Fighting for women’s rights in Iraq, not an easy job
Yanar Mohammed is a tiny woman with very delicate manners. I met her about a month ago, days before her hearing at the UN Security Council on October 13. She came to New York to talk about the current status of Iraqi women. She wanted the world leaders to know what the Iraqi government was not doing to help them. She hoped her speech would raise awareness for a political push to create new laws for women.
“Since 2003 Iraq made a step backward in terms of women’s freedom and rights,” she said. Yanar blamed the US invasion for what happened to her country. She explained the aftermath politics of the invasion excluded most of the secular parties. “I remember this long list of new political figures that wanted to participate in the creation of a new Iraq. They were banned from any form of political participation.”