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Women one year later

>Subject: [WIB-LA] [Fwd: Press Release: Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan: A
>Conference]

For Immediate Release

Contact: Sonali Kolhatkar, AWM, (626) 676-7884 or
sonali@afghanwomensmission.org
fax: (509)756-2236

10th October 2002

Attention: News Desk Afghan Women's Mission Pasadena, CA 91101


Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan: One Year Later


A little over a year has passed since the United States began bombing
Afghanistan in response to the terrorist attacks of September 11th 2001.
Today Afghanistan is being held up as a successful example of US
intervention. But close examination of the facts suggests that Afghans
have paid a very high price for freedom from the Taliban. The Afghan
Women's Mission presents a one day conference on Saturday the 19th of
October from 10 am to 5 pm at the Emmanuel Presbyterian Church (3300
Wilshire Blvd) to examine the effects of US intervention on the Afghan
people, and particularly Afghan women. The conference is called
"Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan: Women's Rights, Collateral Damage, and
Puppet Regimes".

Professor Marc Herold of the University of New Hampshire, and keynote
speaker for the October 19th conference said, "As the body count of the
World Trade Center was revised downward from the initial high of 6,700
to the current 2,819, that in Afghanistan rose from 20-37 on October 8th
to 3,215 today." Herold adds, "The U.S. mainstream corporate media has
resisted portraying the carnage caused by U.S. bombs in Afghanistan".

Aside from the collateral damage from US bombs in Afghanistan, the
conference will focus on the status of Afghan women. Sonali Kolhatkar
and Neesha Mirchandani, Vice Presidents of the Afghan Women's Mission,
will speak in depth about whether Afghan women are free today, and about
the Afghan women's resistance, the Revolutionary Association of the
Women of Afghanistan (RAWA). According to Kolhatkar, "President Bush
told us that Afghan women have been freed. This is in direct
contradiction to the fact that Afghan women have little or no power in
the new government, little or no access to food and education, and still
experience the highest rates of maternal mortality in the world."

The conference will also focus on analyzing the political process of the
"Loya Jirga" this summer. As the US heads toward a war on Iraq in stage
two of the so-called War on Terrorism, it is important to examine
Afghanistan one year later. Dr. Jim Ingalls will deconstruct the US role
in the Loya Jirga and the re-establishment of Afghan war-lords. Ingalls'
latest paper published in the September issue of Z Magazine, is entitled
"The US and the Afghan Loya Jirga: A Victory for the Puppet Masters".

The conference will also feature speakers from Palestine, Iraq and
Colombia in order to draw the connections between the conflicts in those
nations and Afghanistan.

There will be videos by Meena Nanji and Renee Bergan, workshops on
Afghanistan's history, American political activism and fund raising, as
well as informational display tables, and a photo exhibit of Afghan
refugees. Hand-made crafts by Afghan women will also be available on
sale to benefit the Revolutionary Association of the Women of
Afghanistan (RAWA). The conference will conclude with performances by
community artists such as music bands, Cihuatl Tonali, and SoRiMoDum,
and poet, Emma Rosenthal and DJ Kool Aid of La Paz.

There will be a suggested donation of a $10 registration fee, although
all are welcome and no one will be turned away for lack of funds.
Participants can register for the conference by emailing their name to
conference@afghanwomensmission.org or filling out the registration form
at www.afghanwomensmission.org.

The conference has been sponsored and endorsed by many community
organizations including 90.7 fm KPFK radio in Los Angeles, Sol
Foundation, Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador, the
Office of the Americas, the American Friends Service Committee,
Anti-Racist Action and more.

The Afghan Women's Mission, an organization dedicated to working with
the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan, is a group of
people moved to action by the plight of Afghan women. The mission was
founded in January 2000 in response to the compelling need for adequate
hospital facilities in Afghan refugee camps in Pakistan.

Established in 1977, RAWA is the oldest women's organization in
Afghanistan and it has stood for the ideals of democracy, secular
government, universal suffrage, human rights and women's through the
Soviet invasion and occupation, the civil war that ensued, and the
Taliban rule.

More information about the plight of Afghan refugees is available on the
RAWA website, http://www.rawa.org. More information about the Afghan
Women's mission is available on the website
http://www.afghanwomensmission.org.



Un votes to increase troops { October 14 2003 }
Women afghanistan forgotten { December 19 2002 }
Women not liberated { December 17 2002 }
Women one year later

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