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NEWS
Women & Extremism - marital rape &
public flogging
New York Times, 15 April 2009
Women, Extremism and Two Key States
There have been two recent reminders of the cost of extremism. In
Afghanistan, President Hamid Karzai signed a law that effectively
sanctions marital rape. In Pakistan, a video surfaced of the Taliban in
the Swat Valley publicly flogging a young woman screaming for mercy.
Pakistan’s government compounded the indignity on Monday by giving in to
Taliban demands and formally imposing Shariah law on the region.
Such behavior would be intolerable anywhere. But the United States is
heavily invested in both countries, fighting Al Qaeda and the Taliban
and financing multibillion-dollar military and development programs. The
cases represent an officially sanctioned brutality that violates
American values and international human rights norms. They also sabotage
chances of building stable healthy societies in Pakistan and
Afghanistan.
In Afghanistan, particularly venal politics are at work. Mr. Karzai,
whose popular support plummeted because of government ineptitude and
corruption, is running for re-election in August. The new law, which
affects family matters for the Shiite minority, seems a bald,
particularly creepy, pander.
It says of Shiite women: Unless she is ill, “a wife is obliged to
fulfill the sexual desires of her husband.” That is licensed coercion.
If let stand, we fear such rules — reminiscent of decrees issued when
the Taliban ruled Afghanistan in the 1990s — could also have a negative
impact on laws affecting the majority Sunni population. Instead of
defending the law as he did, Mr. Karzai must ensure that it is rewritten
to reflect principles of freedom and dignity for women.
In Pakistan, the video of the woman’s flogging proves the bankrupt
nature of the army’s strategy. Failing to defeat the Taliban on the
battlefield, the army tried to appease them with a peace deal in
February. It ceded the insurgents control of Swat, 100 miles from
Islamabad, and allowed free rein for their repressive ways. The woman
was beaten after declining a Taliban fighter’s marriage proposal, the
head of the Peshawar Bar Association told reporters.
After resisting for weeks, President Asif Ali Zardari capitulated to
political pressure and signed a regulation formally imposing Islamic law
on Swat as part of the peace deal. We seriously doubt this will bring
peace, and it will certainly not make life better for Pakistani women.
It is unlikely that Mr. Zardari’s wife — the slain former prime
minister, Benazir Bhutto — would have ever consented to such a craven
sellout.
The one encouraging sign came last week, when Pakistan’s recently
reinstated chief justice, Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, publicly rebuked
the attorney general and other officials at a court hearing for inaction
in the flogging case. We hope this was not just grandstanding and that
he and his supporters will find a way to make as powerful a case for
this victim’s rights as they did for Mr. Chaudhry’s return to the
Supreme Court.
Many Pakistanis have wasted their time decrying the video as a
conspiracy intended to defame Islam and Pakistan. They should be
demanding that the army — Pakistan’s strongest and most functional
institution — defend against an insurgency that increasingly threatens
the state. Like their military and political leaders, Pakistan’s people
are in a pernicious state of denial about where the real danger lies.
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