Quiet, or I’ll Call Democracy

February 8th, 2005 - by admin

Haifa Zangana / The Guardian – 2005-02-08 22:55:33

http://www.envirosagainstwar.org/edit/index.php?op=edit&itemid=2317

“Rarely do women in the Arab world enjoy as much power as they do in Iraq … men and women must receive equal pay for equal work. A wife’s income is recognised as independent from her husband’s. In 1974, education was made free at all levels, and in 1979 it was made compulsory for girls and boys until the age of 12.”
— UNICEF, 1992

(December 22, 2004) — The US state department has launched a $10 million “Iraqi women’s democracy initiative” to train Iraqi women in the skills and practices of democratic life ahead of the forthcoming elections.

Paula Dobriansky, US undersecretary of state for global affairs, declared: “We will give Iraqi women the tools, information and experience they need to run for office and lobby for fair treatment.”

The fact that the money will go mainly to organisations embedded with the US administration, such as the Independent Women’s Forum (IWF) founded by Dick Cheney’s wife Lynn, was, of course, not mentioned.

Of all the blunders by the US administration in Iraq, the greatest is its failure to understand Iraqi people, women in particular. The main misconception is to perceive Iraqi women as silent, powerless victims in a male-controlled society in urgent need of “liberation”. This image fits conveniently into the big picture of the Iraqi people being passive victims who would welcome the occupation of their country.

The reality is different. Iraqi women were actively involved in public life even under the Ottoman empire. In 1899 the first schools for girls were established, the first women’s organisation in 1924. By 1937 there were four women’s magazinespublished in Baghdad.

Iraqi Women Have Been Liberated for Generations
Women were involved in the 1920 revolution against British occupation, including in fighting. In the 50s, political parties established women’s organisations.

All reflected the same principle: fighting alongside men, women were also liberating themselves. That was proven in the aftermath of the 1958 revolution ending the British-imposed monarchy when women’s organisations achieved within two years what over 30 years of British occupation failed to: legal equality.

This process led Unicef to report in 1993: “Rarely do women in the Arab world enjoy as much power as they do in Iraq … men and women must receive equal pay for equal work. A wife’s income is recognised as independent from her husband’s. In 1974, education was made free at all levels, and in 1979 it was made compulsory for girls and boys until the age of 12.”

By the early 90s, Iraq had one of the highest literacy rates in the Arab world. There were more professional women in positions of power than in almost any other Middle Eastern nation

The tragedy was that women were living under Saddam’s oppressive regime. True, women occupied high political positions, but they did nothing to protest at the injustice inflicted on their sisters who opposed the regime.

The same is happening now in “the new democratic Iraq”. After “liberation”, Bush and Blair trumpeted women’s advancement as a centrepiece of their vision for Iraq. In the White House, hand-picked Iraqi women recited desperately needed homilies to justify the invasion of Iraq. In June, nominal sovereignty was handed over to a US-appointed Iraqi interim government, including six women cabinet ministers. They were not elected by Iraqi people.

Once Emancipated, Iraq’s Women Have Now Been Driven Back Indoors
Under Ayad Allawi’s regime, “multinational forces” remain immune from legal redress, rarely accountable for crimes committed against Iraqis. The gap between women members of Allawi’s regime and the majority of Iraqi women is widening by the day. While cabinet ministers and the US-UK embassies are cocooned inside the fortified green zone, Iraqis are denied the basic right of walking safely in their own streets. Right of road is for US tanks labelled: “If you pass the convoy you will be killed.”

Lack of security and fear of kidnapping make Iraqi women prisoners in their own homes. They witness the looting of their country by Halliburton, Bechtel, US NGOs, missionaries, mercenaries and local subcontractors, while they are denied clean water and electricity.

In the land of oil, they have to queue five hours a day to get kerosene or petrol.

Acute malnutrition has doubled among children.

Unemployment at 70% is exacerbating poverty, prostitution, backstreet abortion and honor killing.

Corruption and nepotism are rampant in the interim government. Al-Naqib, minister of interior admitted that he had appointed 49 of his relatives to high-ranking jobs, but only because they were qualified.

Women as Targets for Assassination
The killing of academics, journalists and scientists has not spared women: Liqa Abdul Razaq, a newsreader at al-Sharqiyya TV, was shot with her two-month-old baby. Layla al- Saad, dean of law at Mosul University was slaughtered in her house.

The silence of the “feminists” of Allawi’s regime is deafening. The suffering of their sisters in cities showered with napalm, phosphorus and cluster bombs by US jet fighters, the death of about 100,000 Iraqi civilians, half of them women and children, is met with rhetoric about training for democracy.

Tony Blair, acknowledged yesterday in Baghdad that violence would continue both before and after the January 30 elections, but added: “On the other hand we will have a very clear expression of democratic will.”

Does he not know that “democracy” is what Iraqi women use nowadays to frighten their naughty children, by shouting: “Quiet, or I’ll call democracy.”

Haifa Zangana is an Iraqi-born novelist and former prisoner of the Saddam regime.


Occupation Behind Rise in Iraq Abortion Rates
Xinhuanet

BAGHDAD, Jan. 24 (Xinhuanet) — An Iraqi medical study showed on Monday that the occupation forces are to blame for the rise in the rates of abortion among Iraqi women.

The study made by Doctor Nagham Hashim, a specialist in feminine diseases, revealed that the rates of abortion among the Iraqi women have risen since the US-led forces occupied the country in 2003.

She said the women were put under “the psychological pressure ofthe American threats and assaults in many of the Iraqi cities.”

Hashim pointed out that the conditions of the occupation also cause the increase of temporary sterility among the married women because of the intense fear.

The researcher called on the humanitarian organizations to pay attention to the impact of the occupation on women’s lives in Iraq.

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