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I had an inspiration about where Osama bin Laden
might be hiding. But when I visited the women's
detention center in
I did meet Ellaha, a bold 19-year-old prisoner
who startled me by greeting me in English. (Like many Afghans, she uses only
one name.) She had been attending college as a refugee in
Her family returned to
That horrified her family because the patriarchs had decided that she
would marry her cousin. "I didn't agree to marry him," she told me
through an interpreter, "because he is not educated and I don't like his
job - he is a butcher. Plus, he's three years younger than me."
"When it was almost time for me to go to
Ms. Ellaha's younger sister, who had been pledged to another cousin, was facing the same
treatment. After a week of being tied up, the two
sisters agreed to marry their cousins.
"So we went home," Ms. Ellaha added,
"and escaped."
The two sisters moved into a cheap guesthouse as they prepared to flee
On what charge?
"It's because their lives were in danger," said Rana, the head of the detention center. Ms. Ellaha agrees that her family was pretty close to killing
her. The sister is apparently back home, but I was
not allowed to interview her.
The police subjected Ms. Ellaha to a mandatory
virginity test. Fortunately, her hymen was intact, or she would have faced a
prison sentence.
Now she worries that she will be released into
her family's custody and then forced to marry her cousin. If that happens,
she told me, "I will kill myself."
The entire jail is a kaleidoscope of woe. It's
been two years since
Nazilah, 17, had been married to an old man with
tuberculosis who beat her - she was his second wife. She ran away and was picked up by the police. Now the authorities are
figuring out whether they can return her to her husband's family without
getting her killed.
Then there is Sohailla, 18, who says she was
kidnapped for three days by the family of a young man who wanted to marry her
(the police suspect that she went to his house voluntarily). The police
subjected her to a virginity test; after she failed, she got a three-year
sentence for fornication.
Inequality is so deeply embedded in this society
that there are no easy solutions. In a new opinion poll in
The best route to change is new schools, new clinics and more economic
opportunity - and those steps are just what the lack of security is blocking
in much of southern Afghanistan, the most traditional part of the country. Mr.
Bush urgently needs to bolster security in rural areas in the south, so
reconstruction projects can go ahead there. The liberation of
If this sounds like a gloomy assessment, it was reinforced
when I located Ms. Ellaha's father, Said Jamil, a carpenter, and spoke to him on the street in his
He did promise me that he would not beat Ms. Ellaha
or force her to marry her cousin. I asked him to show mercy toward his
daughter, but I have a bad feeling about what lies ahead.
This is how "women are free" in