Thursday, 24 February 2011

Stop the Colonial Train


Women in Black, Italy support the international campaign against the building of a high speed train that will link Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, in which the Italian firm , Pizzarotti, is involved.

A report produced by the Israeli coalition of women for peace, as part of their research projectt Who profits?, shows that the train's route passes through the occupied territory and involves further losses of land for the Palestinian communities - who won't even be able to use the train. The construction in which Pizzarotti is taking part is illegal since international law prohibits the use of resources from an occupied territory by the occupying power for the benefit of its own citizens.

The choice of building in the occupied territory wasn't even necessary to the project. According to Dalit Baum, researcher with the Coalition of Women for Peace:

it is significant, even though not surprising to discover that Israeli planners found it easier to take land from the Palestinians and run the risk of being prosecuted for violations of international law rather than face the possible complaints of Israeli citizens who might object to the building of the train line close to their houses and the consequent devaluation of their real estate or the worsening of the air quality and the view from their windows. It seems that the internationally recognised borders of Israel are totally insignificant in the eyes of Israeli engineers and that they can cross them whenever it is more convenient or easier for their projects.

Friday, 18 February 2011

Alarm for Afghan Women: The Kabul government threatens to take control of women's refuges

The Italian coordination in support of Afghan women (CISDA) condemns the law promoted by the Afghan Council of Ministers in January 2011 according to which, within 45 days of the law being passed, management of women's refuges will be controlled by the Ministry of Women's Affairs, rather than the Afghan NGOs.

The decree is based on a previous decision of the Afghan Supreme Court - the most reactionary legislative body in the country - that defined it a Crime for a woman to leave her home and seek shelter in one of the refuges for abused women run by the NGOs.

The decision of the Afghan Supreme Court already restricted the possibilities for women victims of violence to appeal to judicial bodies.

Moreover, the law requires the closure of some refuges, the accompaniment of women by a mahram (male relative or husband), the teaching of Islan and the obligation of women to submit to continual "medical examinations" in order to monitor their sexual activity. The government affirms that management by the MoWA will guarantee a better administration of funds and a better choice of staff.

We maintain that this measure has been taken to satisfy fundamentalists and the Taliban, whith whom negotiations have been started. The refuges have been labelled by some as brothels and the choice has been made to bring them under control.

The consequences of this will be disastrous for the women victims of violence. :
  • No male relative - and much less a husband - will accompany a woman to a refuge: in most cases, it is they who are the perpetrators of the violence from which the women want to escape.
  • In Afghanistan, rape is reason for shame and for the repudiation of the woman. If the medical examination were to show that a woman has been raped, under government control, the woman would be condemned instead of being helped.
  • If a woman were to escape from a forced marriage, once she arrives at the refuge she would be denounced by the government, since leaving home is considered a crime.
  • Young women sent home would live a life of shame and marginalisation , if they are not killed, as is shown by various cases of stoning in different parts of the country in recent months.
  • If the family were to ask for the return of the woman - whatever the reason, including a forced marriage, the staff of the refuge could not refuse. As if this were not enough, many women who have been in refuges will be accused of adultery within their community.
  • Afghanistan is one of the most corrupt countries in the world: there will be no guarantee that the funds donated by international agencies for women victims of violence will be properly controlled.

The Karzai government, set up and maintained by the US-NATO occupation, is certainly not distinguished by its respect for human rights. :
  • In March 2009 the Karzai government passed a law against women - particularly those from the Shiite community. According to this law, women could not refuse to have sexual relations with their husbands and they could not go to work, to the doctor, or to school without his permission.
  • In March 2007, the Karzai government guaranteed an amnessty for all the crimes against humanity committed in Afghanistan in the last 20 years.
  • In January 2007, the journalist Parwez Kambashkh was condemned to death by a tribunal in Balkh, after being accused of blasphemy because of his ideas about equal rights for women. Though Parwez was pardoned following international pressure, dozens of other journalists operate in the same situation.
  • In July 2006, the Karzai government reintroduced the “Ministry of Vice and Virtue”, - sadly well known under the Taliban regime.
  • Moveover, Afghan human rights organisations denounce constant pressure from the government to legalise the “informal justice informale” (tribale) which provides for the stoning of women.

E l’Italia?


Between 2001 and 2011, the Italian government has invested hundreds of millions of Euro in a project to rebuild the justice system in Afghanistan. We call on the Italian government and the political forces that have supported - and still support - the military intervention in Afghanistan to explain how the funds for the rebuilding of the Afghan justice system have been spent, given that in recent years laws have been passed that penalise rather than favour human rights and the rights of Afghan women.

INFO CISDA: cell. 3336868938
COORDINAMENTO ITALIANO SOSTEGNO DONNE AFGHANE Onlus
BANCA POPOLARE ETICA – Agenzia Via Melzo, 34 – Milano
IBAN: IT64U0501801600000000113666 – SWIFT: CCRTIT2T84A



Afghan Women

Tuesday, 15 February 2011

To Be a Woman is to Fly


On February 13th (the day of the mass demonstrations against the decline of public life symbolised by Berlusconi) there were so many people - women and men in Rome's Piazza del Popolo that you just couldn't get in and once in couldn't get out. Cell phones weren't working, so it wasn't possible to meet up as we'd planned. The only thing to do was to relax, listen, and talk with those beside us in the Piazza.

The speeches from the platform weren't particularly great. It wasn't a real public meeting with professional speakers. There were quite a few readings, some of them boring - as reading often are when performed by people who don't know how to project their voices and maintain a rhythm. There were also some rather dubious speeches... but the demonstration was peaceful and relaxed, made up of people who, in all simplicity and without moralism, were standing up for their dignity, their right to live in a civilised country.


And it was a marvelous gathering. People of all sorts, tolerant acceptance of all political positions and all life style choices from nuns to sex workers. There was the feeling that you have at the theatre when the comedy ends - you didn't like it, it was all to overdone, vulgar and farsical. It didn't make you laugh, in fact it was a little nauseating like a joke in bad taste told over and over again by pimply adolescents.... Finally it ends. You can leave without disturbing everyone on your row and when you get outside in the fresh air, you realise that the play has bored and nauseated everyone.. you can see the it written on their relieved faces .

There wasn't just Piazza del Popolo. Some women who didn't manage to get in, started an improvised march throuh the streets of central Rome, which because more and more joyful and liberating and which arrived in front of the seat of government. They really enjoyed themselves. Free, indecorous, autonomous, not ready to delegate. Rebels are beautiful, because they have the scent of freedom.

The Rome women in black were in the Piazza and in the march. Those who managed to get into Piazza del Popolo unfurled their banner -Donna é volare (to be a woman is to fly)- in memory of a dear friend. It was a prophetic slogan. All the women who experienced that demonstration know that they won't turn back. It took us some years, but it's clear that we've taken flight and we really can't go back.

Solidarity with the Struggle of Civil Society on the Other Mediterranean Shore


In recent days we have all seen the tremendous courage of Egyptian civil society, which inspired by the revolution in Tunisia has fought - and continues to fight - to be free of a dictatorship that as lasted more than 30 years.

We use the words of the Seville Women in Black to express our admiration and solidarity.

From civil society in Tunisa and Egypt, enormous waves - tenacious, strong, and decided in their will for social just and freedom - have made the Mediterranean the great lady of the revolution for human rights. a revoultion of active non-violent resistance that reveals the daily reality of life under regimes that have been maintained and supported by both the US authorities and the powers of the EU. Regimes that translate the forms of neo-colonialism, that perpetuate contempt for civil society in support of geostrategic and social economic interests. A double standard, which our western world uses as a characteristic of patriarcal power. So, Egyptian civil society, thanks to the Sadat regime, followed by the Mubarak regime, has been living for decades as a political prisoner under the control of the explicit interests of Zionism within a framework of western interests.

Then, all at once, our western universe discovers that in the mediterranean world "on the other shore", there are societies that are lively and full of aspirations. Almost always, the information we've been given has favoured an image of stagnation and reactionary traditionalism. The media have seized everthing that feeds islamophobia, fear of "terrorism" among our people, rarely mentioning rebellions that succeeded over the years and remaining silent about the systematic violation of human rights.



This veil that covered and protected the US and EU puppet regimes, with measures that went from outrageous levels of aid to sales of arms to be used for repression; a veil cast over the violations of human rights that is only lifted in a few countries, when their goverments come into conflict with the interests of western countries; countries that then the West does not hesitate to threaten and occupy, creating a disaster for the lives of millions of women and men (Iraq, Afghanistan), or instigating civil wars (Rwanda, Ivory Coast).

And while we recognise that such policies are part of the right wing in western politics - whose identification with the culture of death is implicit in their defence of the capitalist, neoliberal economy - we are scandalised by the fact that so-called progressive sectors have favoured, in one way or another, the maintenance of these corrupt, dictatorial regimes (one example among the many: the parties led by Mubarak and Ben Ali are even today part of the Socialist International). With the argument of the "lesser evil" and the fight against "radical Islam", they contribute to the creation of a "demon" which facilitates the miitarisation of the world and of our minds, reinforcing the structures of patriarcal power based on violence and exclusion.

From our position of absolute refusal of any regime that stands in the way of free development of popular sovereignty and of the rights of women, and because of our conviction that every form of violence - including obviously social and economic inequality and sexist, racist, cultural and religious exclusion - generates oppression and violence, in particular towards women, we demand that:

All EU governments must immediately

  • Explicitly condemn these regimes and their violations of human rights
  • Stop the export of arms
  • Show their support for the civil society without interference and with full respect for their sovereignty.
We express our complete solidarity with:

The greater part of the civilian populations of Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, Jordan.... and with the pacifist opposition in Israel who are mobilising to condemn their current political regimes.

Civilian populations, women and men, who will be able to take the road to the realisation of their demands for political, social and cultural freedom.

People who today in their uprising for human rights expose the many disturbing aspects of our democracies, calling upon us to reinforce the bonds of solidarity and banish from the Mediterranean those interests that are an obstacle to intercultural coexistence, and so to favour peace, social justice, and the emancipation of women and men from all types of oppression.

Monday, 31 January 2011

Work, Rights, Dignity



  • The national contract
  • Freedom to strike
  • Freedom to join a union
  • The right to free expression


These are necessary for today and for a more worthwhile future for all women and men.

On January 28th, The F.I.O.M union confederation called a national strike of works in the metal mechanics sector. Many other groups throughout Italy decided to take part - schools and universities, students and other workers and service providers.

The participation in the strike was not in the least ritual. It was not simple solidarity towards "others" but rather a mobilisation to defend the rights of all women and men. We are dealing with questions that affect all, that relate to the lack of prospectives, precariousness, the loss of union and social rights. The relevance of the current conflict was demonstrated when the referendum was heldc in
Mirafiori on January 13th and 14th.

The amazing response of the workers (much greater than all predictions!) to the blackmail/referendum was an act of resistance and dignity that tells all of us that the absolute will of the company and the destruction of collective rights can be opposed.

As the women delegates of the F.I.O.M at the FIAT plant in Mirafiori, in Turin, in Naples said:

in the factory and on the production lines there are many workers who report working conditions that are at the very limit of what can be tolerated. Speeding up working rhythms, moving the lunch break to the end of the shift, cutting break times, imposing 120 hours of overtime, penalising sick leave signifies […] the logic of super-exploitation imposed with blackmail and authoritarianism, [that] breaks bodies and minds, pushes people to desperation and humiliation

The women of the F.I.O.M rightly claim the right to a life that is not exhausted in the work place, and they maintain that:

work with rights and the choice of motherhood and family life cannot be counterposed: Work time should not eat up the the rest of life, productivity at all costs is not the banner of modernity.


We want an economy that is centered on social and environmental justice, cooperation and peace.

Never Again - for Anyone

On the occasion of the Holocaust Remembrance Day, January 27th 2011, the Women in Black in Bergamo wish to remember how Nazi and Fascist regimes that carried out the massacres, were born to oppose the rise in consciousness of the working classes.

We recall how the middle classes of the time, in fear of a redistribution of wealth, chose to entrust themselves to authoritarian figures, who - after national-socialist beginnings - invested in weapons and in war as a plan for development and dominion. We express our solidarity with the Palestinian people who suffer injustice and abuse and with those Israeli citizens who struggle beside them to stop the occupation.

In addition, we express our indignation and refusal for the current policies of governments that refinance ill considered and highly expensive military commitments.
  • Governments that do not show wisdom and do not invest in health, education and employment opportunities for the new generations.
  • Governments that ignore the protection of the natural and cultural environment of their countries.

We hope that with these actions it will be possible to influence choices for production that are coherent with the needs of Italy and of the environment.

Italian Women in Black, who for years have worked for the peace that comes from justice, express all our solidarity with the demonstrations planned in various Italian cities on 28th January 2011 by trade unions who are fighting for a change in the productive situation in Italy.

We would like to express our respect for FIAT workers and members of the F.I.O.M. union confederation who have taken a clear and dignified position.

Saturday, 15 January 2011

For Jawaher - We are here with our hearts in Bil'in


Bil'in, a village in Palestine
Its land divided by the separation barrier built by Israel.

Bil’in - a village that resist that demands the return of its land



The Israeli court has ruled in their favour.

The barrier must be moved.
The sentence was handed down a year ago - the barrier is still there.


Every Friday, the people march, they go towards the "wall".
They go with flags and music.
They go because they are right.
They go because they won't give in.

Every Friday, soldiers fire tear gas from the hill
- sound bombs too - and not only.
Jawaher is dead.
She breathed in too much gas.
Her brother is dead too - -
He too marched against the wall.

The people weep, the people shout, but they don't give in.

While the world celebrated new year, Jawaher Abu Rahmeh, a 36 year old Palestinian woman, resident of Bil’in, was killed by the tear gas massively used by the Israeli occupation forces against peaceful, non-violent people - Palestinians, Israelis and internationals- who were demonstrating to stop the Wall and the occupation.

Jawaher demonstrated every Friday, marching towards the separation barrier that steals the land from Palestinian farms to be used for the construction of new Israeli colonies. Like many other Palestinian women, Jawaher era courageous, proud, and dignified.
Her mother was still mourning the loss of her beloved son, Bassem, killed two years ago by the Israeli army.

Now she must also mourn the loss of a beloved daughter. We must stand by the Abu Rahmeh family in this new, terrible moment of loss and sacrifice.




We cannot forget Jawaher and her struggle for freedom and the right to live in her own land.

Despite the brutality of the Occupation, the Palestinians do not give up their rights or their freedom. Peaceful, non-violent resistance is spreading in the villages and towns to put an end to:

The occupation
Illegal settlements and their expansion
The apartheid wall
The siege of Gaza
The racist politics that are imposed on the Palestinians in every day life.