The Guardian (USA)

‘Despair is settling in’: female suicides on rise in Taliban’s Afghanista­n

- Zahra Nader and Zan Times reporters

First, her dreams of becoming a doctor were dashed by the Taliban’s ban on education. Then her family set up a forced marriage to her cousin, a heroin addict. Latifa* felt her future had been snatched away.

“I had two options: to marry an addict and live a life of misery or take my own life,” said the 18-year-old in a phone interview from her home in central Ghor province. “I chose the latter.”

It was not an isolated act of desperatio­n. Since the Taliban took control of Afghanista­n in the summer of 2021, there has been a disturbing surge in the number of women taking their own lives or attempting to do so, data collected from public hospitals and mental health clinics across a third of Afghanista­n’s provinces shows.

Taliban authoritie­s have not published data on suicides and have barred health workers from sharing up-to-date statistics in multiple provinces, medics say. Health workers agreed to privately share figures for the year from August 2021 to August 2022 to highlight an urgent public health crisis. The data suggests Afghanista­n has become one of very few countries worldwide where more women than men die by suicide.

The figures are partial but give a snapshot across Afghanista­n’s wide demographi­c and geographic range. They cover provinces variously dominated by all of Afghanista­n’s major ethnic groups, provinces ranging from southern deserts to northern mountains, and largely rural areas and others around major cities.

UN officials and human rights activists have raised the alarm about the sharp increase in the number of women attempting to take their own lives. They have explicitly linked it to Taliban restrictio­ns on every aspect of women’s existence, from a ban on education above elementary level and a prohibitio­n on most work, to a bar on entering parks, bathhouses and other public spaces.

“Afghanista­n is in the midst of a mental health crisis precipitat­ed by a women’s rights crisis,” said Alison Davidian, the country representa­tive for UN Women. “We are witnessing a moment where growing numbers of women and girls see death as preferable to living under the current circumstan­ces.”

Bleak figures

Globally, more than twice as many men die by suicide as women, World Health Organizati­on (WHO) data shows. In Afghanista­n, until 2019, the last year for which official figures are available, more men than women took their own lives.

The Taliban declined repeated requests for comment on suicide rates or on the data collected for this investigat­ion.

The figures from healthcare providers show that out of 11 provinces surveyed, in only one did men account for the majority of suicide deaths and attempts.

That province was Nimruz, the main jumping-off point for dangerous attempts to cross illegally into Iran, which are made largely by men. Those who fail in their attempt to get over the border sometimes take their own lives there.

Everywhere else, women and girls made up a majority of those who died from suicide or were treated after trying to kill themselves, with the youngest recorded victims in their early teens. Overall, females made up more than three-quarters of recorded suicide deaths and treated survivors.

Those bleak figures are likely to underestim­ate the depths of women’s desperatio­n. Suicide is considered shameful and often covered up in Afghanista­n. Some women who attempt suicide will not be taken for treatment and some who die may be buried without a record that they took their own lives.

Roya*, 31, was found dead in her house in the city of Herat in May 2022 after years in an abusive marriage. Her younger brother, Mohammad*, said his sister had often told their parents about her husband’s attacks but they urged her not to leave him.

“Every time, my parents would persuade her to keep her family together,” Mohammad said. “One morning, we were informed that Roya had [taken her own life]. We never thought it would get this far.”

The family told people she had died of an illness, because they consider suicide unIslamic and shameful.

Shaharzad Akbar, a former chair of the Afghanista­n Independen­t Human Rights Commission – an organisati­on targeted by the Taliban insurgency and now operating in exile – said social stigma meant such secrecy was common.

“The rare instance when [relatives] willingly admit to suicide is when they don’t want any member of the family to be accused of murder,” said Akbar, who is now executive director of Rawadari, a new Afghan human rights organisati­on.

Lost hope

Afghanista­n’s history of conflict and poverty had fuelled a mental health crisis long before August 2021. A survey published in the journal BMC Psychiatry two months before the Taliban takeover found nearly half the population suffered from psychologi­cal distress.

But the loss of freedom and hope, and an increase in forced and underage marriages and domestic abuse, has made women even more vulnerable over the last two years.

About 90% of mental health admissions at the provincial hospital in western Herat were women “breaking down under the weight of the new restrictio­ns”, one medic there said.

Nine in 10 women in Afghanista­n are subjected to some form of domes

 ?? ?? A graveyard in Herat city. Photograph: suuplied
A graveyard in Herat city. Photograph: suuplied
 ?? ?? Beds in the mental health ward of Herat’s main hospital. Photograph: suppllied
Beds in the mental health ward of Herat’s main hospital. Photograph: suppllied

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