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Reuters, February 22, 2005
Amnesty: Iraqi
Women No Better Off Post-Saddam
by Jeremy Lovell
LONDON -- Nearly two years after the U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq, women there are no better
off than under the rule of ousted dictator
Saddam Hussein, the human rights group Amnesty
International said on Tuesday.
In a report entitled "Iraq -- Decades of
Suffering," it said that while the systematic
repression under Saddam had ended, it had been
replaced by increased murders, and sexual abuse
-- including by U.S. forces.
Washington promised that the overthrow of Saddam
would free the Iraqi people from years of oppression
and set them on the road to democracy. But
Amnesty said post-war insecurity had left women
at risk of violence and curtailed their freedoms.
"The lawlessness and increased killings,
abductions and rapes that followed the overthrow
of the government of Saddam Hussein have restricted
women's freedom of movement and their ability
to go to school or to work," Amnesty said.
"Women have been subjected to sexual threats
by members of the U.S.-led forces and some
women detained by U.S. forces have been sexually
abused, possibly raped," it added.
Amnesty said several women detained by U.S. troops
had spoken in interviews with them of beatings,
threats of rape, humiliating treatment and
long periods of solitary confinement.
The Pentagon said it had not seen the report,
but took any allegations of detainee abuse
seriously.
"We have demonstrated our commitment to
ensuring that kind of behavior is identified
and dealt with properly," spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel
Joe Richard said in Washington.
"With this report, we would like the opportunity
to review it and to test the validity of the
allegations."
Amnesty said women's rights activists and political
leaders had also been targeted by armed insurgent
groups.
Women continued to suffer legal discrimination
under laws that granted husbands effective
impunity to beat their wives and treated so-called
"honor" killers leniently, the group
said.
"Within their own communities, many women
and girls remain at risk of death from male
relatives if they are accused of behavior held
to have brought dishonor on the family,"
Amnesty said, noting some attempts by religious
zealots to make the laws even more repressive
against women.
But on the positive side, the report said several
women's rights groups had been formed -- including
ones that focused on the protection of women
from violence.
Amnesty called on the Iraqi authorities and newly
elected members of the National Assembly to
enshrine the rights of women in the new constitution.
This included treating honor killings as murder,
outlawing violence within marriage and making
sure that the punishment was commensurate with
the crime committed.
© 2005 Reuters
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