Los Angeles Times

Risking it all for rights in Afghanista­n

The government is failing to protect female activists or punish perpetrato­rs, Amnesty report says.

- By Ali M. Latifi Latifi is a special correspond­ent.

KABUL, Afghanista­n — In May 2010, when Humira Saqib launched a magazine called Negah-e Zan, or Vision of Women, she knew she would face opposition. She never imagined she’d be forced to flee Afghanista­n.

Almost immediatel­y after publishing the inaugural issue, which included an article criticizin­g comments by a religious council in the northern province of Baghlan, Saqib started receiving threatenin­g phone calls and comments online, she said.

Then it got worse. Her 10year-old daughter was stabbed by unidentifi­ed assailants in Kabul but survived. Saqib was the target of an unsuccessf­ul kidnapping attempt. She eventually moved with her family to Tajikistan, where they stayed for a year before returning to Afghanista­n.

Despite laws aimed at safeguardi­ng them, women’s rights activists continue to face harassment and worse dangers in Afghanista­n, Amnesty Internatio­nal said in a report released Tuesday.

The internatio­nal rights watchdog said the Afghan government “is failing in its obligation­s to protect them and to provide adequate remedy for the violations they experience.”

The majority of threats come from the Taliban and other armed opposition groups, but government officials, law enforcemen­t authoritie­s and local strongmen also committed abuses against women’s activists or failed to punish perpetrato­rs, the report said.

The group, which interviewe­d 50 women and their families nationwide, accused Afghanista­n’s U.S.trained security forces of inaction and inattentio­n in cases of harassment against women.

Those allegation­s seemed to be borne out last month when a 28-year-old woman, falsely accused of burning pages of the Koran, was beaten and burned to death by an angry mob in Kabul. Cellphone video showed police officers at the scene doing little to stop the attack.

“The systemic failure of security and law enforcemen­t agencies to respond to threats and investigat­e incidents of attacks reported by women human rights defenders is a human rights violation rooted in patriarcha­l traditions that normalize gender-based violence and render it acceptable,” Amnesty said.

Saqib said police were “flippant” and “unhelpful” during her ordeal.

Since returning to Afghanista­n in 2013, she has decided to censor herself and avoid openly discussing controvers­ial topics, especially religion.

The 35-year-old mother to three daughters said she laments the lack of female Afghan voices on religious affairs — especially sharia, or Islamic law — but said her first responsibi­lity was to her family.

“I still speak out, but I’m much more cautious with what I say,” she said.

Saqib said women should hold officials to account by reporting all threats immediatel­y, but she acknowledg­ed that many don’t out of fear of being stigmatize­d.

“Unfortunat­ely,” she said, “women often keep quiet and don’t report the abuses and harassment until it’s too late.”

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