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Taliban
edicts require that windows in houses that have female occupants
be painted over
United States response
Secretary
of State Albright characterized the Taliban's treatment of women
and girls as "despicable" during her recent visit to the Nasir Bagh
refugee camp in Pakistan. She said "We are opposed to their [the
Taliban] approach to human rights, to their despicable treatment
of women and children, and their lack of respect for human dignity,
in a way more reminiscent of the past than the future."
Promoting the observance of human rights, particularly the rights
of women and girls, is one of our highest foreign policy priorities
in Afghanistan. We will continue to press the Taliban in public
and private, to extend equitable and humanitarian treatment to women
and girls. We call upon the Taliban to lift its restrictions on
the mobility and employment of women and the schooling of girls;
we also call upon the Taliban and all factions to abide by internationally-accepted
norms of human rights.
The United States is neutral toward the various Afghan factions
fighting in that country, but our neutrality does not extend to
violations of international norms of behavior. We condemn Taliban
human rights violations, particularly against women and girls.
The United States does not plan to extend diplomatic recognition
to the Taliban or the Northern Alliance. We do not plan to recognize
any government unless it is broad-based, representative of all Afghans
and respects international norms of behavior in human rights, including
the human rights of women and girls.
The United States has taken a leadership role in the region and
in the United Nations to promote peace in Afghanistan. We believe
the United Nations is central to the peace process and support the
efforts of the Secretary General's Special Envoy, Ambassador Lakhdar
Brahimi, and the work of the United Nations Special Mission to Afghanistan.
We participate in the Group of Six Plus Two (the six countries bordering
Afghanistan: Pakistan, Iran Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan
and China, plus the U.S. and Russia) in a serious attempt to see
how progress can be made toward a peaceful negotiated settlement.
The United States has a commitment to providing humanitarian assistance
to women and girls of Afghanistan. United States officials play
a key role in making the issue of assistance to women in Afghanistan
a major focus of the donors' Afghanistan Support Group. In 1997
the United States government contributed $26.4 million to the United
Nations High Commission on Refugees (UNHCR), the International Committee
of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the World Food Program to run a variety
of programs that directly benefit Afghan women and girls. This was
nearly a quarter of the total funding for the UNHCR and ICRC programs.
In 1997 the United States also provided $1.7 million for non-governmental
organizations such as CARE and the International Rescue Committee
for health and education programs and services. These programs directly
benefit women and girls in Afghanistan and in neighboring refugee
camps in Pakistan.
The United States recently called for an UNHCR investigation of
reports of violence against women and girls in refugee camps in
Pakistan. Due to United States efforts, an investigation is now
underway. United States funding supports UNHCR procedures to provide
protection to women and girls in refugee camps.
New initiatives
The
United States is committing up to $2.5 million in new funds for
women's grass roots organizations in Pakistan and for training to
improve the skills of women in Afghanistan.
In Pakistan, this funding pays for activities such as training health
workers and teachers, and training women's groups to familiarize
themselves with and advocate for their legal rights, and to communicate
with other organizations, locally and internationally. This training
will enable women to provide services in refugee camps, as well
as prepare them with skills that they can take with them when they
eventually return to Afghanistan. Some of the women have been in
these camps for 20 years.
In Afghanistan, this training focuses primarily on health such as
training local women to be community health workers; training women
to be traditional birth attendants; and building the capacity of
the local community to deal with basic health issues, particularly
diseases that affect children. Funding also supports training women
to participate in the development of rural rehabilitation projects.
This will allow them to have a say, for example, in determining
the location of the water well since the women are the ones who
carry the water.
Courtesy
of the Archives of the U.S. State Department
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