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International-UN-NGOs
Women go 'missing' by the millions
2006-03-26
by Ayaan Hirsi Ali

As I was preparing for this article, I asked a friend who is Jewish if it was appropriate to use the term "holocaust" to portray the worldwide violence against women. He was startled. But when I read him the figures in a 2004 policy paper published by the Geneva Center for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces, he said yes, without hesitation.

One United Nations estimate says from 113 million to 200 million women around the world are demographically "missing." Every year, from 1.5 million to 3 million women and girls lose their lives as a result of gender-based violence or neglect.

How could this possibly be true? Here are some of the factors:

In countries where the birth of a boy is considered a gift and the birth of a girl a curse from the gods, selective abortion and infanticide eliminate female babies.

Young girls die disproportionately from neglect because food and medical attention is given first to brothers, fathers, husbands and sons.

In countries where women are considered the property of men, their fathers and brothers can murder them for choosing their own sexual partners. These are called "honor" killings, though honor has nothing to do with it.

Young brides are killed if their fathers do not pay sufficient money to the men who have married them. These are called "dowry deaths," although they are not just deaths, they are murders.

The brutal international sex trade in young girls kills uncounted numbers of them.

Domestic violence is a major cause of death of women in every country.

So little value is placed on women's health that every year roughly 600,000 women die giving birth.

Six thousand girls undergo genital mutilation every day, according to the World Health Organization. Many die; others live the rest of their lives in crippling pain.

According to the WHO, one woman out of every five worldwide is likely to be a victim of rape or attempted rape in her lifetime.

What is happening to women and girls in many places across the globe is genocide. All the victims scream their suffering. It is not so much that the world doesn't hear them; it is that fellow human beings choose not to pay attention.

It is much more comfortable for us to ignore these issues. And by "us," I also mean women. Too often, we are the first to look away. We may even participate, by favoring our sons and neglecting the care of our daughters. All these figures are estimates; registering precise numbers for violence against women is not a priority in most countries.

Going forward, there are three challenges:

Women are not organized or united. Those of us in rich countries, who have attained equality under the law, need to mobilize to assist our fellows. Only our outrage and our political pressure can lead to change.

The Islamists are engaged in reviving and spreading a brutal and retrograde body of laws. Wherever the Islamists implement Shariah, or Islamic law, women are hounded from the public arena, denied education and forced into a life of domestic slavery.

Cultural and moral relativists sap our sense of moral outrage by claiming that human rights are a Western invention. Men who abuse women rarely fail to use the vocabulary the relativists have provided them. They claim the right to adhere to an alternative set of values - an "Asian," "African" or "Islamic" approach to human rights.

This mind-set needs to be broken. A culture that carves the genitals of young girls, hobbles their minds and justifies their physical oppression is not equal to a culture that believes women have the same rights as men.

Three initial steps could be taken by world leaders to begin eradicating the mass murder of women:

A tribunal such as the court of justice in The Hague should look for the 113 million to 200 million women and girls who are missing.

A serious international effort must urgently be made to precisely register violence against girls and women, country by country.

We need a worldwide campaign to reform cultures that permit this kind of crime. Let's start to name them and shame them.

In the past two centuries, those in the West have gradually changed the way they treat women. As a result, the West enjoys greater peace and progress. It is my hope that the third world will embark on this effort. Just as we put an end to slavery, we must end the gendercide.

(Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali-born Dutch legislator, lives under 24-hour protection because of death threats against her by Islamic radicals since the murder of Theo van Gogh, with whom she made the film "Submission" about women and Islam.)

This woman has displayed more resolve in the struggle to preserve the values of Western civilization than any other European legislator that I'm aware of. If only more politicians - there and here - had her gonads!
Posted by:ryuge

#6  I'm not sure if Asia or Africa is the worst, both are terrible. But if these nombers are even close, and they don't mention the child trafficking horrors, it is something that needs action. Identify the countries that condone this and embargo them through the UN for starters.
Posted by: 49 Pan   2006-03-26 19:54  

#5  The biggest forest is Islam. There are other woods as well. But Islam's the biggie. Let's start there.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412   2006-03-26 16:48  

#4  Even to a cynic like me this is appalling. While we read the individual cases here, it's sor t of like the 14 year olds in the hills of Appalachia who get married. It happens, but how much is there? Some times it's good to see the tree, sometimes it's good to see the forest.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2006-03-26 09:38  

#3  That mnay be true, Glenmore, but those are real, live women and girls being beaten, kidnapped, gang raped and killed.

Not just some bloodless statistic about comparative demographics.
Posted by: lotp   2006-03-26 09:35  

#2  Legal standards at The Hague, impose "command responsibility" on leaders and military officers and oblige "prevention and punishment" of offenders of the Genocide Convention, etc. That mechanism could assist the war against women. The problem is: the authority of international law tribunals is based on a "statute of the tribunal," which is enforceable only when trial participants are prepared to back that statute with their own statute, as in the Nuremburg War Crimes Trials. The US participates on a case by case basis, where the cause is judged to be right, as in the Slobo case. The US doesn't accept Tribunal sovereignty over US law, because that would enable arbitrary enforcement of successful moonbat claims. Numerous Israelis cannot travel in Europe because specious ex parte indictments for "war crimes" have been issued, and the EU states are under obligation to prosecute. The EU turns a blind eye to general Arab oppression of women, unless the oppressor is pro-US, because Arabs are a protected minority in Europe. All persons are equal, but Arabs are more-equal than women.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs   2006-03-26 09:08  

#1  "we must end the gendercide."

Maybe it's the species' natural means of population control? You have to eliminate a LOT more men to have the same long-term population limiting effect. The sub-groups she cites as examples of 'gendercide' seem to have a significant correlation with the groups with the highest/most rapidly growing overpopulation (and the least 'civilization'.)
Posted by: Glenmore   2006-03-26 08:52  

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