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Battered Afghan wives opt for divorce instead of suicide
Published in The Saudi Gazette on 24 - 07 - 2009

AFTER regular beatings, torture and attempted murder by her husband, 35-year-old Zahra tried to burn herself to death to escape her marriage. Then she learned of a safer option: divorce.
Zahra is among a growing number of women in Afghanistan's western Herat province who, with the help of a women's charity, have taken on patriarchal laws to get a divorce, a taboo in the devoutly Muslim, formerly Taleban-led state.”I did not spend a single happy day with my husband .He was not like a human being. He used to beat me every day,” she said, revealing scars on her right leg and feet where her husband had deliberately given her electric shocks.
After marrying at 14, Zahra, who declined to give her full name for her own safety, said she suffered years of abuse. Then a property dispute with her in-laws turned her marriage into a full-blown nightmare. “They wanted to kill me three or four times. Once they gave me rat poison. I cannot go out because of the divorce and my four brothers are looking for me; they are after me to kill me.”
The divorce led to her father disowning her and cost her custody of her seven sons and two daughters. Initially her ex-husband let her keep her daughters on condition that she didn't remarry. But her financial circumstances were so dire in a country where women rarely work that she eventually remarried and when her ex-husband found out he took the daughters back.
A man's law
Suraya Pakzad runs a safe house for women in Herat and has helped several women, including Zahra, divorce their husbands. She says her outreach programs, which inform women about divorce, discourages them from burning themselves and helps them tackle divorce law. The numbers of divorces have doubled in Herat over the past two years, according to Pakzad, while reported cases of self-immolation have declined. “In 2006 we had 98 cases of women killing themselves with fire .In 2008, there were about 73 cases, so there has been a definite decrease,” Pakzad said.
“When we brought the number of self-immolation cases down, automatically the number of divorces went up because women realized that they could not solve their problems by burning themselves,” she said.
In Afghanistan, a man can divorce without needing his wife's agreement. But if a woman seeks a divorce then she has to have the approval of her husband and needs witnesses who can testify in court that the divorce is justified.
“A man can, with great ease, tell the court that his wife's behavior is inappropriate, that she does not behave in the home, and wants to divorce her. A man decides a woman's future with one piece of paper,” said Maria Bashir, chief prosecutor in Herat.
A woman can appeal for a divorce on grounds that her husband is absent for a long time, he cannot adequately provide for the family, either financially or because he is physically incapable, or if he is impotent or abuses her to the point where her life may be at risk, Bashir said.
To get their husbands' agreement for the divorce, women were usually forced to let the husband and his family keeps the children, a prospect that dissuaded many battered women. “Women prefer death to the pain of being separated from their children. This is why many women, before consulting the law, will resort to self-immolation, or suicide or running away.” “Afghan families think that a woman should not be divorced, whatever she goes through, she should be patient and put up with it. She should die before asking for a divorce,” Pakzad said.
Pakzad links the women with one of five or six law firms in Herat which take on divorce cases. “We don't want to work against the law. We have an enemy in the Taleban and we don't want to create another enemy out of the government but, the law needs to change and we need a (parliamentary) session on this to change it.”
My only way out
A few miles away, in Afghanistan's only hospital ward dedicated to self-burning, Dr Mohammad Aref Jalali stands over one his patients and asks how she feels. Twenty-year old Zarbakht's entire body is cocooned in white plaster. She lies in bed on her back all day, like a mummy. She can barely move her lips to speak and her eyebrows, partly burned off, are knitted in pain. She says her family never visits.
“I had to marry at 14. I was compelled to marry because my family is so poor. I had no other way. After five years I couldn't take it anymore, what else was I supposed to do?” Zarbakht said in a strained whisper, her jaw almost clamped shut by bandages.
For Dr Jalali, who confirmed there were slightly fewer self-immolation cases in Herat so far this year compared with 2008, it comes as no surprise that divorce is not something his patients are ever likely to contemplate.
“The problem is 80 percent of Afghan women are not literate, and they don't have the means to solve their problems so they resort to extreme and desperate measures, like suicide,” he said.
Last year, of the 85 patients admitted to his ward, 63 died of their self


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