News from the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA)
RAWA News
News from the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA)
RAWA News


 

 

 





 


 


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  • March 15, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Ravages Of War: Afghanistan’s Paghman Gardens Before And After
    RFE/RL: In early February, “Picture This” ran a photo gallery titled “Afghanistan As It Once Was.” The photographs were taken in Kabul in the late 1960s by William Podlich, a professor at Arizona State University. Podlich, a camera buff, spent two years in Afghanistan -- teaching and taking pictures. His daughter, Peg Podlich, was kind enough to share some of her father’s photos with RFE/RL.      Full news...

  • March 13, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    There was no peace for civilians
    The Killid Group: Nahoor in Ghazni province is picture postcard pretty. With plentiful water from streams and rain, it is green. There are orchards of apricots, plums, prunes and other fruit. Three decades ago it was the site of a bloodbath. Seventy-year-old Abdul Husain is a witness. From Deh Afghan, a village in Nahoor district, he says the scars left by war have not healed.      Full news...

  • March 12, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Analysis: Afghan women navigate a challenging judicial landscape
    IRIN: Sadaf Ahmadi*, 18, from the northern Afghan province of Badakshan, has arrived battered and bruised at a women’s refuge centre in Faizabad. It is her fifth such visit. Every time it is the same. Staff at the centre, run by Women for Women, an Afghan NGO, try to offer support, but every previous time local community leaders or the government courts send her back to her husband and the beatings continue.      Full news...

  • March 11, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    2 civilians dead in ISAF firing in Kabul
    PAN: Foreign troops opened fire at a private truck, killing its two occupants in the Deh Sabz district of central Kabul province, an official said on Monday. The incident occurred at 10:30am when the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) personnel fired shots at the vehicle of a private firm responsible for providing maintenance support to police, the Ministry of Interior spokesman, Gulam Siaddique Siddiqui, told Pajhwok Afghan News.      Full news...


  • March 10, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Sharp increase in violence against women
    PAN: Violence against women has dramatically increased in eastern provinces, where 220 cases were registered since the start of this year, compared to 40 incidents during the same period in 2012, officials said on Sunday. Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC)’s women wing head for eastern provinces, Sabrina, told a gathering marking the international women’s day, there were a total of 170 incidents...      Full news...

  • March 9, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Eight Children killed in Khost blast
    PAN: Eight children and one policeman were killed on Saturday when a suicide attacker blew up his explosives on a road beside a joint patrol of Afghan police and international forces in this capital city of southeastern Khost province, an official said. The strike around 10:30am targeted the joint Afghan-US patrol in the Kandi area on Khost City’s outskirts, but eight passing civilians were killed...      Full news...

  • March 8, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    International women’s day: a voice from Kabul, Afghanistan
    The Guardian: When I got married at the age of 14, I didn’t know that my husband used drugs. When I asked him why he was using heroin, he told me lies – he told me that he just smoked cigarettes, not that he was addicted to drugs. When he came home after he used drugs, he would usually beat me. Sometimes he would disappear for months at a time.      Full news...

  • March 8, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Unsolved murder highlights plight of Afghan women
    AFP: Afghan teenager Shakila was shot in the back 13 months ago in the house where she worked as a maid for a wealthy local leader in one of the most progressive provinces of Afghanistan. Her murderer has never been arrested, and her family’s search for justice has laid bare the complex web of grinding poverty, attitudes towards women and a culture of immunity that plagues much of the country’s legal system.      Full news...

  • March 6, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Paris-based watchdog calls for journalists’ safety
    PAN: Two radio stations have been closed and at least a dozen journalists arrested or attacked by police in various parts of Afghanistan since the start of the current year, an international group said on Wednesday. Voicing its concern about an increase in harassment and violence against journalists and sanctions against news media, Reporters Without Borders said...      Full news...

  • March 5, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghanistan: Atrocity against Civilians. The Fiction of US Troop Withdrawal
    Global Research: On March 1, a U.S./NATO helicopter gunship killed two Afghan brothers, seven and eight years of age, as they tended cattle in Uruzgan province. According to reports from residents, the boys were listening to a radio, which the helicopter crew interpreted as “radio signals” from Afghan resistance fighters. The latest killing comes amidst a series of atrocities against civilians that has further enflamed opposition to the ongoing occupation.      Full news...

  • March 4, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Another “One-Tenth of a Newtown” in Afghanistan
    The Nation: Two more children dead in Afghanistan, thanks to an American airstrike. The war is winding down, but try telling that to the families of the children blown to pieces by mistake. Unless you’ve been reading news accounts closely, you probably missed the story: Two boys out collecting firewood with their donkeys were killed by weapons fired from a NATO helicopter, Afghan and American military officials announced Saturday.      Full news...

  • March 4, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Inside Afghanistan’s ‘appalling’ refugee camps
    Channel 4 News: It has come to this. A woman sits in the mud and puddles. The snow falls relentlessly. It is minus 6 degrees, even at 11 in the morning. But sit here she must. If she moves suddenly, she will be hit, for she sits in the middle of the road and covered head to foot in the blue burkha. Her vision is restricted ahead and her peripheral vision is non-existent.      Full news...

  • March 2, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Two Afghan boys killed by NATO troops
    Reuters: NATO forces accidentally shot dead two boys during an operation in Afghanistan’s south, the alliance said on Saturday, in the latest in a series of incidents involving allegations of civilian deaths at the hands of international troops. The two boys were shot dead when they were mistaken for insurgents during an operation in the northwest of Uruzgan on February 28, ISAF commander, U.S. General Joseph Dunford, said in a statement.      Full news...

  • March 2, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    In Afghanistan women fleeing violence face jail terms
    Digital Journal: Even though the Taliban government in Afghanistan fell more than ten years ago, the justice system is still discriminatory in its treatment of women as is the legal system. Al Jazeera reporter, Jennifer Glasse reports from Herat at a women’s jail. Many Afghan women are in jail for fleeing domestic abuse or violence.      Full news...

  • February 28, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghan police force “drug-addled that kidnaps locals and sells its weapons”
    The Sunday Times: Handing over security operations in Afghanistan to the Afghans is “proceeding very well”, Philip Hammond, the defence secretary, said on a recent visit to Helmand. “The Afghans are developing capabilities faster than we expected.” He was echoing the unbridled optimism of many British and American officials. Having just returned from five weeks in Sangin — the most violent district in Afghanistan’s most violent province — I cannot see any reason for such optimism.      Full news...

  • February 26, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Is the US maintaining death squads and torture militias in Afghanistan?
    The Guardian: In 2010, as WikiLeaks published hundreds of thousands of classified documents relating to the conduct of the US government, government defenders dismissively claimed that they revealed nothing new. Among the many documents disproving that claim were ones relating to a US policy in Iraq set forth in “Frago 242”, which ordered coalition troops not to stop or even investigate torture and other war crimes by the Iraqi forces they were training, but simply to “note” them.      Full news...


  • February 22, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Combined forces kill 4 civilians
    Pak Tribune: Combined force allegedly killed four civilians in Kunduz district, capital of northern Kunduz province on Thursday, local resident said. Afghan and foreign forces raided the house of a local resident, Saifur Rahman, at approximately 1:30 a.m. (local time), killing him, his two sons, Dilarwa and 18-year-old Hayatullah...      Full news...

  • February 21, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Man Murders Wife With Razor
    A man has murdered his wife with a razor blade after prolonged domestic quarrels arising from financial difficulties, Kabul Police officials said Thursday. “This heart-wrenching and tragic incident took place in Zone 7 of Kabul city. The people of the area informed us, and the police reached the area within a short time and arrested the man before he managed to escape,”...      Full news...

  • February 20, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Insurgent violence against women, girls in Afghanistan jumps 20% - UN
    RT: Violence against women and girls in Afghanistan is growing. A UN report says crimes against females jumped by 20 per cent last year, adding that the Taliban and other insurgent groups were responsible for 81 per cent of civilian casualties in 2012. The annual report on the Protection of Civilians in armed conflict, released Tuesday, said that more than 300 women and girls were killed in 2012 as a result of targeted killings by insurgents.      Full news...

  • February 19, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghan President: Beating wives is the “law of all Muslims and all Afghans”
    Examiner.com: Hamid Karzai, president of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, has endorsed the nation’s Ulema Council’s ruling in accordance with Islamic Sharia Law that approves of wife beating and the forced segregation of the sexes. As reported by the Associated Press via the Washington Post, Karzai’s endorsement is part of his national reconciliation outreach to the Taliban.      Full news...


  • February 18, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Taliban flog Ghor couple on adultery charges
    PAN: A 30-year-old woman, a relative of a former Taliban governor, was publicly whipped by the rebels for having alleged sexual relations with a man who received 27 lashes before being expelled from western Ghor province, officials said on Monday. The whipping took place in Gurgin village of Charsada district late on Friday, a provincial high peace council member, Nasrullah, told Pajhwok Afghan News.      Full news...

  • February 17, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Woman beheaded in Jawzjan
    PAN: A woman was beheaded by unidentified men inside her house in the northern province of Jawzjan, officials said on Sunday. The incident occurred on Sunday morning soon after the husband of the 27-year-old left home, the administrative head of Khoshab district, Mohammad Zahir Nazari, told Pajhwok Afghan News.      Full news...

  • February 16, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghan warlord Hekmatyar send out curse to democracy in Afghanistan
    Khaama Press: Gulbuddin Hekmatyar Afghan warlord and founder of Hezb-e-Islami (Islamic Party of Afghanistan) said around 1000 people were killed during the Afghan civil war and denied to agree with the current Afghan institution, democracy and freedom of speech. While speaking during an exclusive interiew with the 1TV Gulbuddin Hekmatyar said he sends out curse to the current democracy in Afghanistan.      Full news...

  • February 15, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghanistan the most dangerous country for journalists: CPJ
    Khaama Press: Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) expressed concerns regarding the working condition of Afghan journalists. According to the new report of CPJ there are no reports regarding the casualties of Afghan journalists from 2005, and Afghanistan is one of the dangerous place for the journalists.      Full news...

  • February 13, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    NATO airstrike kills 10 civilians, Afghans say
    The Associated Press: A NATO airstrike struck two houses, killing 10 Afghan civilians and four insurgents near the Pakistani border, officials said Wednesday. President Hamid Karzai condemned the attack, the latest in a series of civilian casualty reports that have raised tensions between the Afghans and the U.S.-led foreign forces.      Full news...


  • February 12, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    7 civilians killed, 3 injured in separate attacks by ISAF
    PAN: More than a dozen Taliban fighters were killed during an operation in the Tagab district of central Kapisa province, officials claimed on Tuesday. But a resident alleged six civilians were among the dead. International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) soldiers on Tuesday opened fire on civilians, killing one and injuring three others in the southern province of Kandahar, officials said.      Full news...



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