
Afghanistan – Violence Against Women – Increase – Reports – Statistics
Author: Womens UN Report Network
Date: July 22, 2005
WUNRN
Spero News, March 9, 2008
Afghanistan:
Violence Against Women Almost Doubles
Sexual
violence, especially in the home, is on the increase in Afghanistan – according
to a UN report. Lack of pre-natal and post-partum care also cited.
Since March of 2007 until now, there has been a 40% increase in
reports of physical violence against women in Afghanistan, according to United
Nations sources.
The Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) says that
in many parts of the country security has decreased, while the sense of
impunity has risen, public institutions are often weak, and poverty is
widespread. But there are also cultural causes, like coerced marriage.
According to alarming data from Womankind Worldwide, a charitable
British group, 80% of Afghan women suffer domestic violence, 60% of marriages
are coerced, and half of women are married before the age of 16.
Suraya Subhrang, a member of the AIHRC, comments that “in
spite of six years of international rhetoric on the emancipation of Afghan
women, there has been no real change in the lives of millions of women”.
The group recorded 626 suicide attempts by women in 2007, with 130 deaths, many
linked to physical and psychological violence.
The health care situation is even worse, with 1,600-1,900 women
out of 100,000 dying in childbirth, a percentage that is second only to that of
Sierra Leone. According to official UN data, each year at least 24,000 women in
the country die from childbirth and infections related to it, and it is
estimated that 87% of the deaths could be prevented. More than 70% of women do
not receive medical care during pregnancy, 40% have no access to emergency
obstetric care, and 48% suffer from iron deficiency.
Today the secretary general of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon,
on the occasion of International Women’s Day, asked governments and
international organisations for “more investment on behalf of women and
girls”, “in order to reach the objective” of effective equality.
The number of women attempting suicide in the past year was 626,
of whom 130 died. Suicide methods included self-immolation, the slashing of
veins and taking lethal doses of drugs, according to the AIHRC. IRIN News,
March 9, 2008
Gender violence has reached “shocking and worrying” levels in
Afghanistan and efforts must be redoubled to tackle it, the country’s human
rights watchdog and civil society organisations said. “Our findings clearly
indicate that despite over six years of international rhetoric about Afghan
women’s emancipation and development, a real and tangible change has not
touched the lives of millions of women in this country,” Suraya Subhrang, a
commissioner on the rights of women at AIHRC, said.
Cases of rape and self-immolation appeared to be going up: “In
2006 we recorded 1,545 cases of violence against [or severe psychological
oppression of] women, which included 98 cases of self-immolation and 34 cases
of rape, while in 2007 we listed 2,374 cases of violence, which constitute 165
self-immolations and 51 cases of rape,” Subhrang told IRIN in Kabul.
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