Quantcast
No peace with the Taliban as long as women considered less than human: activist – Metro US

No peace with the Taliban as long as women considered less than human: activist

Peace overtures to the Taliban endanger the fragile progress made on women’s rights in Afghanistan, a former Afghan cabinet minister told MPs on Tuesday.

Moussada
Jalal, a former Afghan minister of women’s affairs who also ran in last
year’s presidential election, urged MPs to pay more attention to the
backward steps that have been taken on equality over the last couple of
years.

President Hamid Karzai’s government has made reconciliation with hard-line Islamists, including the Taliban and Hezb-e-Islami, a priority to end the war.

Jalal said, however, that women’s groups are fearful and remember what things were like prior to the ouster of the Taliban in 2001.

She told a House of Commons subcommittee she is skeptical the insurgents will ever change.

“The Taliban do not recognize rights and even do not recognize women as human beings entitled to all of their rights,” Jalal told reporters.

“We
saw them, how they treated women and civilians as a whole. Them coming
to power would create fear, without doubt. And also their ideology
would not serve women’s rights and human rights.”

There are deep divisions in the current Afghan government about the idea of peace with the Taliban. The sudden dismissal this week of the country’s intelligence chief and interior minister is an illustration of the rifts.

Both
Amrullah Saleh and Hanif Atmar are said to be critical of Karzai, who
last week called insurgent fighters his “brothers” and urged them to
lay down their weapons.

Saleh was quoted in the international press as saying “negotiating with suicide bombers will disgrace the nation.”

Jalal was equally dismissive of last week’s peace conference and pointed to a recent edict by Mullah Omar, the Taliban
supreme leader, who decreed that women in insurgent-controlled areas
may only venture outside in the company of male family members. That
hearkens back to the social restrictions the Taliban brutally enforced during their time in power.

In many parts of Afghanistan, insurgents operate a shadow government that has more sway than elected officials.

“Their
engagement will be bad news to our values, so I hope it doesn’t
happen,” Jalal said. “It’s not good for Afghanistan. It’s not good for
the democratic processes we have created and invested upon.”

Jalal laid down a long list of demands for Kabul, all of them aimed at strengthening human rights and anti-discrimination laws.

She said the overthrow of the Taliban
in the U.S.-led invasion of 2001 ushered in an era of hope and social
progress, marked by the return of girls to schools But the government
has been increasingly looking for ways to appease hard-line Islamists
and last year approved legislation that essentially legalized rape
within marriage among the minority Shite population.

Jalal also
demanded Karzai implement a transitional justice program, cobbled
together in 2005 but abandoned last year. The plan was aimed at
bringing warlords, who now hold positions of power, to account for
atrocities committed during the country’s civil war.

“They need to go to court,” she said. ”They are criminals.”