lakhdar
Brahimi. Representatives of four Afghan groups participated,
representing the Rome process, linked to the former King;
the United Front (also known as the Northern Alliance); the
Cyprus Group and the Peshawar Group. All political groups
had been encouraged by the UN to include women in their delegations
and Afghan women’s organizations were asked to contact the
four groups for participation in the Talks. Two women, Sima
Wali and Rona Mansuri, participated as full delegates of the
Rome process; Amena Afzali participated as a full delegate
of the United Front; Seddiqa Balkhi participated as adviser
to the Cyprus Group; and Fatana Gilani participated as adviser
to the Peshawar Group. The Agreement on Provisional Arrangements
in Afghanistan pending the re-establishment of permanent government
institutions was signed in Bonn on 5 December 2001.
In response to requests from Afghan women, a number of non-governmental
organizations convened the Afghan Women’s Summit for Democracy
in Brussels, from 4 to 5 December 2001, in collaboration with
the Office of the Special Adviser on Gender Issues and Advancement
of Women and the United Nations Development Fund for Women
(UNIFEM). About 40 Afghan women leaders from different ethnic,
linguistic and religious backgrounds participated, including
three who had also attended the UN negotiations in Bonn. The
Summit concluded with the adoption of the Brussels Proclamation,
which included concrete demands for the recovery of Afghan
society in the areas of education, media and culture; health;
human rights and the constitution; and refugees and internally
displaced women. Participants of the Summit met with members
of the European Parliament, members of the U.S. Congress,
members of the Security Council in the Arria Formula meeting,
and women ambassadors to the United Nations. In their talks,
the Afghan women called for measures to increase security
in Afghanistan and facilitate the disarmament of all warring
factions.
UNIFEM organized a roundtable in Brussels from 10 to 11 December
2001 in cooperation with the Government of Belgium on “Building
Women’s Leadership in Afghanistan”. The roundtable brought
together Afghan women and UN agencies, the World Bank and
donors, and issued an Action Plan calling for mechanisms to
support the role and leadership of women in shaping the future
of their country.
On 19 December 2001, the Special Adviser on Gender Issues
and Advancement of Women organized a breakfast meeting between
Afghan women non-governmental organizations and women ambassadors
from the permanent missions to the UN, allowing Afghan women
to share their vision and priorities for Afghan women. In
addition, these Afghan women met with the Secretary-General
to share such vision and their views about their role in the
reconstruction of Afghanistan.
In January 2002, Hamid Karzai, the head of the Interim Administration,
demonstrated his support for women’s rights by signing the
“Declaration of the Essential Rights of Afghan Women”, which
affirmed the right to equality between men and women. The
Declaration had been adopted by a meeting of Afghans in Dushanbe,
Tajikistan, in 2000.
When the Secretary-General visited Kabul on 25 January 2002,
he made a symbolic visit to a girls school, which is assisted
by UNICEF. Girls from six through 16 were preparing to resume
their education after a Taliban-imposed break of five years.
Women are at the helm of two Ministries which are part of
the new Interim Administration headed by Hamid Karzai. The
Ministry of Women’s Affairs, which had never existed before,
is headed by Sima Samar, a physician and founder of the Shuhada
Organization network of clinics, hospitals and schools in
Pakistan and central Afghanistan. Ms. Samar is also one of
the five Vice-Presidents of the Interim Administration. Suhaila
Siddiq, a surgeon who continued to practice in Kabul throughout
the Taliban regime, heads the Ministry of Public Health.
International
Women’s Day: 8 March 2002
The observance of International Women’s Day (8 March 2002)
at United Nations Headquarters, under the theme “Afghan Women
Today: Realities and Opportunities”, is being organized by
the Special Adviser on Gender Issues and Advancement of Women
and the UN Department of Public Information, in cooperation
the Inter-Agency Network on Women and Gender Equality and
UNIFEM. The special event will focus on the recent developments
in Afghanistan, which have created new opportunities for women
to claim their rightful roles as full participants in Afghan
society. The event will also underscore the international
community’s support for and solidarity with the women and
girls of Afghanistan in the face of the long-term challenges
that remain.
|