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More Afghan women are being imprisoned on murder charges

More than a fourth of all women serving prison time are there on murder convictions


Afghan women are being increasingly jailed on murder charges. Officials say that more than a quarter of the 700 women in prison are serving murder sentences.

Women in Afghanistan have are frequently jailed in cases of adultery, robbery, abduction and narcotics smuggling.

Women in Afghanistan have are frequently jailed in cases of adultery, robbery, abduction and narcotics smuggling.

LOS ANGELES, CA (Catholic Online) - Gen. Amir Mohammad Jamshed, chief of the Afghan Prison and Detention Centers says that these numbers continue to increase. There are 34 prisons in the country with a total of 24,613 inmates.

"The number of prisoners increases every year by 24 percent. The number of women charged with murder shows much increase. Murder tops the crimes by women," he told journalists.

Women have also been jailed in cases of adultery, robbery, abduction and narcotics smuggling. "The crimes have causes," Gen. Jamshed says.

Among the myriad reasons for this high incarceration rate, he lists the practice of forced marriages and the vast disparity in age between husband and wife. "Poverty can be counted as the cause of problems in the community," he adds.

While many have been arrested on murder charges, most crimes of murder involving women are found in a few provinces, such as Herat and the Northern Provinces like Balkh, Baghlan and Jawzjan.

Many say they have been railroaded into serving prison sentences due to the faulty court system. Sixty-year-old Sayera says her daughter-in-law committed suicide after two years of marriage. According to her, the daughter-in-law set herself aflame after pouring oil on herself.

"Many of our family members were jailed on the accusation of killing her. Some people were released. I have been in prison for one-and-a-half years. I am accused of killing my daughter-in-law and burning her body. That is a lie. I am innocent."

The woman says her neighbors have given false evidence.

"Nooria" says she killed her brother-in-law in self-defense. "My husband lived out of the country. I killed my brother-in-law because he had an evil eye on me in my husband's absence," she says.

She says she attacked her brother-in-law with a kitchen knife because he was going to sexually assault her.

Mohammad Zaher Zaher, head of the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of Kabul province believes there is no significant increase in the murder rates. "The crime figures are normal. No difference, either in terms of increasing or decreasing has been seen in the past few years."

He says his department has investigated only three murder crimes by women, significantly less than crimes perpetrated by men.

Women turn criminals, in his opinion, are borne out of "compulsion and life problems." He believes women criminals "live with violent men or are victims of violence by men," saying the "level of violence against women is high but still women generally are compassionate . if they perpetrate crime it is due to compulsion and life problems."

A version of this story was first published by Inter Press Service news agency.

© 2012, Catholic Online. Distributed by NEWS CONSORTIUM.

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Pope Benedict XVI's Prayer Intentions for January 2013
General Intention:
The Faith of Christians. That in this Year of Faith Christians may deepen their knowledge of the mystery of Christ and witness joyfully to the gift of faith in him.
Missionary Intention: Middle Eastern Christians. That the Christian communities of the Middle East, often discriminated against, may receive from the Holy Spirit the strength of fidelity and perseverance.

Keywords: Afghanistan, women, women criminals, murder charges, forced marriages

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1 - 3 of 3 Comments

  1. Jim
    7 months ago

    @Patrick: Did you consider that maybe the extreme poverty, ignorance, and corruption is what leads people in general to war against each other. I don't think either as a whole is to "blame." Much of the problems in the Middle East result from the polygamist culture. Everyone is a cash cow in someway. Whether I could or not I cannot never imagine wanting to be responsible for more than one spouse. It would be too much of burden on me and too emotionally draining. I'm not saying the unjust treatment of women is to be condoned but an "eye for an eye" leaves everyone blind.

  2. Patrick
    7 months ago

    Jim, I have to disagree with you. The culture in Afghanistan as well as much of the Islamic world is so anti-woman that they are seen as nothing more than chattel. This is all part of the culture (and dare I say religion) that views women as a temptation, and if a man commits a wrong against a woman, then the woman must have driven him to it through her temptation. When a culture and legal system can jail a woman and give her the death penalty for "adultery" when she is raped unless 3 men corroborate that rape (those men are most likely involved, so you know they aren't going to incriminate themselves), women can become desperate and act violently. A woman acting out of self defense will usually end up in jail on murder charges even if it is truly self defense. It is easy to see how this could constitute "life problems" that drive women to violence.

  3. Jim
    7 months ago

    "Women turn criminals, in his opinion, are borne out of "compulsion and life problems." He believes women criminals "live with violent men or are victims of violence by men," saying the "level of violence against women is high but still women generally are compassionate . if they perpetrate crime it is due to compulsion and life problems.""

    I love this! Nothing like the good old blame game. Does he not think maybe men turn criminals out of desperation too? Always blaming men for women's problems. When women start taking responsibility for their own actions then they will be taken seriously.

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