Tortured Child Bride, 15, Rescued From Toilet Prison After Husband's Family Mutilated Her For Refusing To Work As Prostitute
No one should be surprised by this.
It's in the quran. "Good women are obedient....As for those from whom
you fear disobedience, admonish them and send them to beds apart and
beat them." -- quran 4:34
And the child marriage is in imitation of the prophet Moe's consummation of his marriage to Aisha when he was 54 and she was nine.
So women are being treated as commodities in Afghanistan? And what else is new?
The tortured child bride: Horrific ordeal of Afghan girl, 15, rescued from toilet prison after husband's family mutilated her for refusing to work as a prostitute Daily Mail (hat tip Sophie)
Cruel: Sahar Gul was brutally tortured by her husband's family. The
15-year-old was burned with cigarettes and had chunks of her flesh cut
out with pliers
And the child marriage is in imitation of the prophet Moe's consummation of his marriage to Aisha when he was 54 and she was nine.
So women are being treated as commodities in Afghanistan? And what else is new?
The tortured child bride: Horrific ordeal of Afghan girl, 15, rescued from toilet prison after husband's family mutilated her for refusing to work as a prostitute Daily Mail (hat tip Sophie)
A teenage Afghan girl was brutally
tortured, beaten and locked in a toilet by her husband's family for five
months after she refused to become a prostitute, it emerged today.
Sahar Gul, 15, was in critical
condition when she was rescued from a house in northern Baghlan
province last week, after her neighbours reported hearing Miss Gul
crying and moaning in pain.
According to police in Baghlan, her
in-laws pulled out her nails and hair, and locked her in a dark
basement bathroom for about five months, with barely enough food and
water to survive.
Disgusting: According to police in Baghlan, Sahar Gul's in-laws
pulled out her nails and hair, and locked her in a dark basement
bathroom for about five months, with barely enough food and water to
survive
Her husband's family also burned the teenager with cigarettes and cut out chunks of her flesh with pliers.
Despite being barely able to speak, Miss Gul managed to tell media about the terrifying ordeal.
'For several months I was locked up in a toilet by my in-laws and particularly my mother-in-law,' she said.
'I was denied food and water. I was tortured and beaten.'
Doctors say the youngster has suffered both mentally and physically and will need weeks of treatment in order to recover.
'She was married seven months ago,
and was originally from Badakhshan province. Her in-laws tried to force
her into prostitution to earn money,' Rahima Zarifi, head of women's
affairs in Baghlan told Reuters.
Upsetting: Sahar Gul was kept in a terrible condition by her husband's family, who tortured and beat her
Dreadful: Sahar Gul's appalling physical condition shortly after she was rescued can be seen in this image
Distressing: This picture shows how frail the teenager was when taken into hospital following her rescue
Miss Gul is covered in scars and bruises, with one eye still swollen shut six days after her rescue.
She is being treated in a government hospital in Kabul, but she may have to be sent to India, doctors said.
'This is one of the worst cases of
violence against Afghan women. The perpetrators must be punished so
others learn a lesson,' health minister Suraya Dalil told journalists
after visiting Miss Gul today with the women's affairs minister.
Mohammad Zia, a senior police
official in Baghlan, who helped to rescue the girl, said Miss Gul's
mother-in-law and sister-in-law have been detained, but her husband and
father-in-law had escaped.
'We have launched a serious hunt to get her husband and the others involved,' Mr Zia said.
Action needed: Afghanistan's acting minister of public health Suraya
Dalil, left, and the caretaker minister for women's affairs Dr Husn
Banu Ghazanfar visit Sahar Gul in hospital
Recovery: Sahar Gul is being treated in a government hospital in Kabul, but doctors have said she may have to be sent to India
Despite progress in women's rights
and freedom since the fall of the Taliban 10 years ago, women
throughout the country are still at risk of abduction, rape, forced
marriage and being traded as commodity.
However it can be hard for women to
escape violent situations at home, because of huge social and sometimes
legal pressure to stay in marriages.
Running away from an abusive husband
or a forced marriage are considered 'moral crimes,' for which women
are currently imprisoned in Afghanistan.
Some rape victims have also been
imprisoned, because sex outside marriage, even when the woman is
forced, is considered adultery, another 'moral crime.'
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