2004-03-01
Self-Immolation Of Women On The Rise In Western Provinces
by Golnaz Esfandiari
RFE/RL
The Afghan government is expressing concern over the growing number of
women in Herat Province who have killed themselves through self-
immolation. Suraya Sobah Rang,
Afghanistan's deputy women's affairs minister, says forced marriages and a
continued lack of access to education is contributing to the growing despair
among Herat's women.
Prague, 1 March 2004 (RFE/RL) -- Gurcharan Virdee is no stranger to the
hardships facing women around the world.
Virdee works with Medica Mondiale, a German-based international
organization supporting women in war and crisis situations.
"Before she committed suicide, my sister always said she hoped she
would never return to Afghanistan and experience the closed atmosphere of
Herat."The group is currently working on a program to provide shelter to
women living in the western Afghan province of Herat -- an area where
Taliban-era repressions are still very much in place.
There, Virdee met several women who had attempted to kill themselves
through self-immolation. The most tragic case, Virdee says, involved a young
pregnant woman who survived despite suffering severe burns over 60 percent of
her body.
"One of the women that I met, she was about 29. She already had
four children, [and] she was seven months pregnant when she burned herself. She
was experiencing problems with her husband and family; they wouldn't allow her
to go and visit her own family. She set fire to herself. She then gave birth to
a baby with no painkillers, nothing. The baby girl was taken by her aunt to
look after her, and [the mother] died three weeks after giving birth,"
Virdee said.
A government delegation that traveled to Herat last week said at least
52 women in the province have killed themselves in recent months through
self-immolation.
A Herat regional hospital last year recorded 160 cases of attempted
suicide among girls and women between the ages of 12 and 50. But Virdee says
the real number is probably much higher.
"The official statistics which the hospitals have are for the
women who have actually come to the hospital, who can receive treatment. There
are many other cases of women burning themselves in the villages, in the city,
in some of the provinces. But these are women we can't give any estimates on,
partly because they never reach the hospital or because they die in their
villages or city. These are the cases that never come to the attention of any
public authorities," Virdee said.
Afghan officials say poverty, forced marriages, and lack of access to
education are the main reasons for suicide among women in Herat. Domestic
violence is also widespread.
"A lot of women are saying that their husbands don't allow them to
go and visit their families. There are severe restrictions on their movement,
and also there is violence towards them -- both physical and psychological --
and intimidation and isolation," Virdee said.
During the five-year rule of the Taliban militia, women were not
allowed to work or study. They could not leave their homes without a male
escort and were forced to wear the all-encompassing burqa.
Since the fall of the Taliban in late 2001, women have once again been
given the right to study and work. But activists say women in many parts of
Afghanistan -- including Herat, which is ruled with an iron fist by provincial
governor and warlord Ismail Khan -- still face repression and harassment.
Virdee says the continued crackdown on women's rights is contributing
to the rise in self-immolation cases.
"The institutional repression of the women's movement is also a
big factor because women are not allowed to go on their own in taxi cars, they
are sort of socially policed if they are talking to other men, they have to be
in the burqa, they have restriction on freedom to work. Just recently in Herat
a women's shop which was employing a lot of women was closed. The driving
school for women was also closed," Virdee said.
Ahmad Bassir is a Herat-based correspondent for Radio Free Afghanistan.
He says women see no difference between their lives now and under the Taliban,
and that desperation drives them to attempt suicide.
"They say we were hoping that after the fall of Taliban and after
the transitional authority took power, the situation would improve for women,
and there would be fewer restrictions. But we see that there have been no
changes, and women are using this very violent act [of self-immolation] to show
their protest. Most of these girls are literate, they are knowledgeable, and
several of them are students," Bassir said.
Bassir adds that the despair is especially strong among women who once
lived as refugees in neighboring Iran, where women enjoy far greater rights.
Mina, a Herat resident, told Radio Free Afghanistan that her sister
recently committed suicide after returning to Afghanistan from Iran.
"Before, we lived in Iran, and we were used to the life and
environment there, which was very good. But since we returned [to Afghanistan],
to Herat, there has been a lot of pressure on us. Before she committed suicide,
my sister always said she hoped she would never return to Afghanistan and
experience the closed atmosphere of Herat. She also had family problems. She
didn't like her fiance, but she was forced to get engaged to him," Mina
said.
The rise of self-immolation among women in Herat is causing concern
among the authorities and citizens. Herat Public Television last year broadcast
a program urging husbands to treat their wives with greater consideration.
Several NGOs are also trying to address the issue.
But Virdee says these are only small steps toward solving an endemic
problem. In many cases, she says, social restrictions continue to prevent women
from seeking what little help is available.
"At the moment, although there are lots of different women's NGOs
and the department of women's affairs all trying to raise some kind of public
awareness about this issue, the problem is that women are so restricted that
for them to even get out of the house, to be able to seek support is also
sometimes very difficult," Virdee said.
Nor is the problem restricted to Herat. Female suicide through self-
immolation is common in many parts of Afghanistan and throughout all of South
Asia.
But statistics are incomplete and largely
anecdotal. There is a strong social stigma attached to suicide in Afghanistan,
and many families are reluctant to seek help for victims of self-immolation or
talk about the reasons behind the attempt.