Posted on 04/15/2009 11:56:31 AM PDT by Schnucki
Women protesting in Kabul against a controversial new law were pelted with stones, jostled and spat on today as they held what is believed to be the first public demonstration calling for equal rights for women in recent Afghan history.
The protest by about 200 women called for amendment of the controversial Shia Family Law, passed last month by the Afghan Parliament, and enforcement of article 22 of the Afghan constitution, which gives equal rights to men and women.
It provoked a furious reaction from local men and a mob quickly surrounded the protesters amid violent scenes close to the Parliament building.
The new law, which applies to the 15 per cent of the population who are Shia Muslim, has drawn widespread international condemnation since it was passed in March. President Obama called it abhorrent after leaked drafts of the law showed it apparently legalised marital rape and child marriage and reintroduced restrictions on women that were notorious under the Taleban period of rule.
The Afghan Government has since announced a review of the legislation, which has yet to come into force. Political opponents of the Afghan President, Hamid Karzai, have suggested that the law was passed by as a sop to powerful Shia religious parties ahead of the country's presidential elections in August.
Carrying banners that proclaimed We want dignity in the law and Islam is justice, the small all-woman march was initially matched by a peaceful counter-demonstration of 300 or so female religious students from the Khatam-ul-Nabieen Shiite University in Kabul. The university is attached to the Khatam Al-Nabi Mosque, a huge building constructed with Iranian backing and overseen by Mohammad Asif Mohseni, a leading Shia cleric who has strongly backed the new law.
However, as the protesters tried to march to Parliament they were blocked and then
(Excerpt) Read more at timesonline.co.uk ...
-Barack Hussein Obama
They stay home all day eating hummus and watching TV.
They can give it up when asked.
Ragheaddism makes anyone better off? Since bloomin’ when???
But they have the ‘iron-clad’ support of the U.N..
In September 2004, a 3-day, UNICEF-sponsored meeting between representatives of South Asian governments, UN agencies, and NGOs took place in Colombo, Sri Lanka. Government officials signed a five-point joint statement, agreeing that children in South Asia deserve better protection from traffickers and sexual abusers. Participating countries were Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, Maldives, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka.
And OHB wants the US to sign on to it also.
Stone-age stoners throwing stones? Who wooda thunk?
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