...and the soldier, Steven Green, could be facing the death penalty for the gruesome 2006 act.
(trigger warning)
Showing posts with label Iraq War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iraq War. Show all posts
Friday, May 8, 2009
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Five Years Later
As we've entered the sixth year of the war in Iraq, it has become more and more evident that women in Iraq are worse off in the post-Saddam era.
Iraqi women are suffering disproportionately and silently; women and children account for 70% of displaced people in Iraq. They are experiencing malnutrition, poverty, sexual assault, and a lack of health care. Women in the public sphere are targets for assassination, and sex trafficking is on the rise, as are "honor" killings. Men in Iraq are suffering also; they are more affected by direct military violence, but women are not exempt from that violence, and they face harassment from other Iraqis: brother, husbands, fathers, and religious leaders.
Much of the violence stems from clothing, including, most shocking and horrifying, acid attacks. '"A month ago I was walking from my college to my house when I was abducted in the street by three men. They dropped acid in my face and on my legs. They cut all my hair off while hitting me in the face many times telling me it's the price for not obeying God's wish in using the veil," Hania Abdul-Jabbar, a 23-year-old university student, recounted.' This was in 2005; however, it is still occurring with frightening regularity today.
The US military is directly contributing to mistreatment of Iraqi women, often arresting (without charging) and imprisoning the wives of insurgents in an effort to pressure the insurgents to surrender.
With a new report released today finding that 41% of American servicewomen have been sexually assaulted during military duty, we have to ask once again: who is this war really helping?
Iraqi women are suffering disproportionately and silently; women and children account for 70% of displaced people in Iraq. They are experiencing malnutrition, poverty, sexual assault, and a lack of health care. Women in the public sphere are targets for assassination, and sex trafficking is on the rise, as are "honor" killings. Men in Iraq are suffering also; they are more affected by direct military violence, but women are not exempt from that violence, and they face harassment from other Iraqis: brother, husbands, fathers, and religious leaders.
Much of the violence stems from clothing, including, most shocking and horrifying, acid attacks. '"A month ago I was walking from my college to my house when I was abducted in the street by three men. They dropped acid in my face and on my legs. They cut all my hair off while hitting me in the face many times telling me it's the price for not obeying God's wish in using the veil," Hania Abdul-Jabbar, a 23-year-old university student, recounted.' This was in 2005; however, it is still occurring with frightening regularity today.
The US military is directly contributing to mistreatment of Iraqi women, often arresting (without charging) and imprisoning the wives of insurgents in an effort to pressure the insurgents to surrender.
With a new report released today finding that 41% of American servicewomen have been sexually assaulted during military duty, we have to ask once again: who is this war really helping?
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