Afghanistan: Kandahar schoolgirls return to school after November acid attacks
Classrooms at Mirwais School for Girls on the outskirts of Kandahar city were brimming earlier this month as the girls prepared for mid-year exams. One girl told a U.S. reporter that her father urged her to return to school at all costs, even if she is attacked again.
Mr. Qadri's efforts were as much to prove a point to the attackers and would-be copycats: If the goal was to intimidate the girls into staying home, the effort was doomed. Within days of the assault, Mr. Qadri called a series of meetings with parents and teachers. Some of the parents were fed up with the threats and attacks from insurgents. “They were telling us … if we don't [stand up] to this event, the insurgents will kill us and our children [in the next attack],” Mr. Qadri said.
The headmaster also met with government officials, asking for better security and buses for the girls, many of whom walk for kilometres to and from school. So far, those requests have not been met.
Many of the Mirwais students come from families whose parents are illiterate. Despite government efforts to reverse the previous Taliban regime's edict forbidding women and girls from attending school and working outside the home, many people in this conservative province still frown on educating girls.
According to government statistics, girls make up 35 per cent of the 5.7 million students enrolled in school in Afghanistan. By remaining open, the Mirwais school remains a symbol of progress and hope in Kandahar. At first, Mr. Qadri feared the parents would not let their children return. The day after the attack, only a few girls appeared for class, but each day their numbers have increased.
But for some students, the wounds from that morning are still raw. Susan Ibrahimi, 18, remembers walking to school with her mother, also a teacher, when she spotted the men on motorcycles. “They stopped in front of us,” Ms. Ibrahimi said. “They took a thing hidden in some clothes, like a long pistol.” Some of the men tried to lift the women's burkas. Using spray guns, they splashed acid on the fabric, disintegrating the material. Burned and temporarily blinded, the two women ran home.
Susan's sister, Mina, a teacher who had stayed at home that day, said the two women were crying in pain and clutching their faces, which were blotched and red from the attack. Ms. Ibrahimi was the more seriously injured. “They were in a very bad situation,” Mina said. “Susan's face was hidden by her burka but some of the acid reached her face. Her face was red. Some parts of her face were burnt.”
Ms. Ibrahimi was treated at a Kandahar hospital and prescribed medication. When the weather turned colder, pieces of skin began to fall off her face. She has since moved to Kabul for more treatment. Mina said her sister is still too traumatized to resume teaching in Kandahar. The attack appeared to have the hallmarks of a Taliban assault.
Schools, especially those catering to girls, have been targets of insurgent attacks and threats. Police later arrested eight men. One confessed on videotape, saying he was paid by Pakistan's intelligence service. But President Hamid Karzai later told a news conference that no foreign forces were behind the attack.
Mina said she believed the assault was ordered from Pakistan, by people “who don't want us to progress even in education. They want us to be their slaves.” In time, Mina said, her sister will be back at school. “The main thing is knowledge, and knowledge is a beautiful thing for a person.”
30 January 2009
By: Jane Armstrong
Source: The Globe and Mail
BACKGROUND:
25/11/2008: Afghan authorities have arrested 10 Taliban insurgents who threw acid in the faces of schoolgirls in southern Afghanistan, an official said on Tuesday. (International Herald Tribune)
President Hamid Karzai ordered the arrest of the culprits and said they would be executed in public after the attack on eight schoolgirls and four female teachers in the southern city of Kandahar this month. General Mohammad Daud Daud, the deputy interior minister tasked to deal with incident, said authorities had arrested 10 men in recent days in connection to the attack. "The attack was the work of the Taliban and we have not finalised our investigation," Daud told reporters in Kandahar.
The Taliban barred girls from education while they were in power from 1996 until U.S.-led and Afghan forces toppled the hardline Islamist movement in 2001, but the militants denied any involvement in the acid attack.
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