Author Topic: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse  (Read 1608 times)

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Offline Al Swearegen

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #60 on: July 25, 2013, 05:22:39 PM »
I am neither touchy nor emotional. You are being an ass hat and I would rather talk to someone with sense. Because I think this is an interesting topic.

No one said that men control the laws and it is their choice? I  know they did.
So rather than quiz me, how about explaining what I am wrong in saying or where the opposing POV is right?
I2 today is not i2 of yesteryear. It is a knitting circle. Those that participate be they nice or asshats know their place and the price to be there. Odeon is the overlord

.Benevolent if you toe the line.

Think it is I2 of old? Even Odeon is not so delusional as to think otherwise. He may on occasionally pretend otherwise but his base is that knitting circle.

Censoring/banning/restricting/moderating myself, Calanadale & Scrapheap were all not his finest moments.

How to apologise to Scrap

Offline Adam

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #61 on: July 25, 2013, 05:28:38 PM »
But I thought you didn't want to talk to me? :(

You just can't help yourself tho, can you? haha!

Offline Al Swearegen

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #62 on: July 25, 2013, 05:40:22 PM »
Just showing your motivations in this thread. I doubt that you had any real opinion, you were just fishing for an opportunity to smear. You were pinned and now you have gone the haha child route. Good job. Adam.
I don't want to engage in discussion with you over interesting things like this when you are being a dickhead, true. Exposing you dir being that dickhead, never gets old.  :hahaha:
I2 today is not i2 of yesteryear. It is a knitting circle. Those that participate be they nice or asshats know their place and the price to be there. Odeon is the overlord

.Benevolent if you toe the line.

Think it is I2 of old? Even Odeon is not so delusional as to think otherwise. He may on occasionally pretend otherwise but his base is that knitting circle.

Censoring/banning/restricting/moderating myself, Calanadale & Scrapheap were all not his finest moments.

How to apologise to Scrap

Offline 'andersom'

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #63 on: July 25, 2013, 05:58:53 PM »
I don't know why you're trying to tell me about fundamentalists and the WBC - that's not what we were disagreeing about, is it?

The point is that women (and men, yes) are oppressed in Iraq. But I believe women are of a lower status there than men. I'm not sure how you fail to see that

I am not sure how you see it.



Women in Iraq are treated like animals. Men can rape a woman and claim they didn't. A woman would need 2 male witnesses to prove anything. That is fucked up.

Men in Iraq are treated like animals. Men can be enlisted in armies to be killed off at a whim. Men also have to risk their safety by being the face of the family and risk their lives daily, outside the homes whilst their wives, mothers and daughters get to stay home. That is fucked up.

The OP was about how the position of women changed for the worse, the past decade. It wasn't about comparing men to women. It was about comparing the position and rights of women before and after the war. The war that was supposedly also happening to help improve the position of women in Iraq.
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Offline El

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #64 on: July 25, 2013, 06:13:55 PM »
JESUS

I think the "proud to be am american" thing is fucking retarded, but I sure as hell feel lucky, reading this, to have been born into relative safety.  :/
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You win this thread because that's most unsettling to even think about.

Offline bodie

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #65 on: July 25, 2013, 06:20:59 PM »
I don't see anything wrong with my original post about Iraqi women.  I don't see how the struggles faced by women are equal to that of men.  Their roles in society are very different, so I have to assume their struggles are too.

Not saying life is a stroll in the park for Iraqi men, and I think it would be interesting if someone felt so strongly about men's issues in Iraq to make a thread about that.

Didn't Calavera start his own site 'just for men' or something like that?  Can't remember it's name but I do recall it was 'for men's issues'!   I can't recall any complaints about that so I don't feel in any way sexist for highlighting the specific troubles faced by women in this instance. 

Anyway, I know and expect thread derailment, but going back to my original post which was to look more at if/ how 'our'(UN backed coalition) played any role in making the lives of these women worse. 

Some supporting evidence is listed below:

The quotes below come from UNwomen.org

Quote
According to the UN’s Women in Iraq factsheet, women “represent one of the most vulnerable segments of the population and are generally more exposed to poverty and food insecurity as a result of lower overall income levels.”

Quote
In Iraq, women are guaranteed a minimum of 25 per cent of seats in Parliament due to a quota law introduced in 2005. While the law does not apply at the local level, in the run-up to the recent regional elections, the Iraqi High Electoral Commission passed a decree ensuring that at least 25 per cent of the representatives on every regional council would be women. 


The information quoted below is from http://www.equalityiniraq.com/ the website of OWFI (organisation of women's freedom in Iraq)

Quote
No-one knows for certain how many Iraqi women and children have been sold into sex slavery since the US-led Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003.

The group that Mahmoud works for, the Baghdad-based Organisation for Women's Freedom in Iraq (OWFI), puts the figure in the tens of thousands.

"Crimes that were virtually unheard of before have now become commonplace. So-called honour killings have shot through the roof and mass unemployment has pushed many women, especially war widows, into prostitution," she says.

"Women have all but disappeared from public life for fear of being raped, killed, kidnapped or trafficked to foreign countries."

Quote
Mahmoud points out that legislation allowing polygamous marriages was passed last year by the puppet Kurdistan regional government despite public outrage.

And Iraq's draft constitution has paved the way for oppressive sharia law.
Did 'we' play a part in this?

Quote
When Fatin found out her father was attempting to sell her, she immediately sought help from the law.

"I ran away from Najaf and escaped to Baghdad where I found my mother and asked her if she knew what my father was planning," says 22-year-old inmate Fatin, "So she took me to court in Baghdad, we got a lawyer and brought a case against my father."

Months passed and the lawsuit was never heard. While awaiting justice, Fatin says her father raped her. After the attack, she killed him, was tried, and is currently serving the fifth year of a 15 year sentence.

Muscati, who's studied trafficking extensively in Iraq, can't understand why Iraqi officials aren't doing more to stop it.

"Why is the Iraqi government not prosecuting the traffickers?" Muscati asked. "There hasn't been a case of prosecution against a trafficker that we're aware of. Why is the Iraqi government not passing a law to make it more difficult for trafficking?"

Quote
“The situation has become much worse since 2003, after the U.S. led invasion of Iraq,” Nadya Khalife, a women’s rights researcher for the Middle East and North Africa region at Human Rights Watch told The Media Line.


“More women have become widows and orphans and have turned to prostitution to simply make ends meet,” she said. “There are simply no other alternatives for women who head households to locate other sources of income. In Syria and Lebanon, for instance, Iraqi families have simply exhausted their financial savings and some of these families have forced their own wives and daughters into prostitution.”


Mahmoud said that since 2003 more than 70% of Iraqis have lost their jobs, a situation compounded by a lack of welfare provisions.


“We have more than four million widows in Iraq… who will provide for these women?” Mahmoud asked. “The situation created absolute poverty, particularly for women, and these women have virtually no other option but to turn to prostitution.”


“There’s nothing called choice in this,” she stressed. “They are either being forced into it because of the economic and political situation or because of a lack of security, whereby women and young girls are being kidnapped.”


With relatively few rights, the ability of Iraqi women to reintegrate into society after prostitution is limited. The women are often ostracized, attacked by their community and harassed by the authorities with charges of immorality.

sorry, this is a long one
Quote
An article by Yanar Mohammed written for TerraViva magazine which was dedicated for the UN Resolution 1325 on women in areas of conflict. A shorter version was published in their last issue.

The UN resolution 1325 was passed unanimously ten years ago for a good reason. Women in conflict zones never participate in decision-making throughout or towards the end of conflicts. They rarely get the protection they need against gender-based and sexual violence. In time of war and military conflict, women's rights in practice and legislation are lost due to a prevailing culture of military and para-military violence which is usually practiced by males. The post-conflict transitional times call for new legislation, which rules the lives of many generations to come, still regularly lack any gender-based perspectives.


Early-on in 2003, women of Iraq were not aware of the serious consequences of an inclusive military invasion which ousted and uprooted all government institutions. With well-meant naivety, we thought we can turn a dark scenario into a bright one, one that is only lacking a people's ideology of freedom and equality, until we were stricken by the stubborn facts on the ground, or rather the atrocities which found their way to women and children through the gaps of insecurity and chaos.

These atrocities seemed to target women in many ways and quite often claimed lives and destinies of many who were dear to us. While unable to awake from a nightmare which was imposed by an illegal and unjustified invasion, we still had to deal with the aftermath which struck women's lives more profoundly and fatally than the males, especially those on the top of the food chain, those who rule, exploit, and thrive from these atrocities.

OWFI had decided then to watch, document, and denounce. We were voicing out the sufferings of the killed, lost and exploited in the society. As dangerous as the task was, persistence at it helped us create a small albeit bold base of fierce women-activists who did not compromise or appeal to the violent warlords, or rather the winners of the conflict, who have mostly become the leaders of the so-called democracy.

Creating an oasis of Feminist Resistance in Iraq was meant to defend a uncompromised right of Iraqi women to participate in decision making, get the protection they deserve, maintain their threatened women's rights, and force a gender-based perspective for the legislation of a secular egalitarian and non-ethnic constitution.

Challenging women's enemies was our main task throughout seven years of surviving in a fundamentalist militia culture which made us witnesses to all the above-mentioned atrocities, which were no longer abstract concepts on paper. They became nightmares which we learnt to live with, escape from, and still document, and denounce.

Mass killings of women in the south: a mix-up of religious militia cleansing and
encouragement of honour-killings by self claimed vigilantes. Although more than 300 women were killed in the city of Basra alone between 2006-2008, the criminals still live free and have the upper hand in the society. Simultaneously, honour-killings continue to take place in alarming rates in all the cities of the center, south, and North. No legislation or campaign have been administered by any governmental facility or media against these crimes which spare lives of hundreds of women every year. In addition, a thriving practice of FGM takes place in the Kurdish north, and female suicide rates rise as the killers have found a way to impose shame on the females and let them kill themselves, thus leaving the males unaccused.

Trafficking into modern-day sexual slavery: In every neighbourhood in the capital, there is a brothel where teenagers are bought and sold-and sometimes exported into a "good" financial deal for an Arab Gulf countries. Girls as young as 11 or 12 are priced locally and cross-borders for the ultra rich Arab sheiks of the gulf. A visit to the female prisons -adult and juvenile- reveals that more than half the inmates are victims of trafficking. The other surprise is that the justice system treats them as criminals and not as victims. When OWFI confronted a female parliamentarian Al Mousawi, with the alarming numbers of females plagued by trafficking, her response was to accuse us of fabricating lies against the "honour" of Iraqi women.

Four million female population of widows and orphans of war: mostly have no education, male protection or financial support. Consecutive wars and previously imposed UN economic sanctions have left them destitute, displaced or homeless. Many become victims to trafficking, pleasure marriages, or prostitution in a society where systemic violence of militia members can spare their lives anytime, with no legal punishment.

Economic insecurity of a disempowered female population, is not a concern of the state. The surplus of governmental budget, 52 billion dollars, serves the military needs of rivaling militias who have turned into "political" groups overnight, or for compensating so-called US victims of the late Iraqi dictator, while teenage girls get bought and sold daily among traffickers and brothels with nobody to think of their human rights, as these decisions are made by enemies of women.

Healthcare security is not the responsibility of the state anymore. Giving birth to children in decent hospitals has become unaffordable to the majority, as hospitalization is gradually getting privatized. Neither do the current Iraqi hospitals treat numerous kinds of cancer which had increased due to an unprecedented exposure to depleted uranium because of two consecutive American wars on Iraq.

Legislation of female enslavement: After months of political dispute on finalizing the constitution in 2005, the Shiite Iran-based militias proved to be the strongest on the ground and passed their version of a most archaic constitution which determines sharia as the main resource for legislation. The constitution was immediately congratulated as the "most democratic constitution in the Middle East" by the US Ambassador to the UN, Zalmay Khalilzad. By the new constitution, Polygamy is allowed, abortion is illegal, economic rights are unequal - inheritance for females is half of males. Many forms of domestic violence are legal.

Misogynist female parliamentarians: When most of the representatives of women (more than 25% of parliament) do not introduce a gender perspective into the parliamentarian sessions, but confront and discredit feminist efforts on the ground, women's representation as it comes in UN Resolution 1325 fails. In one of the regional conferences, a female parliamentarian Damluji, scolded many of the Iraqi feminists for not reporting their findings to the government. In other words, she was a representative of the government and not of the women of Iraq.

NGO-harassment governmental office: When building a new and strong government means assigning an establishment for investigating NGO work - meant originally to be an NGO-assistance office. Moreover, those facilities were assigned to political Islamist officers who accuse feminists of promiscuity and promoting prostitution.  Then, the gender-based perspective meant by UN Resolution 1325 has not been met.

The government of Iraq had successfully swept away or manipulated all the objectives of the UN Resolution1325 while claiming to be fair to women. The secular freedom-loving women of Iraq find themselves more vulnerable to a patriarchal and religious violent outbreak which is supported by both militia groups and the US militarization of Iraq.

OWFI has fortunately gained alliances among the women of the world who helped support the initiative of the Feminist Resistance of Iraq, by getting more resources to it, most of which was the MDG3 Fund from the Netherlands. When there is a women's will, there is a local and international way. All we needs is the support and solidarity of the freedom-loving people of the world.

Yanar Mohammed – OWFI president
19-10-2010

A lot of reading, I know.  My apologies.  Hope it explains better than my own words.
blah blah blah

Offline RageBeoulve

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #66 on: July 25, 2013, 06:22:00 PM »
Quote
I think the "proud to be am american" thing is fucking retarded

Nobody's forcing you to stay, asshole.
"I’m fearless in my heart.
They will always see that in my eyes.
I am the passion; I am the warfare.
I will never stop...
always constant, accurate, and intense."

  - Steve Vai, "The Audience is Listening"

Offline 'andersom'

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #67 on: July 25, 2013, 06:28:34 PM »
@ bodie,

It's a sad reading. Not unexpected, but sad nonetheless.
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Offline 'Butterflies'

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #68 on: July 25, 2013, 06:52:58 PM »

The men control the laws there. It is their choice. Women have no choice. They are promised to a man they never met before they are adults. They are beaten, tortured and raped even if it is just a rumor they were promiscuous.

I think this is a very major point. The men control the politics, the men control the religion, and the men control the women.
In Iraq, a woman has no freedom, and she lacks the small consolation of at least being safe.

Offline bodie

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #69 on: July 25, 2013, 06:54:42 PM »
I agree.  I have spent all evening reading this stuff and it is sad on so many levels.

blah blah blah

Offline RageBeoulve

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #70 on: July 25, 2013, 06:57:24 PM »
Sadly, this realization usually leads to attacking the men, instead of the system promoting this retarded behavior.

Just saiyan. Be  :viking: and know who the real enemy is, ladies.
"I’m fearless in my heart.
They will always see that in my eyes.
I am the passion; I am the warfare.
I will never stop...
always constant, accurate, and intense."

  - Steve Vai, "The Audience is Listening"

Offline Jack

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #71 on: July 25, 2013, 07:04:40 PM »
The only thing that's changed is economic, and the fact the men who control them are being systematically removed. They're still treated the same as before. If anyone had stepped in and handed them western women's rights, before their country was worn torn and their men dead, it would have been refused. Their women didn't want to be 'us'. They have to want it. They have to rise up and fight for it to be meaningful. Will think about it again in twenty years.

Offline RageBeoulve

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #72 on: July 25, 2013, 07:07:17 PM »
I can't accept that, jack. Freedom is the only decent option. Ever.
"I’m fearless in my heart.
They will always see that in my eyes.
I am the passion; I am the warfare.
I will never stop...
always constant, accurate, and intense."

  - Steve Vai, "The Audience is Listening"

Offline Jack

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #73 on: July 25, 2013, 07:16:01 PM »
I can't accept that, jack. Freedom is the only decent option. Ever.

Not sure what you inferred, but there's some misunderstanding. Never meant to imply otherwise. Of course they should have their freedom. It's simply the way things work. It's the only way oppression is ever overcome. In twenty years things will be very different.
« Last Edit: July 25, 2013, 07:18:20 PM by Jack »

Offline RageBeoulve

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Re: Life for women in Iraq ten years after...much worse
« Reply #74 on: July 25, 2013, 07:18:16 PM »
I can't accept that, jack. Freedom is the only decent option. Ever.

Not sure what you inferred, but there's some misunderstanding. Never meant to imply otherwise. Of course they should have their freedom. It's simply the way things work. It's the only way oppression is ever overcome.

So you agree that the oppressors must be imprisoned for life/killed. Right?
"I’m fearless in my heart.
They will always see that in my eyes.
I am the passion; I am the warfare.
I will never stop...
always constant, accurate, and intense."

  - Steve Vai, "The Audience is Listening"