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  • Soheila: I did not want to be with him, he had two wives already. My father wanted

  • to take me to Nuristan to get married with that man. As soon as I learned, I ran away

  • with my lover. When my father found me, he put me in prison.

  • [On-screen text: The majority of women in Afghan prisons have committed what

  • courts have deemed "moral crimes."]

  • [They are jailed for refusing arranged marriages, running away from home,

  • marrying without family consent and attempting adultery.]

  • [Title card: Prisoners of Tradition: Women in Afghanistan]

  • Yakta Azad*: Afghanistan is a male-dominated society. Fathers and brothers are the

  • ones who decide every aspect of a woman's life. In the poorest villages, daughters

  • are still sold in marriage for a piece of land or money. Often they can be as young

  • as 9 years old.

  • [On-screen text: In 2004, Afghanistan revised its constitution to include more

  • freedoms and rights for women.]

  • Azad: In theory, Afghan law is very similar to many Western countries, but the

  • reality is radically different.

  • [On-screen text: Gul Ghutai, women’s right’s lawyer]

  • Gul Ghutai: If the husband disappears for more than three years, Afghan law

  • says the wife can go to court and ask for a divorce. But according to Shari’a law,

  • a woman has to wait for her husband for 70 years.

  • The judge will give his verdict with consideration to both Shari’a law and civil

  • law.

  • [On-screen text: Women’s prison in Kabul Inmates: 155]

  • Soheila: They gave me six years of prison, and I have been here for the past 17

  • months.

  • Azad: In exchange for a piece of land, Soheila's father demanded she marry and

  • become the third wife to an older man. Instead, she ran away and married her lover.

  • Her father found her and had her arrested, even though she was pregnant.

  • Born in prison, her son is one of 42 children in Badam Bagh. Prison is the only home

  • many of them know.

  • Soheila: Here I don’t have a life. My child does not have a future. Living in prison is

  • difficult. But if I go to be with my husband, my father will kill me.

  • [On-screen text: Soheila’s husband, Policharki Prison]

  • Soheila’s husband: I think girls should not marry until they are 18, and then they

  • should be able to get married with whomever they like. It is not right that fathers

  • sell their daughters for money!

  • Nobody could have arrested me if I had not gone to the police and handed myself

  • overbut I did it because I love her. I thought it couldn’t be possible that she

  • stays in prison and I be free.

  • [On-screen text: Under Afghan law the legal age for marriage is 16 for women and

  • 18 for men.]

  • [But according to the United Nations, nearly 60 percent of girls are married before

  • they turn 16.]

  • [Soheila’s father]

  • Azad: Soheila’s father still visits her in prison. He says that as soon as she accepts

  • his choice of husband she will be freed. Soheila says he is only thinking about his

  • piece of land.

  • Soheila’s father: Islamic law says an 8-, 9-, 10-year-old girl belongs to whomever

  • the father marries her to. That’s it.

  • [Off-screen question] So the father can marry his daughter to any man, no matter

  • how old he is? Is this the Islamic law?

  • Soheila’s father: Yes.

  • [Off-screen question]: Or is it the law of Afghanistan?

  • Soheila’s father: Afghan law.

  • Azad: Most Afghans don't know a lot about laws, even about Shari’a laws because

  • of the lack of education. In fact, the majority of judges don't have a university

  • education.

  • [On-screen text: Less than one-third of adults in Afghanistan are literate.]

  • Ghutai: In Afghan law, running away from home is not a crime unless it’s in

  • connection with adultery.

  • [On-screen text: Women’s prison in Mazar-e-Sharif Inmates: 69]

  • Azad: But the prison in Mazar-e-Sharif is filled with women who ran away from

  • home. In reality, many were escaping forced marriages or abusive husbands.

  • Latifeh: I went to a male neighbor and begged him to do whatever he could to free

  • me from my husband.

  • [On-screen text: Latifeh, 18]

  • We would fight every night. My husband would put a pillow on my mouth and sit on

  • my head as if he wanted to kill me. Only when I was close to dying did he let me free.

  • My husband was very abusive. I could not tolerate it anymore. If I didn't get married

  • I would have liked to go to school.

  • Azad: Many women fear for their lives when they get out of prison. There are few

  • places they can go to be safe.

  • [On-screen text: Disguised as residential homes, safe houses have been established

  • by NGOs, giving women a chance to escape honor killings by their families.]

  • Samirah: “Don’t come home; your brother will kill you,” my mother hugged me and

  • whispered in my ear when she came and visited me. The real story is we are rich,

  • and he is poor. I say, this is my life! I want to marry him. Still my family didn’t

  • want me to marry him, and in the trials they bribed

  • the judges.

  • In 19 days it will be two years that I have been in the safe house.

  • I think I will be here for the rest of my life. I want to be alone with my sadness.

  • Azad: With no skills, education or a support system outside, once a woman enters a

  • safe house, she finds it difficult to leave.

  • In the 1960s and ’70s, Afghanistan was actually a modern country. Women used to

  • go to universities and had jobs. They could walk around the city with skirts.

  • But once the Taliban came to power, women were forced to wear burqas and were

  • banned from schools and the workplace.

  • Although the Taliban was overthrown in 2001, the effects of fundamentalist rule

  • remain.

  • Today, violence against women is part of the norm in Afghanistan.

  • [On-screen text: The U.N. estimates 70 to 80 percent of marriages in Afghanistan

  • are forced.]

  • [In a 2008 Human Rights Watch survey, 87 percent of women had experienced at

  • least one form of sexual, physical or psychological abuse.]

  • Ghutai: The responsibility of Afghanistan’s society is not just to educate womenit

  • is also to educate men. Many boys from childhood on, when they are 9 or 10 years

  • old, start to work in order to support their families. Once they start to work, nobody

  • pays attention to their education, and they never learn about women’s rights.

  • Azad: What will happen to women when international security forces leave? Many

  • fear a return to Taliban rule. Human rights leaders continue fight for reform so that

  • women in Afghanistan can freely follow their dreams.

Soheila: I did not want to be with him, he had two wives already. My father wanted

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