"On May 22 around 4:00 P.M. at Baghdad, nine-year-old girl “Saba”, was abducted from the stairs of the building where she lives, taken to an abandoned building nearby, and raped..."
(Human Rights Watch Report: Climate of Fear, July 2003)
According to a Human Rights Watch report Climate of Fear published in July 2003, as a result of the invasion, women and girls face increased sexual violence and abduction, which was almost unheard of during Saddam Hussein's regime.
The violence against women and girls has created a state of fear, preventing them from being more active in the society. "It's certain women feel that now [after April], it is less safe for them on the street. There's been more killing; women feel more danger going back and forth from work and school, and participating in activities. Some girls have been withdrawn from school because their parents think it's unsafe in the streets," explains.Amnesty International researcher Elizabeth Hodgkin.
While the U.S.-led - the occupying forces, the Coalition Provisional Authorities (CPA), and its de facto government in Iraq - is busy securing Iraq's natural resources, the public security vacuum in Baghdad has heightened the vulnerability of women and girls to sexual violence and abduction.
There has been an acute rise in "honor killings" and domestic violence since the U.S. occupied Iraq last April. A woman becomes the victim of an "honor killing" when her family feels she has damaged their reputation by having sex with a man, or even just by going out with him. This dishonor "entitles" a male member of her family to "justifiably" murder her. "These crimes often go unreported, and even when they are reported, police rarely take any action. So a woman's life is expendable," Hodgkin explains.
According to an Amnesty International investigation, there have been many "honor killings" in Iraq, the vast majority of which are unreported. There have been no investigations of the people alleged to have carried out these murders. Police have made no arrests. The CPA has not changed the Saddam-era law which gives low sentences to “honor killers”. Hodgkin explains further, "If you do find a situation where a woman may have been raped, no matter what the circumstances, she runs the risk of being murdered by a male relative if she admits the incident to a family member. So if you think there's a possibility that a woman has been raped, you'd never go to her family to investigate the crime for fear of putting her in more danger."
However, Hodgkin still remains optimistic about the role of women in the post-Saddam era. She says since April, there's been great boost of activity from all sectors in Iraqi society, including the formation of many civic and human rights organizations. Although women are underrepresented in these groups, Hodgkin reports there are organizations surfacing that have been formed by women and are run by women. "I think there is great hope for women's activism in the future. I think this is a period of transition, this is a period of change; [but] women are still unable to take their rightful position in the society."
This is an edited copy of the report from ActionLA (
http://www.actionla.org)