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Afghan women jailed for 'running away'
 Part of channel(s): Afghanistan (current event)

A rights group says hundreds of Afghan women are in jail for so-called moral crimes that include running away from domestic abuse.Human Rights Watch says about 400 women and girls are being held in Afghan jails for crimes that also include having sex outside marriage.

In a new report, titled I Had To Run Away, the group says even if a woman is raped, it is she who is punished and not the perpetrator.

The group's executive director, Kenneth Roth, has called on Afghan president Hamid Karzai to immediately release them.



"It is shocking that 10 years after the overthrow of the Taliban, women and girls are still imprisoned for running away from domestic violence or forced marriage," he said.
"President Karzai could simply issue an order and say that running away from domestic violence is not a crime, period."

"The crime of running away isn't even a crime. And the Supreme Court says, 'well we based this on Sharia (law)' - but no-one else in the world, no other government treats running away from an abusive situation as a crime."Human Rights Watch researcher Heather Barr notes that Mr Karzai does regularly issue pardons for womenconvicted of "moral crimes".
"But it doesn't make up for something that's an injustice in the first place," she said.

"It doesn't give you back the months or years you have spent in prison, it doesn't change the fact that so many of these women and girls are at risk of honour killings because they have been convicted of these crimes."According to the report, many of the 58 inmates
interviewed expressed fears that they could be murdered by their families for reasons of "honour" after they were released.

The report cited a woman sentenced to three years in prison after fleeing a father-in-law who raped her and had her brother murdered as saying:

"I am happy in here. Here I am not afraid because I know no-one is coming in the night to kill me."

A spokesman for Mr Karzai has played down the report, rejecting suggestions the Afghan government has failed to fulfil its obligations under international human rights laws.
"Over the past decade conditions for women have significantly improved," spokesman Aimal Faizi said. "The constitution and other laws of Afghanistan defend the rights of women."

But he added: "We can't deny there still are problems faced by women, Afghanistan is a war-torn country."








http://www.abc.net.au/news


Added: Mar-28-2012 Occurred On: Mar-28-2012
By: Jake_Sully
In:
World News, Politics, Afghanistan, Other Middle East, Religion
Tags: human, crime, women, women-religious, prisons-and-punishment, law-crime-and-justice, rights, world-politics, afghanistan
Location: Afghanistan (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 2357 | Comments: 14 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 3
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  • the war isn't the problem

    Posted Mar-28-2012 By 

    (1)

  • another hole in the "moral equivalency" argument

    Posted Mar-28-2012 By 

    (1)

  • Typical

    Posted Mar-29-2012 By 

    (1)

  • human rights group should blame america for stepping in 10 years ago and putting an imbalance in the status quo of sharia rule. infidels gave a few girls pause to rethink their situations now that they are comming of age.

    WHen we finally leave, the curtain will close behind us.
    Nothing to see there
    finally,
    the code pink O's and other NOW types can become vocal about what really matters ... getting the focus back on
    their own c*nts.

    Posted Mar-28-2012 By 

    (0)

  • can we just fucking nuke the place flat yet??

    Posted Mar-28-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Pakistan and Afghanistan home of forced marriage :)

    Technically in Islam you can persuade easily (not exactly force) children to marry each other if they accept but when they are older they can have it annulled.

    Also in Sharia technically they should be able to go to the court and ask for the marriage to be annulled if it is forced and that's the end of it supposedly. However, 'forced marriage' is a means of business related to the wedding gift which is supposed to be for the bride but the f More..

    Posted Mar-29-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Sick twisted Islamist pigs at work again.

    Posted Mar-29-2012 By 

    (0)

  • It's believable because the men there don't need the women for anything but to make young boys. The men keep eachother company while the women get locked up.

    Posted Apr-15-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Thank you America for bringing freedom and democracy to Afghanistan. After more than a decade in the country, this is what's happening.

    Thank you again.

    Posted Mar-29-2012 By 

    (-1)

  • Oh pleaseeeee Jake Sully ! You think the majority of men on LL are going to be sympathetic to women who are abused? Half of men on LL think women are 2nd class citizens and should be 'beat'
    Have you not read the comments???

    Posted Mar-28-2012 By 

    (-4)

    • @wargypzy

      we don't care what happens as long we get more apache footage of taltubbies blown to bits.

      Posted Mar-29-2012 By 

      (1)