Add new comment

Struggling for women’s rights across Asia

A step back in Afghanistan, but women and men continue to fight against oppression by radical conservatives.

The rights of women are one aspect of our world that has undergone a change for the better over the course of the last few centuries.  The teachings of religious dogma and the entrenchment of patriarchal governmental structures have been the chief enemies, but one by one the people of the world are making it known that they desire change.  A more modern society means more humanistic views, which in turn means treating women with the same respect that men have historically demanded.  This is not to say that the state of women’s rights is perfect by any means, but some places are distinctively better than others.  This contrast becomes obvious when one looks at the state of affairs in many parts of Asia, particularly conservative Muslim countries.  By still adhering to outdated religious laws, these countries seek to hold on to the past and prevent the natural progression of freedoms from taking root.  This week, Afghanistan saw their struggle for more rights temporarily halted, though other places in Asia let the world know that they will continue their fight until the scales are set to balance.

When the Taliban ruled the country of Afghanistan, they were notoriously backwards in their beliefs of what women should or should not be allowed to do.  Their ultra-conservative religious viewpoint put men first and foremost and relegated women to a status that is more in line with property and very similar to slavery.  Women were objects with specific functions, those functions meant to make men’s lives easier.  Under that oppressive regime, women were not even allowed to work or go to school.

Though the government moved into the hands of more forward-thinking individuals, there are still many religious conservatives holding the reigns of power in this primarily Muslim country.  A law was put into place in 2009 by the current president of Afghanistan that provided many rights for women as well as enacting punishment for men who treated women as less than human.  That law, however, was only put into effect due to a presidential decree and 2014 will see the election of a new president.  If that president decides to pander to conservative elements in the government, the law could end up dumped, setting the country back in its ongoing struggle.

In order to prevent this, a call for parliament to review the decree and establish it as a proper law was made.  But those in parliament decided that they did not share the same views as the president and pushed it into limbo once more.  Some of the points that came into question and were not agreeable to all members of parliament include the set legal marriage age of 16 for women, the establishment of domestic abuse shelters (which one individual claimed were morally corrupt and filled with prostitutes and immoral women), the limitation of the number of wives to two, the criminalization of domestic violence, the criminalization of buying and selling women and the protection of women from being prosecuted for adultery when raped.

Thankfully, pushing the decree aside means that it’s still in effect, but the danger of it being shut down by some ultra-conservative faction within the government still exists.  And though many see the question of women’s rights as primarily a humanistic one, it seems to me that even the religious side of the debate would see the practical advantage and logic in giving women as much power as possible.

To put out the argument in a pragmatic way, women are, as has been proved time and time again, a great source of creativity and intellectual thought.  Allowing women to have as many rights as men is not only morally correct, but incredibly progressive to a society as a whole.  The old ideals of religion must be broken down for the transition to work, but the end result is a country that thinks more, produces more and demands more respect on the world stage.

It always amazes me that people in a position of power would think so short-sightedly as to demand that things in their life never change, even if it means risking the future of their country.  What stops them is the fear - fear of not being able to control women when they see the need to, fear that women will try to change things to balance society and thus steal away power and influence from men, and fear that women will have the ability to retaliate legally against men should those men fail to maintain proper control of themselves.

Luckily, it’s not all doom and gloom for women’s rights in Asia.  Other countries, some of them with predominantly Muslim populations, are dedicated to continuing the fight.  In Pakistan, where the problem of women being prevented from voting (as is their constitutional right) is prevalent, people are standing up to enable more protection so that women can safely get to and use the polls.  In Bangladesh, supporters of women’s rights are rallying for protection and demanding that the government does not pander to Islamic hard-liners.  And in India, one Bollywood star is pushing a campaign to bring more men into the fight for women’s rights - a very important factor to enabling change in a country that has been male-dominated for so many centuries.

So not all is bad.  Women’s rights are an inevitable part of our changing world, a world where everyone is needed and all freedoms are becoming important.  It is only natural that antiquated views such as sexism and racism fall by the wayside as we make progress as a species.  Some may fight the change, but every year there are less and less of those people.  To fight against social evolution is as futile as trying to defy gravity by jumping into the air over and over.  Now if only we could get the ignorant of our world to learn this lesson a bit quicker, we could get on with improving the human race.

Afghanistan Women photo courtesy of Afghanistan Matters via Wikicommons

Anti-Taliban protest photo courtesy of RAWA via Wikicommons

Blog: 
Eyes on the East
Interest categories: 

Filtered HTML

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><p><br>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

shout_filter

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.