Iraq, where women once had more rights and freedom than most others in the Arab world, has turned deadly for women who dream of education and a professional career.
Stronger Women, Stronger Nations: 2008 Iraq Report, a new report from Women to Women, provides the most detailed information on this "deadly" reality. You can download and read the full report here. (h/t GorillasGuides )
Rather than try to describe findings, I thought I’d let the video above and the results of the Women to Women survey of Iraqi women speak for themselves tonight:
Key findings
Hope for the Future
• 85.0% of respondents described the situation in Iraq as bad or very bad, and 88.8% expressed a great deal of concern that they or someone living in their households would become a victim of violence.
• Only 26.9% of respondents expressed optimism for the future, saying they thought the overall situation would get better in the year ahead. While there continue to be pockets of optimism throughout the country, and the overall situation may be on a slow ascent, the situation remains volatile, and the long-term sustainability of any improvements still remains to be seen.Security
• 71.2% of respondents said they do not feel protected by U.S./U.K. soldiers and 65.3% of
respondents said that, overall, the presence of U.S./U.K. security forces in Iraq is
making security in the country worse.
• 67.9% of respondents stated that their ability to walk down the street as they please has gotten worse since the U.S. invasion.Violence Against Women
• 63.9% of respondents stated that violence against women is increasing. When asked why,
respondents most commonly said that there is less respect for women’s rights than before,
that women are thought of as possessions, and that the economy has gotten worse.
Economy and Infrastructure
• 68.3% of respondents describe the availability of jobs as bad and 70.5% said that their families are unable to earn enough money to pay for daily necessities.Social Services
• 76.2% of respondents said that girls in their families are not allowed to attend school, and 56.7% said that girls’ ability to attend school has gotten worse since the U.S. invasion.Political Participation
• 70.2% of respondents thought that the citizens of Iraq have not been given a chance to contribute their input on the future of Iraq, and 52.0% did not know if Iraqis had the right to participate in the political process.
• 43.6% of respondents did not think that the circumstances of women were being considered by those making decisions about Iraq’s future. However, in the Central Iraq cities of Fallujah, Samarra and Rawa, the number jumps to 75.1% of respondents saying they did not think women’s circumstances were being considered.
• 72.7% of respondents said that in the future there should be one unified Iraq with a central government in Baghdad, and 88.6% of women thought that the separation of people along ethnic/religious/sectarian lines was a bad thing. However, only 32.3% of respondents thought there would in fact be one unified Iraq with a central government in Baghdad in five years. This is another indication that women do not feel as though their opinions are being considered in decisions about their country’s future.
As Zainab Salbi writes in the report’s introduction:
Modern warfare is no longer confined to battlefields, and its consequences reach far beyond mere military targets. With its life and death political consequences, collateral economic damage and stress on the social fabric of every community in its wake, war leaves an indelible mark on the hearts and minds of every man, woman and child it touches. Because of this, we can no longer talk about post-war development, democracy, and freedom in a vacuum. When we allow the traditionally male-dominated front-line discussions of war to be segregated from the back-line struggles of women working to ensure that there is food to eat, water to drink, and hope to spare, we entrust the future to an isolated cadre of elites with little grasp of the reality on the ground.
When will we listen to the voices of the women of Iraq who tell us that it is time to leave Iraq and stop the violence?
Thank you to MICT for their work – the video above is one of their reports, in collaboration with UNIFEM.
Heads up for next weekend: KPFA will be streaming live audio from Winter Soldier next weekend at KPFA.org and warcomeshome.org. War Comes Home will also feature bios, photos, and videos of the speakers and audio clips of the testimonials. In addition to hosting the broadcast, Aimee Allison and Aaron Glantz will be blogging the hearing at warcomeshome.org, and listeners are invited to participate with their comments. (h/t Nicole)
And if you can be in DC, don’t forget Take Back America!
Related posts:
- McChrystal Digs In, Afghan Women Say Get Out
- When the Women of Afghanistan Speak, Does Howard Dean Listen?
- FDL Book Salon Welcomes Dahr Jamail, The Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan
- RNC Ad Compares Pelosi to Pussy Galore — Time For Women to Exit the GOP?
- Valuing Democracy: Iran, Iraq and the War Supplemental





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Hi Siun!
Aloha, Siun!
But, but Teh Surge has been a Suckcess!!!
gawd, those are depressing statistics.
It’s too bad they’re not available to Republicans, evidently.
And I want to hear from the women of Gaza too.
Hello, all! Siun is traveling today and may join us in a little bit. She asked me to host her Sunday evening salon in her stead.
She may have shown us the reason why we never hear from BushCo any more about how this war is working wonders for Iraqi women.
Hi Siun, when you get a chance could you drop me a note at my email addy over on DemVet? Thanks…Jo
Hearing? Is Congress holding hearings on ‘Winter Soldier’?
Are there any ‘good’ numbers on how many Iraqi civilians have been killed since the unprovoked Bush attack on that nation? I want out of Iraq now. Do you hear me Hillary, Obama and McCain?
How can Bush claim to be spreading “democracy” if this is true?
If half the populace doesn’t know it has the right to participate in the political process, something fundamental is very wrong.
Somewhere the “We’re going to Democratize the ever-lovin’ shit out of you” sentiment got lost?
I’m sure the Maladministration blames the ‘Liberal Media’ for that fact…
Not until January of 2009 apparently. If then. This is just so sad…so criminal.
The “Iraq Oil Plot” continues under the facade of Iraq’s liberation! What a deal for Americans, Iraqis and the world?
How can some people be so calloused at the murder of hundreds of thousands of innocent victims? I am sorry, people of Iraq, for what my country has done to your peoples.
Waccamaw – if you’re here, I left you one downstairs…
AP has this up now..
A few headlines:
US Military Deaths in Iraq at 3,974
Studies: Iraq Costs US $12B Per Month
US Military: Violence Trend Unchanged
AP: Water Makes US Troops in Iraq Sick
For Few, Iraq War Has Changed Everything
And this story:
For Few, Iraq War Has Changed Everything
snip
What groups, where do they live, how much American protection/money do the women who thought things were getting better get or are only just as bad as under Saddam?
52.0% did not know if Iraqis had the right to participate in the political process
I find myself wondering if those are not actually the smarter ones…
Think of the ophans crying in the night on the streets of Iraq and Gaza.
Collateral damage. Don’t you just love that phrase.
McCain has all but pledged to continue the killing.
The complete arrogance of policy makers to think 25 million people could be quelled at the cost of 50 to 70 billion dollars, is a crime. Unlike the moral certainty of “exterminating” Nazis, the Iraq war of choice, lacks moral legitimacy and instead has become “horror.” Our presence in Iraq is motivated by oil. Kiddo, the “collateral damage” is, the cost of doing business!
Is Douglas Feith, neo-con Iraq war planner, the fucking, stupidest guy on the planet? This claim was made repeatedly by General Tommy Franks. Feith denies that he is the stupidest guy, and Donald Rumsfeld also defends Feith, as being “one of the brightest people you or I will ever come across. He’s diligent, very well read, and insightful.” But Feith’s new book seems to prove Gen. Franks is correct.
Feith blames the losing Iraq on Gen. Franks, and the black people in the government, Colin Powell and Condi Rice. He blames Paul Bremer and Richard Armitage also. These people did not recognize his military genius and did not follow Feith’s brilliant plan to Win The War.
The key mistake that the United States made in Iraq, Feith asserts, was “the mishandling of the political transition.” The good that Bremer did, he concludes, “was outweighed by the harm caused by the fact of occupation.”
Feith does quote Kommander Guy, on Dec. 18, 2002, saying “War is inevitable.” Unfortunately, “a swift transition to Iraqi control, was prevented from succeeding by ill-informed or disloyal subordinates.”. It is the ill-informed and disloyal Bushies whio are to blame for losing the War/Occupation.
Nah, they have never let facts get in the way of the message.
I honestly think they realize that their base doesn’t gives a rat’s patooie about women and less about Iraqi women.
I wonder what the statistics are for women in Afghanistan, it is probably worse. I’ve seen documentry films of military patrols on the military channel of what daily life is like. The issue of how women are treated in general always screams out in these shows. The compounds these folks live in always show the women in the background doing most of the heavy labor, child rearing, and livestock tending while the men sit around and talk, drink tea, and play board games. I’m afraid it is going to be a very long time before democracy does anything to help these women. The American soldiers are always only looking for hidden weapons or pleading with the men from the village to give them intelligence on “bad guys.” The soldiers occasionally comment about the women’s plight in the films but accept it knowing they have to follows orders and pursue the job at hand. It is also difficult for them to offer aid because of the sensitivity of soldiers not are allowed to interact with Iraqi or Afghan women for fear of offending the Islamic men.
The Iraq plan was a Feith-based iniative.
In the name of Yitzhak Rabin, Anwar Sadat and Rachel Corrie, stop the killing.
Collateral damage. Don’t you just love that phrase.
Yeah. “We knocked down a school, an apartment building, and a couple of open-air markets. There were some collateral casualties – mostly just women and kids.”:
“But we bagged our 27th Number Three Man in Al-Qaeda, so it’s all good.”
fixed
I’ve always wondered what happened to the people with the ink-dyed fingers. Why haven’t we been shown pictures like that in the past few years?
And, Sen. McCain, if Iraq is just like an American neighborhood, do you believe 80+% of Americans are afraid someone in their family will become the victim of violence?
“by their Deeds shall you judge them”
So yes Dan Qualye has lost his crown.
Siun,
Your posts are such a hard read on Sunday, always keeping in the forefront the death and destruction that is the Iraq war. Keep up the good work lest we never forget.
Don’t work, go to school or shop on 3-19-08 but do make your voice heard ,that if the stupid CIC can’t wrap up a war in 5 years he doesn’t have the brains necessary to ever win.
Support our troops by bringing them home now!
I believe the “provincial elections” scheduled for October 2008 are Dear Leader’s newest reason not to de-Surge the troops. So we may see purple fingers — just before we get to stain our own!
Say it Over 1 million
I don’t know what to say about this, Siun. It’s too horrible for words.
My heart bleeds for the people of Iraq and Gaza.
Good evening.
October reprise?
If anything this survey might be too optimistic after all a lot of people might think this survey was being used by America to spot trouble makers. Which would explain why some people said that things were not that bad.
I am surprised that they got anyone to talk on the record. Although maybe things are so bad in Iraq that the women just don’t care anymore.
Which is dangerous despair is taking hold.
We are to blame!
Sooner or later as a response to this despair Religion old time fundamentalist stuff will come to unite the people against us we will have created another Iran in the South. The Sunni will create a similar group much like if not Al Quieda in their lands.
Feith has created what he was trying to defend against by using force to create change that was suppose to benefit us.
Without ever once asking or caring about what the Iraq’s wanted or WHY.
I assume that you know that Quayle is a PNAC’er?
PNAC’er?
Er no please explain Most of what I know about Dan was from comedy central back when you could put comedian after comedian on tv doing jokes about the president and vice without getting your show canceled.
Without women, no nation or people can survive. Without men, they cannot survive, either.
When any or all hope is extinguished, life is not bearable and may become impossible– is this what America wants? Empty spaces of hopeless, broken people who have nothing but pain, rage and the misfortune of sitting atop “our” oil and resources.
The women of Afghanistan have been enduring so much since the Soviets invaded their country………. they’ve lost their husbands, fathers, children, sisters, mothers, and more. How much can humans endure?
This is what is being done in our names— in Iraq, Afghanistan and Gaza.
PNAC
J Dnaforth Quayle, signatory
Wow, that’s a lot of # 3’s, IRCC, we’ve bagged a lot of No. 2’s too… Still no Numero Uno… Osama Bin Forgotten…!
‘cept I can’t spell – J Danforth (Dan) Quayle
During the Bush-Quayle era the jokes wrote themselves. Quayle said “It’s time for the human race to enter the solar system.”
Osama bin Forgotten dead. Has been quite some time. Ssssshhhh… Don’t want anyone to know. Wouldn’t have a boodeyman any more.
damn! “boogeyman” ya know what I mean.
Dougie’s Wiki is very telling…
Wow — just watched the 60 Minutes worship of St John McCain. This is going to be a rough eight months for him — not.
I am aligned with those Israeli people who want peace. And there are many.
I didn’t see Mrs. McCain standing by her man.. But I didn’t catch the whole segment.
They sure put a glossy coat of paint on McCain. All I saw was George Bush III.
The PNAC’s stated goal is “to promote American global leadership.”[1] Fundamental to the PNAC are the views that “American leadership is both good for America and good for the world” and support for “a Reaganite policy of military strength and moral clarity
So PNAC is a
band of brothersMorons?Whose goal is to provide American Leadership under George W Bush? A man who will not go after Ossama bin Laden in Pakistan! But instead LEADS US TO WAR WITH IRAQ?
That is both good for America and Good for the world? After 7 years the Ossama is still free Dollar is down gas is up the economy is a wreck. Just what has Bush accomplished that is GOOD for America?
“a Reaganite policy of military strength and moral clarity” Well are we torturing any Nuns in South America yet? Have we sold Iran any weapons to Iran after Iran’s puppet terror group Hezbollah blows up a bunch of Marines in Lebannon? Has Rumsfeld sold any more poison gas to Saddam or anyone else lately?
I read somewhere that the Peloponnesian wars ended when the women stopped having sex with the war boosters. They weren’t going to make babies to waste on the battlefield. For a man not a tough choice to make love or war. Peace came quickly.
The adulteress was right beside him. Wow, she’s got some crazy eyes.
From MSNBC
That was a Greek Comedy!
…
Even though Foster is the Rahm-appointed candidate, rather that the progressive John Laesch, I perceive this a victory.
Good night all you dear folks. It’s Swiss Miss and marshmellows upstairs again tonight. And a Marty Robbins special, on OETA. Preceeded by a Patsy Cline special and the “Three Tenors”.
I am terribly sorry to hear Obama campaigned against Laesch.
ttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aristophanes
Led by the title character, Lysistrata, the story’s female characters barricade the public funds building and withhold sex from their husbands to end the Peloponnesian War and secure peace. In doing so, Lysistrata engages the support of women from Sparta, Boeotia, and Corinth. All of the other women are first against Lysistrata’s suggestion to withhold sex. Finally, they agree to swearing an oath of allegiance by drinking wine from a shield. This action is ironic and therefore comical, because Greek men believed women had no self-restraint, a lack displayed in their alleged fondness for wine as well as for sex.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lysistrata
The Rahm candidate had to get help from Obama and not Hilary! Bwahahaha! Rahm’s evil plans are Coming Undone!
Yo!
If it’s good enough for us then it’s good enough for them over there in The MeatGrinder:
Every day four women die in this country as a result of domestic violence….
That ‘country’ is here…
And….
If you want to see where said violence comes from hike on over to CheetoLand and dive into any thread about Hillary.
Warning: You will need a strong stomach.
My point?
That the attitudes the mental states that make the violence this post is about is right here, right now in the corporatist press….in the ’sphere.
Take a look around. Right here and you will see that we need to take action.
Did he?
Obama campaigned for Foster in this special election against Oberweis, but I don’t know that he campaigned for any candidate in the either the special election or general election primary.
My sis just saw that play by Aristophanes– Lysistrata.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aristophanes
Really….
How the hell you figure that. Senator ‘Hope’ is just as big a creature of the Dead Loser Caucus as The Hill and yeah, sure
The Rabbit’ was a protege of ‘Big Dog’ but…..
That was yesterday.
Please know that progressive people walk not alone.
L.
***applause!***
nite nite
It is a great play..The first time that I read it was years ago, on an airflight, and I was laughing so hard, the seat was shaking. (I am getting like demi, too many commas.*g*)
Well, I took the MSNBC quote in macks comment above, #56..
To be against Laesch.
Obama I admit needs to move more Left as does Hilary. But Rahm is a recent congressman without his connections to Bill there is no way he would be running things like picking safe candidates to run against our Blue America candidates.
Knowing that it must hurt Hilary that Rahm her guy had to turn to Obama for help.
Where did you hear that?
I read your MSNBC quote above.
Nope
Laesch ran against Foster in the Feb primary for the November election.
He did not campaign for the special election to replace the retiring (but not shy) Hastert.
In November Foster will be the incumbent.
Hastert’s motivation for early retirement was to take advantage of the percieved split Dem field which was evidently not an issue.
Obama’s support for Foster came in the Special – not the primary.
That is a relief. The rules and number of elections up there confused me several weeks back. I am very glad to know Obama didn’t step on our toes.
Rahm threw considerable weight behind Foster in the primary.
Laesch just missed (sadly).
But Foster is clearly superior to Jim Oberweiss, whose Senatorial campaign included shots of Chicago’s Soldier Field accompanied with a voice over saying that the stadium would not hold all the illegal aliens in the city.
This guy defines new lows for Republican lies and fear mongering.
This really belongs in the last thread, and I didn’t see it there, so here it goes:
McCain’s daughter’s vlog of the media BBQ (via HuffPo).
Next time Jon Stewart has “Bloody” Bill Kristol on TDS, he needs to ask him, point blank, “How’s it goin’ fer wimmin folk in irak these days?”
Oh well – not to steal the thread, but the news bodes well for November.
This is historicly a solid Red district, and while Foster is not a poster child for progressive values, he ain’t all that bad either.
And the tried and true Rove playbook failed.
I read somewhere this morning Foster campaigned against Telcom immunity.. Sounds promising if he means it.
too late
I looked at that issue today..I don’t think Obama involved himself until after the primary. That whole thing pissed me off, Laesch has worked his butt off for several years to win that seat and Foster comes in and buys the primary.
I think the Blue Dogs will think twice about telecom immunity this week, having seen Foster’s convincing win. There’s no reason to railroad the caucus for telecom immunity, as Foster’s victory in a really red district shows there is NO constituency for telecom immunity.
Laesch for Obamas former Senate seat ‘09!
I like that
I would liek to think that’s so, but I don’t think they will see Telco Immunity as the majore factor.
It certainly is not a popular issue, but faced with strong lobbying pressure from the telcos, i am not optimistic.
Feith is absolutely delusional from reading what appears to be in his book. He blames everyone else…but when you look at what he blames them for it’s precisely where they carried out his agenda.
He blames Powell for not making a convincing case at the UN…but he later says that the case for WMD’s and terrorist links was overblown…that it should have been enough to show that Sadaam was a megalomaniac and had used WMD’s some 15 years before. Yeah…that would convice France and Germany and Turkey, Dougie! And, of course, he completely forgets that it was his group pushing these ridiculous memes about Al Qaida involvement with Saddam, that the Iraqi government sponsored the 9/11 attackers, and all this stuff about WMD’s currently being just a few years, if not months, away from production.
He praises Chalabi, who is known to have constantly given US military intel to Iran…and says the CIA burned him because they didn’t like exiles. Sorry, won’t fly, Dougie. They didn’t trust Chalabi (justifiably)…but they loved some exiles…heck..they made one Sunni exile the head of the Interim Authority. And the guy is just off in la-la land if he thinks that the Iraqis would have accepted Chalabi, Feith’s handpicked dictator, when he had no support by anyone in the country. The US would have been taking on at least two Shiite militias, all Sunni groups, and a goodly number of Kurds with that nightmare.
No wonder people laughed at him! And funny that the guy who pesumably had the ear of both Rumsfeld and Cheney couldn’t get his ideas across.
• 85.0% of respondents described the situation in Iraq as bad or very bad, and 88.8% expressed a great deal of concern that they or someone living in their households would become a victim of violence.
• 71.2% of respondents said they do not feel protected by U.S./U.K. soldiers and 65.3% of respondents said that, overall, the presence of U.S./U.K. security forces in Iraq is making security in the country worse.
• 76.2% of respondents said that girls in their families are not allowed to attend school, and 56.7% said that girls’ ability to attend school has gotten worse since the U.S. invasion.
• 70.2% of respondents thought that the citizens of Iraq have not been given a chance to contribute their input on the future of Iraq, and 52.0% did not know if Iraqis had the right to participate in the political process.
• In order to avoid trouble, respondents said they did the following things very often
• or somewhat often over the past year:
• 74.5% avoided going out of their homes;
• 63.2% have not sent their children to school, most commonly in parts of Baghdad;
• 65.9% have avoided passing or driving by police stations or other public buildings;
• 64.5% have avoided markets and other crowded areas, most commonly in parts of Baghdad, Hilla and Karbala;
• 60.7% have avoided checkpoints;
• 74.6% have avoided U.S. and other Coalition forces;
• 57% have avoided travel, most commonly in parts of Baghdad, Fallujah and Samarra;
• 59.3% have been careful with what they say about themselves to others; and
• 53.4% have avoided going to work or applying for work.
Violence Against Women
Question: Do you feel protected by the police?
• In Central Irak 99.6% of the women said “No” to that question.
• In Baghdad 99.6% of the women said “No” to that question.
Question: Do you feel protected by religious leaders?
• Overall, 41.7% of respondents said they feel protected by religious leaders, but 41.4% of respondents did
not feel protected by religious leaders, and 16.9% of respondents didn’t know.
Some blogwhoring:
We have feeds by topic – something we’ve introduced in the last few weeks:
• Women – genital mutilation of (1)
• Women – killing of (6)
• Women – suicides (2)
• Women and Children (9)
• Women and Children (13)
• Women in politics (7)
• Women’s health – neglect of (2)
• Women’s Rights (35)
I don’t know if Obama campaigned against Laesch, the advertisements were against Oberweiss. Laesch lost, as I understand it, to Foster in a close primary for the remaining term. There will be another primary I think, for the regular full-term.
Thank you moderators for letting that large number of links through.
Erdla.
It’s chilling, shameful and horrifically sad.
Thank you for all you and your team do.
That’s not what it says. You’ve added the sentence about it being against Laesch. The context says that McCain ran ads for Oberweiss, Obama for Foster. Clearly that refers to the non-Primary for the seat that fills out the remainder of Hasterts term. The race where the ads were run were Foster vs. Oberweiss. Do you have specific evidence otherwise?
I’ve been to Jim Laesch’s site frequently…he never mentions ANY issues with Foster getting support from Obama, or any other Presidential candidate in their Primary.
It’s getting harder and harder for them Angie – and I’m talking only of the logistics of it, the stress they’re under is intense and realistically it is going to get much worse as the elections draw near.
John Stewart will smile and smirk and fawn and impishly ask some pretend tough questions with the tentativeness of a grandchild joshing with his grandfather.
John Stewart is a fucking stooge.
He gets in Chris Matthews face and Tucker Carlson’s face and treats Kristol like he’s a beloved professor.
Ptooey.
-G