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Official: 160 girls poisoned at Afghan school

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  • Official: 160 girls poisoned at Afghan school

    Source: http://www.cnn.com/2012/05/29/world/...html?hpt=hp_t2

    Official: 160 girls poisoned at Afghan school
    From Masoud Popalzai, CNN
    updated 6:58 AM EDT, Tue May 29, 2012

    Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) -- A hospital in northern Afghanistan admitted 160 girls Tuesday after they were poisoned in their classrooms with a type of spray, a Takhar police official said.

    The incident, the second in a week's time, was reported at the Aahan Dara Girls school in Talokhan, the provincial capital...

  • #2
    Re: Official: 160 girls poisoned at Afghan school

    Source: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news...ectid=10810226

    Poison outbreak 'hysteria' in Afghanistan
    By Lianne Gutcher
    5:40 AM Saturday Jun 2, 2012

    Hundreds of Afghan schoolchildren have been admitted to hospital in the past six weeks after falling victim to what is claimed to be six separate poison attacks.

    Three occurred in northern Takhar province in the past week, affecting more than 300 girls.

    Some government and police officials have blamed the Taleban, whose hostility to girls' education during its hardline rule in the 1990s is well documented.

    Others have blamed the "enemies of Afghanistan" and hinted at the involvement of Pakistan and Iran.

    But tests by the International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) and the government have not found any toxic substances. One international expert says the scares have all the hallmarks of mass hysteria...

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    • #3
      Re: Official: 160 girls poisoned at Afghan school



      KABUL, Afghanistan -- The Afghan government accused the Taliban Wednesday of poisoning schoolgirls by bribing students and workers to sneak toxic chemicals into drinking water or spread it around school grounds, sickening scores. Fifteen suspects have been arrested, officials said.

      Government officials said six schools were affected in northern Takhar province in the past three weeks, and though they did not give a total number of girls who got sick, they said one school alone had 125 cases.

      When the Taliban ruled Afghanistan, girls were banned from going to school and women were only allowed to leave their homes with a male relative as an escort. After their 2001 ouster, Taliban insurgents would attack schoolgirls by spraying their faces with acid. However, the group has appeared to tone down its stance against education for girls more recently.

      Government officials suggested the alleged plot may also have been aimed at undermining the government's achievements.

      President Hamid Karzai called for an investigation and intelligence service spokesman Latifullah Mashal said the intelligence service discovered a conspiracy by militants to try to scare families from sending their children to school.

      "They want to create terror and fear among students, especially in the education sector and also in the health sector, which are two of the major achievements of the 10 years of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan," said Mashal.

      He said 15 people have been arrested in connection with the school poisonings. Those being held include 12 identified Taliban insurgents, a teacher and a school treasurer and his wife, he said.

      Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid denied any involvement in the poisonings.

      "The poisoning of innocent children is against Islamic law. The mujahedeen are not involved in the poisoning of schoolchildren. It is a crime," Mujahid said in an email.

      Government officials had previously said it was unclear what caused the series of outbreaks of illness at girls' schools in the province starting about three weeks ago. In at least one case, doctors in the capital city of Taluqan attributed complaints of illness by 125 students to mass hysteria.

      But cases continued to mount and seven alleged school poisonings have now been reported in six schools in the province, said Mustafa Rasouli, a spokesman for the provincial government.

      He said the insurgents confessed to bribing teachers, school workers and even students to sneak toxic chemicals onto school grounds, Rasouli said.

      In two cases, female students were paid 50,000 Afghanis (almost $1,000) to contaminate water tanks at their schools with a toxic powder, Mashal said.

      In other instances, conspirators sprayed a sweet-smelling yellow liquid around the grounds of the school, he said.

      Officials did not identify any of the toxic substances allegedly used.

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      • #4
        Re: Official: 160 girls poisoned at Afghan school

        Here's an overview of the problem from 2010. (Maybe less politically loaded than the current election year media reports are.)

        What?s Behind the Poisoning of Afghan Girls
        AOL News, April 26, 2010
        Girls at the schools reported seeing fellow classmates fall unconscious after smelling a strange gas in the air and then succumbing themselves

        Adnan R. Khan

        For girls in Afghanistan, getting an education has always been difficult, if not impossible. But their struggle appears worse than ever recently as a series of poison gas attacks on girls' schools has sent at least 88 girls, some as young as 7, to the hospital.

        A medic checks a schoolgirl in a hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan. Dozens of Afghan girls have been hospitalized after poison gas attacks on their schools. (Photo: Fulad Hamdard, AP)

        The attacks in Kunduz province, in the north of the country, come amid heightened Taliban influence in the region, raising fears that ultra-conservative elements in society are becoming bolder in their efforts to exert influence over social behavior. But no military defeat of the Taliban is likely to banish even violent opposition to female education, which has deep cultural roots in a large part of the country.

        "Attacks like these spike in unison with the strength of insurgents," says Jennifer Rowell, head of advocacy for CARE International in Kabul. "But we have to remember: not all insurgents are Taliban, and not all attackers are insurgents. It's likely that the attackers, whoever they were, had a problem with the idea of girls' education."

        It's still unclear whether the attacks were intended to kill or only terrorize female students into staying home. Girls at the schools reported seeing fellow classmates fall unconscious after smelling a strange gas in the air and then succumbing themselves.

        Similar attacks a year ago also hospitalized dozens of female students, but all recovered. A police officer in Kunduz, requesting anonymity because he is not authorized to talk to the media, says the investigation is focusing on criminal elements rather than the Taliban, who in a statement to the media condemned the attacks. "This is the act of miscreants who just don't like the idea of girls being educated," the police officer says.

        The broader implications of these sorts of attacks underscore the challenges Afghanistan's girls face even if the Taliban are defeated.

        The root of the problem lies not in any one militant group, but in a broader and persistent aversion to girls' education among some segments of Afghanistan's ethnic Pashtuns, the same ethnic group as the vast majority of the Taliban. Culturally, the Taliban's rigid interpretation of Islam, including the banning of education for girls, is part and parcel of Pashtun society.

        "There is no way around it," says Bashir Khan, a businessman in Kabul who counts himself among the staunchly anti-Taliban Pashtuns. "In Pashtun culture, a woman's place is in the home. Even some of the most educated Pashtuns believe this. I'm willing to let my daughters go to school but only to a point, maybe until they are 11 or 12 years old. After that, why do they need an education? Their life will be in the home."

        Pashtun men like Khan resent the emphasis Western nations have placed on girls' education, arguing that they are trying to destroy Pashtun culture. "It's an insult to our way of life," he says. "We will not allow it. We see what happens to women in the West; we see it on television, in their music videos and movies. We will never let our women become so corrupted."

        And the problem is not about to go away anytime soon. The U.S. and its NATO allies continue to make girls' education a pillar of their vision for a future Afghanistan, yet even by the most optimistic estimates only about 30 percent of school-age girls are enrolled in schools. And Washington now admits that the Taliban have a legitimate role to play in Afghan politics and society, since they represent the Pashtuns, Afghanistan's largest ethnic group by far, comprising 42 percent of the country's population.

        But even a pacified Taliban will still bear the earmarks of Pashtun culture. Some Afghans, and a growing cadre of Western NGO workers, are gradually coming to accept the reality that improving women's rights will take generations in a country like Afghanistan. And that forcing Pashtun culture to change too quickly could be disastrous.

        "Yes, there is some pushback," Rowell says. "There are still some pockets of cultural resistance to girls' education. And we are seeing a rising trend in the number of attacks on the education system in general over the last few years."

        But she hastens to point out that Afghans in general are open to educating girls, if sensitivity to the culture is maintained. There are some members of the society, however, who will never accept change. And the grim reality is that more innocent girls will have to suffer before these elements disappear altogether.

        Category: US-NATO, Children, HR Violations, Education - Views: 5827

        Read more: http://www.rawa.org/temp/runews/2010...#ixzz1x3r0noGh
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