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Many iraqi women say life better under saddam { March 26 2008 }

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   http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2008%5C03%5C26%5Cstory_26-3-2008_pg4_10

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2008%5C03%5C26%5Cstory_26-3-2008_pg4_10

Many Iraqi women say life was better under Saddam
Wednesday, March 26, 2008

BAGHDAD: Iraqi women say they are now worse off than they were during the rule of dictator Saddam Hussein and that their plight has deteriorated year by year since the US-led invasion in March 2003.

Now they are demanding not just equal rights but the very "right to live”, says Shameran Marugi, head of the non-governmental organisation Iraqi Women's Committee. "The 'right to live' is a slogan that we have begun using because a women's life in Iraq is being threatened on all sides. Laws are not being implemented equally and society is ignoring women," Maguri told reporters.

"Before the 2003 invasion it was possible for a woman to lead a normal life as long as she followed state policy," she said, adding, "It was even possible for a woman to engage in political and economic activities through the official Union of Iraqi Women.”

She said, “When the regime change occurred in 2003, women, men, and children went out on to the streets to celebrate. We were very happy. Unfortunately there was no qualified leadership to handle the situation and society was not equipped to deal with the changes."

The Union of Iraqi Women was dismantled after the invasion as it was affiliated to the former Baath Party of Saddam. Marugi said in the past few years, violence against women had significantly increased.

"At home, a woman faces violence from her father, husband, brother and even from her son. It has become a kind of a new culture in the society," said the women's rights campaigner. She said out in the society, women were subjected to verbal abuse on the streets if they did not wear a veil, and in extreme cases face being abducted by unknown gunmen, who sexually abuse and then kill them.

"It has also become normal for women to receive death threats for working for example as a hairdresser or tailor, for not wearing a veil or not dressing 'decently'," said Marugi, adding, "In addition to equal rights, we are now demanding the 'right to live'."

Although there are no official nationwide figures available, rights activists report numerous cases of so-called "honour killings" in the southern city of Basra, in the northern Kurdish area and in the capital Baghdad.

A United Nations report said police in Basra registered 44 cases in 2007 where women were killed with multiple gunshot wounds after being accused of committing "honour crimes". The report said in Baghdad, several women teachers had been shot dead by armed men, some of them in front of their students.

A report by US-based Women For Women International released earlier this month said the state of Iraqi women had become a "national crisis" since the March 2003 US-led invasion. "Present-day Iraq is plagued by insecurity, a lack of infrastructure and controversial leadership, transforming the situation for women from one of relative autonomy and security before the war into a national crisis," said the report.

It said 64 percent of women surveyed complained that violence against them had increased. "When asked why, respondents most commonly said that there is less respect for women's rights than before, that women are thought of as possessions, and that the economy has gotten worse," it said.

The report also found that 76 percent of the women interviewed said that girls in their families were forbidden from attending school. Selma Jabu, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani's consultant for women's affairs, said apart from being sidelined politically Iraqi women are subjected to abuse and intimidation on the streets and face violent sexual abuse.

"There is terrorist violence, including bombs, against the Iraqi people in general on the streets. But there is specific violence against women who are being abducted for sex and subjected to many other crimes," said Jabu, adding, "The Iraqi constitution protects and supports women on some issues, but there are other issues we have not agreed upon and we are doing our best to get them in to the constitution."

Iqbal Ali, in her forties, said death threats had forced her to close her hairdressing salon in Baghdad's central Karada neighbourhood. She said, "In the beginning everything was going all right but afterwards the situation in the country deteriorated, women hairdressers started getting threats. My work was affected and I closed my salon down."

She has now opened a cosmetics and perfume shop which she has named Alwarda Albaidaa (white rose). "I was in a difficult situation financially with no access to rations, no assistance from the government. I was without a job. So I decided to borrow money and open this shop," she said. afp



Backwards steps on womens rights in iraq
Brits sexually abuse iraqi women { May 8 2008 }
Iraqi girls attending schools down since invasion { March 14 2008 }
Iraqi was most progressive protecting women rights { July 20 2005 }
Iraqi women alarmed by new constitution
Iraqi women could lose rights given by saddam hussein { February 2 2004 }
Iraqi women face harsh life post saddam { February 21 2005 }
Iraqi women lose most progressive rights in region { July 20 2005 }
Many iraqi women say life better under saddam { March 26 2008 }
Top iraqi scientists under saddam are women
Women lose rights given since 1959 in new constitution { July 26 2005 }
Womens rights destroyed by foriegn military aggression { August 17 2005 }

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