By Sahar Kassaimah
26/1/2001
It is hard to believe or even to imagine that, in a
Muslim country, Muslim women are being banned from
wearing hijab (headscarves), state employees are
banned from wearing beards, and workers can lose
their jobs if they are spotted praying in public.
Women have been banned from wearing hijab at
universities throughout Turkey since the beginning
of 1998, and it is considered a criminal offense
against the law in Tunisia.
These are very crucial matters in the history of
these two countries - one of which is a former
capital of the Khilafah, and the other the land of
the glorious Islamic University Azzeituna.
The same shameful conspiracy is occurring within
both countries - not only against those who have
Islamic political beliefs, but also against anyone
practicing Islam.
Thousands of Muslim women have been expelled from
their work places; and universities, schools and
even hospitals will not admit them. Scenes of police
on campuses removing women students who have refused
to take off their hijab have become all too
familiar.
At the same time, the government regimes have placed
them under an internal economic siege in which they
are facing the intense pressure of being without a
source of income for their families. In some cases,
they succumb - removing their hijab so that they can
provide the basic necessities of life such as food,
shelter, medicine and clothing for their children.
In October 1998, four million protestors
demonstrated in various cities in Turkey in support
of female students who had been suspended from
universities for refusing to remove their hijab. The
police attacked thousands of the demonstrators for
peacefully participating in the protests, which were
staged at night. Many women and young girls were
taken away.
Several journalists, lecturers and students were
charged with treason, and many people were tortured
by the police - even youth at the mere age of 13 and
14 - and treated as if they were criminal suspects.
Political prisoners and prisoners of conscience in
Turkey are not allowed free and open access to their
visitors; they have been forced to speak to them
through a series of bars and reinforced plastic
sheeting.
According to IHRC Rapporteurs, various methods of
torture have been used against some of the prisoners
at the hands of guards, including:
· The use of electric shocks on different parts of
the body, including their genitalia;
· Beating prisoners while they are blindfolded;
· Exposing naked prisoners to winter weather through
open windows after dousing them with cold water;
· Raping women, young girls and even children.
Feliz Beyaz, born in Istanbul in 1975, passed the
university entrance exams in 1996 and was arrested
in 1998 during demonstrations against the banning of
hijab. One week after her release from jail, at half
past midnight, Feliz and her friend died on an
Istanbul highway after being knocked down by the
secret service in a hit and run accident. This
method of murder is common in Turkey.
The following story is that of a young Turkish girl
who has been asked to choose between attending
school and her religious beliefs:
"Today, my school looks at me as [though I am] a
stranger and tells me that I am a stranger. However,
yesterday, I was the owner of these lands. Tomorrow?
I do not know what will happen tomorrow. Will the
corridors of the hospital that I have walked
[through] for many times claim me again? Will the
garden that I have sat for many hours of the guard
nights take me to its bosom?
"Our efforts to save the lives of patients, taking
their blood pressure.... my friends that I have
competed with to take an EGG... My heart beats that
I felt when I first made an IV injection... Will
they take place in my life, again?
"For five years, I have attended this faculty with
the excitement, which I felt the day I first wore
the white clothes... I have become eager by
listening to the dreams my father had about me. I
have striven to see the happiness and pride in my
father's eyes and to take my mother's blessing.
"When I saw the patient losing his life due to lack
of medical care, I decided to work harder and prayed
more. I prayed to Allah not to keep me away from my
way and to let me be a real doctor that helps the
others.
"But suddenly, someone said, "STOP"! You have no
chance to enter here with these clothes, especially
the funny thing you wear on your head. And then the
doors were closed to my face roughly. The police
stopped me entering my school that I had reached by
the first lights of the day.
"My friends that I had shared the same desks for
many years were able to do nothing. The professor
who had been expressing his gladness about my
success to the classroom was, now, at the door near
the policeman. He was sorry... I could see this in
his ashamed eyes. The only thing I can do was to cry
out my innocence.
"I am really sad to see the ugly face of my elders.
But I am not hopeless, I know and I believe that
these days and oppressions will end somehow,
someday. They will become 'memories' from the past."
In Tunisia, the situation of Muslim women is almost
the same as in Turkey despite the claims of
President Ben Ali about his social achievements and
the improvement in the status of women in Tunisia
over the last decade.
In an interview with "Al-Hawadeth" Magazine in 1997,
after the celebration of the 10th anniversary of the
Movement of Change, President Ben Ali said, "In this
respect, we are moving forward, on the basis of a
complementary conception, in such a way as to
safeguard the dignity of women while preserving the
interests of the family and the security of society.
We have been concerned to ensure an equality of
opportunity between men and women and to renew
legislation regulating the sphere of women."
These statements were made while Muslim women
wearing Islamic hijab were being banned from schools
and work places across the country.
Out of a total population of around nine million,
there are more than 3,000 prisoners of conscience -
most of whom are Islamists - and there have been
dozens of deaths due to torture, and food and sleep
derivation.
Human rights organizations have found it
increasingly difficult to carry out their activities
in defense of human rights in Tunisia. The Tunisian
government often targets them, accusing their public
opposition to its widespread violation of human
rights of being against democracy and in favor of
the Islamists.
PCOT defendant Iman Darwiche reported that guards
incited her mental illness by torturing, choking,
and spitting on her, and defecating on her personal
effects. The government does not permit the media or
international organizations to inspect prison
conditions.
The regime targets women purely for their marriages
to or blood relations with Islamists. Violations
against them include harassment, interrogations,
dismissal from work, torture, sexual abuse and rape.
Anyone, including relatives, who assists wives of
prisoners or exiled political opponents is liable to
prosecution.
Many reports have affirmed that Security Services
uses different forms of inhumane torture and
degrading treatment against prisoners of conscience.
The torture includes methods such as electric shock,
cigarette burns, beating them with police batons,
submersion of their heads in water and/or chemicals,
and food and sleep derivation. Other methods of
torture have been used against Islamists in prison
that are hard to describe - even harder to imagine.
Over the last few years, many prisoners -
particularly women and children - have become
mentally, psychologically and physically ill because
of the cruelty and inhumanity that they have
suffered at the hands of regimes who are obsessed
with using their power in a conspiracy against their
own people.
Is this what President Ben Ali meant by "the
improvement in the status of Tunisian women and the
security of society?" Is this what he meant by "the
equality of opportunity between men and women?"
Maybe he was talking about equality of opportunity
inside prisons, where all prisoners face the same
methods of torture without differentiation between
men and women.
This shameful agony - being faced by honorable women
in Tunisia and Turkey - is for no other crime than
adhering to their religious beliefs.
Allah (SWT) says in the Qur'an (Sura'tul 85:8), "And
they ill-treated them for no other reason than that
they believed in Allah, Exalted in power, worthy of
all prais.
Source :
http://www.islamonline.net/english/Politics/2000/1/article53.shtml |