Afghan women may hold a quarter of the seats in their country’s parliament, but many are mere mouthpieces for warlords, who continue to set the legislative agenda, an Afghan women’s rights activist said on Thursday.
“Today we have 68 women in the parliament, 25 percent ... We have a group of women high in quantity, but low in quality,” Voice of Women director Suraya Pakzad told a meeting in the US Congress to mark International Women’s Day.
Many of the female lawmakers in Afghanistan were elected with “the support of warlords” and now have to answer to those warlords, Pakzad said.
“Those women don’t have voices, they don’t have the right to raise their voices. They have to have their mobile phone and call the warlord who supported them ... and ask them whom they should vote for or not vote for,” she said.
“We need quality women in parliament. We don’t need 68 women who just sit in parliament. We would be better with 10 women who have strong voices there,” she said.
Having a presence in parliament was one sign that Afghan women have come a long way since the fall of the repressive Taliban regime in 2001, Pakzad said.
However, there was still a lot of ground to cover to ensure that all Afghan women enjoy basic human rights, she said.
The 3 million Afghan women who were widowed by 30 years of war need jobs to support their families, child marriage must be stopped and there should be no more public floggings like two weeks ago, Pakzad said, when warlords had two women whipped for running away from abusive husbands.
Under the 1996 to 2001 Taliban regime, Afghan women were routinely beaten in public and even stoned to death for perceived breaches of Islamic law. They were excluded from all public activities, including school, and could only leave home accompanied by a male relative.
Pakzad repeated a call for women to be included in any dialogue with the Taliban, whom Afghan President Hamid Karzai has said he wants to include in negotiations to bring peace to Afghanistan, which has been at war for most of the past three decades.
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