RAWA wants separation
of religion from state
Dawn, March 18, 2003
Bureau Report
PESHAWAR, March 17: The
Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA) has said that
unless religion is separated from the state, Afghanistan cannot make progress
in the socio-economic field.
Speaking at a gathering
organized by RAWA in connection with the International Women Day on Monday,
RAWA leaders said that Karzai government was a continuum of the successive
despotic Afghan regimes. The lawlessness in Afghanistan was a carry-over of the
jingoism syndrome, they said.
They observed that Afghan
women could enjoy their basic rights and freedom in a true democratic
deposition based on secular and liberal values. RAWA leaders pledged that they
would continue their struggle against all forms of exploitation and for the
establishment of the people's democracy in Afghanistan.
They criticized the political
role of the Northern Alliance - a main shareholder in political power in Kabul
- for its anti-women, anti-democratic and inhuman role in the country.
Referring to the Iraq crisis,
they said Saddam Hussain was accountable to his people, who had been braving
against the cruel policies of the dictator. They said RAWA was opposed to
terrorism whether it was unleashed by individual, groups or state.
Humaira Jan of RAWA said that
democracy without secularism was incomplete as human rights were guaranteed
only in a secular state.
She said that as an eyewash
just a few women were made ministers by the present Afghan government but in
true sense they didn't represent the Afghan women.
Marina Mateen told Dawn that
whether it was Taliban regime or Northern Alliance both looted the country of
its freedom and the women of their due rights. Both were fundamentalists and
puppets in the hands of outsiders.
Expressing solidarity with
RAWA, Awami National Party information secretary Haji Mohammad Adeel said that
his party would continue to support the association's struggle for the
womenfolk.
He praised RAWA's role against
the Taliban and said that it had been a main part of democratic struggle
against the obscurantism and fundamentalism in Afghanistan.
The Afghans, he said, had
luckily dethroned the fundamentalists and paved a way for the fragile democracy
which needed to be strengthened. The deserter Taliban, he claimed, had made
NWFP the next target of their activities, he added.
He lashed out at the six-party
religious alliance, Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal for enforcing a Taliban-style
system in the province in the name of Shariat.
Speaking on the occasion, MPA
Sikandar Hayat Khan Sherpao, a central leader of PPP (Sherpao), lauded Rawa's
struggle and assured his party's support.
He said: "Afghanistan is
back on the track of reconstruction, economic development and progress."
He hoped that the repatriation
of Afghan refugees would pave way for the peaceful their rehabilitation. The
new Afghan government needed the support of developed countries to bring back
prosperity to the country, he added.
A central leader of the PPP
(Sherpao), Senator Aneesa Zeb Tahirkheli also praised the efforts of Rawa for
its poor and war- affected people.
Afzal Khamoosh, general
secretary of the Communist Mazdoor Kisan Party, also spoke on the occasion.
Afghan
school children presented revolutionary songs and Sheema Kirmani, a famous
classical dancer, performed the women struggle in the light of poetry.
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Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA)
Mailing Address: RAWA, P.O.Box 374, Quetta, Pakistan
Mobile: 0092-300-8551638
Fax: 001-760-2819855
E-mail: rawa@rawa.org
Home Page: http://www.rawa.org
Mirror site: http://rawa.fancymarketing.net