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IN THE NEWS
September 22, 2005
Afghan women take special joy in vote
4 years after Taliban, 27 percent of assembly
is reserved for them
By Farah Stockman, Globe Staff | September 19,
2005
JALALABAD, Afghanistan -- The sun had hardly
risen yesterday over the women's polling center, and a crowd in blue burkas already
waited at the door.
Lima Nasser, an 18-year-old student, did a little
dance as she slipped her ballot into the plastic container provided by the United
Nations. ''I'm really excited about this election," she said, explaining
that she had cast the first vote of her life for a neighbor she believes will
bring industries, roads, and housing for the people of this city in eastern Afghanistan.
Millions of Afghans turned out yesterday to
vote for the lower house of their national assembly, reflecting a mood of optimism
four years after a US-led alliance toppled the religious rule of the Taliban.
No major incidents of violence were reported, despite two dozen attacks across
the southeast that killed at least 14 people, including a French soldier.
A
handful of polling stations closed temporarily and 16 did not open at all, mostly
due to security concerns, Peter Erben, chief electoral officer of the Afghan-UN
Joint Electoral Management Body, told the Associated Press.
The vote, which cost the international community
$150 million, marked the
time seats have been reserved for women. After the votes are counted
and the results are announced in early October, Afghanistan will have a
national assembly that is 27 percent women, higher than the US Congress and legislatures
in much of the industrialized world.
Here in Jalalabad,
179 candidates vied for 14 seats, four of which are set aside for women.
Most people in Jalalabad seemed swept up in the
enthusiasm of the campaigns, certain that their candidate would bring local accountability
and the development that the city desperately needs. A particularly festive mood
seemed to envelope the polling stations that were prepared for women. In keeping
with local traditions, men and women often separate in public life.
At the female polling station set up at the Darull-Malemeen
school, women waited patiently to be frisked for weapons. Then they strode inside
and lifted their burkas over their heads, revealing colorful shawls, wide
smiles, and strong political opinions.
''We went through lots of intolerable
eras and we want a person who can cure the old wounds and meet our requirements," said
Dr. Shamsi Noorzi, 38, a gynecologist from a local hospital who came early in
the morning to vote. ''In past times, women's rights were disregarded, and now
we have got our rights. Now we'll get some seats in parliament, and after five
years, we'll ask for more."
Elderly women with gold nose rings lifted
their burkas to kiss one another on both cheeks.
Outside on the porch, an army officer sent to
protect the voting women stuck a branch of purple flowers in the barrel of his
gun.
As the day
wore on, an all-male Pakistani television crew caused a commotion by setting
up its cameras outside the women's voting area.
Some
women talked to the cameras. Others slipped their burkas back on and floated
away.
''I don't want them to film," grumbled an Afghan army
commander with a salt-and-pepper beard. ''But what can I do? This is democracy."
Women
have faced formidable obstacles in this race, according to a recently released
Human Rights Watch report regarding the safety of female candidates in Afghanistan.
Some women in conservative areas had to campaign under burka, prompting questions
about whether voters would recognize their pictures on the ballot, which displayed
candidates' faces and logos to assist the many voters who are illiterate.
Safia Seddiqi,
a popular female candidate, was recently attacked in her campaign convoy by gunmen
but escaped unharmed, according to a campaign spokesman.
Even Zakia Arsala, a candidate from a powerful clan that is
the Afghan equivalent of the Kennedys, had to persuade a group of local religious
leaders to remove the fatwa they had issued against voting for women, according
to her son, Abdullah Arsala.
''Mullahs came and said, 'If you
vote for a woman, it's against Islamic law,' " he said.
''But I had worked too hard for those votes," he
said, describing how he built a well in a camp for thousands of displaced people
and helped them get their school registered.
He said the family invited the mullahs for
a debate, and ultimately they reversed their edict.
Women have struggled to raise enough money for
their campaigns, which feature billboards and glossy postcards. Candidates must
also pay for bowls of rice and meat for supporters at rallies, and placate tribal
elders who ask for a cow or sheep in return for their village's support.
Despite
these obstacles, some female candidates have become popular with male voters.
At one polling station, Najeeba Arif, 40, a vocational teacher, said it was her
own husband who persuaded her to vote for Seddiqi.
As the day drew to a close and the sun dipped behind the mountains,
chaos erupted at the polling station at Char-Bagh High School, about a 10-minute
drive west of the city.
The male voting station had three rooms
for voting but the female station had only one. Election workers were forced
to stay open hours longer as hundreds of women waited to cast their ballots.
Inside, a suffocating
crush of mostly illiterate rural women cast aside the cardboard booths set up
for privacy and huddled together trying to figure out how to mark their ballots.
Some women left in frustration, ballots unmarked, while others sifted carefully
through the newspaper-like pages.
But every woman was determined to enter the voting
room. Those who had not yet voted formed a sweaty, angry group around the lone
army officer outside the door. Some demanded to be allowed to climb into the
voting room through the window.
Indeed, hours earlier, Mohammad Ashraf, an election
worker, had propped a ladder outside the window so women could leave the room
without fighting against the crowd at the door. Now he leaned a disheveled head
out the window, trying to breathe fresh air.
''I have never been in such trouble
in all my life," Ashraf said.
''The women came more than we expected, and they are really excited. Today,
I have been tortured by women."
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