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In response to the rumours being circulatedaround on the Internet that
the Taliban Islamic Movement is oppressing women in Afghanistan:
I never respond to the recipients of forwarded messages like this but
I feel professionally compelled to address this one. The message does
not produce any evidence to support the allegations made in it. There
are no information sources quoted and yet more than 350 people have
e-signed this document.
I am a Canadian-trained family physician. I recently returned from
a medical/fact finding mission to tour the hospitals and cities of Jalalabad
and Kabul in Afghanistan to get a first hand perspective of the social
and health care problems there. I stayed with an Ottawa, Canada based
NGO in Kabul who helped me tour the health care facilities and cities.
I personally witnessed the situation in the hospitals and cities and
conducted two clinics in Kabul.
Here is a summary of my observations.
1. There is an entire hospital dedicated to the complete care of women
in Kabul. It is called the Womens Gyne and Maternity Hospital of Kabul.Another
hospital, the Indira Gandhi Childrens hospital also takes care of women.
It, like all hospitals in Afghanistan, suffers from severe medication
and supply shortages. I saw doctors in emergency wards using their bare
hands to stitch up wounds. Surgeons at the children's hospital see 2-3
cases a day of young children with bowel obstructions caused by severe
intestinal worm infestations. This is completely preventable through
improved hygiene. Health care is equally dismal for all Afghans - male
AND female.
2. There is a high incidence of vaccine-preventable diseases (I saw
my first case of tetanus/"lock jaw" in Jalalabad).
3. Doctors (both male and female) are leaving Afghanistan in large
numbers as the monthly salary of a doctor is only 6000 Afghan Rupees
(about $15CDN). Nurses make only 3000 rupees (about CDN$7.50) monthly
while janitors make only 2000 rupees.
4. Most Afghans cannot even afford to buy the prescriptions the doctors
write for them and their children. Many go out into the street, holding
their prescriptions and begging people to give them money to buy the
medications for their children.
5. The 400-bed children's hospital has a diesel powered heating system
which is operational, but they cannot afford to run it in winter as
fuel costs 15000 Afghan rupees (about CDN$30 per hour) to run it. Temperatures
can dip to -15 deg celsius or colder.
6. There are schools in Laghman province which teach women employable
skills such as sewing, and weaving. Other schools run by western NGOs
were closed by the Taliban because they refused to segregate males/females
or operate under the rules of Islam. There are many girl schools operating
in Afghanistan.
7. With regards to daily life, I saw countless women walking freely
in the markets alone or with their children, unaccompanied by any male
escort.Many were even wearing high heel shoes. None were being stoned
or beaten.
8. I saw many women who were not wearing the burqa (head and body covering
with a net opening over the face) but were wearing colourful head scarves
that would also cover their mouths and upper body. They were not beaten
or stoned.
9. I did not see any windows that were painted to prevent women from
being seen. Afghan homes are not built the same as western homes. Almost
all Afghani homes are surrounded by a tall external mud/straw wall which
provides the ultimate privacy to homes and families. Afghans are very
private people and do not like others looking in on them, especially
women.
10. There is great poverty in Afghanistan and I saw many suffering
men,women and children. Families are selling their household belongings
(furniture, clothes, utensils, cooking pots) to help them buy food for
their families. Once they can't sell anything more, they are forced
to beg in the streets.
11. While there were many people forced to beg in Afghanistan, one
must remember that begging is not a problem restricted to Afghanistan.
12. Kidnappings, rapes, prostitution, robberies, and murders committed
by bandits and dacoits were rampant in Afghanistan in the years after
the Russians retreated. When the Taliban took control, all 41 brothels
in Kabul were closed and the bandits fled to neighboring countries for
refuge (i.e.,Pakistan, Iran). Afghans now freely travel even at night.
13. The Taliban have instituted strict Islamic shariah in Afghanistan.
They have closed cinemas, prohibited the photography in any form of
live people, banned gambling, prostitution, etc. They "enforce" morality
on their people.
14.The UN confirms severe drought conditions for Afghanistan for the
next two years. Rivers that run turbines to generate electricity are
almost dried out. As a result, electricity is only available for 5-6
hours during the day.
15.The Afghan infrastructure is almost completely destroyed from war.
There are almost no jobs. Only now are some of the major roads linking
the major cities being repaired.
The Afghan people gave 1.8 million lives to gain their freedom to their
land and religion from the Russians. The suffering is indeed great.
The Taliban may not be the most perfect government around but we must
not ignore the needs of the Afghan people, particularly the many widows
and children. Messages like the one below not only help to propogate
false information but can also hurt the innocent people it is trying
to help (e.g., through further UN sanctions and restrictions.)
I challenge everyone who has signed this list to go to Afghanistan
themselves, just as I did. See for yourself whether the allegations
in the message below are true or not. See the magnitude of the poverty
and the suffering which is partly being caused by messages like the
one below which is being conveniently p! ropogated through the internet.
Try to open your mind to the "big picture" and only after seeing the
hard facts and evidence,deecide whether you should support this petition.
Let's try to use our energies to help those who are suffering the most
-i.e., the widows and orphans. I am working with Health and Education
Projects International, based in Ottawa, Canada which is running a number
of projects for women and children. In the next few weeks I will be
helping to set up the following projects with them:
A) Physician/Nurse income supplementation fund - to help retain existing
health care staff (believe it or not, the main objective is $10 per
month per physician which can make a big difference).
B) Regular shipments of primary care medications and supplies and equipment
to be sent every 6 months through an agreement to be negotiated with
the Canadian military. To be sent to the Jalabad Public Hospital and
the Indira Gandhi Children's Hospital in Kabul.
C) Regular shipments of donated shoes, sweaters, blankets and sleeping
bags (as Kabul gets very cold in winter and heating is extremely expensive)
D) A fund to help hospitals purchase adequate cleaning supplies and
hire cleaning staff.
E) A fund to purchase milk cows to help feed the needy.
I welcome anyone to contact me regarding questions or requests for
documentation and/or video footage. And, oh yes, please copy and forward
this message to as many people as possible.
Raza M. Khan, BSc, MD, CCFP.
Family Physician.
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