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Why are divorce rates so high in Afghanistan?

Why are divorce rates so high in Afghanistan?

Rising divorce rates may indicate that women are increasingly aware of their rights, although the law is restrictive and unevenly applied. Rising divorce rates may indicate that women are increasingly aware of their rights, although the law is restrictive and unevenly applied. Women’s rights discussed in Kabul, August 30, 2015.

What are the causes of violence against women in Afghanistan?

Fahim Sultani, legal adviser at the ministry for women’s affairs, said that while poverty and unemployment did contribute to domestic abuse, there were also other deep-rooted social causes for violence against women.

What causes a family to disintegrate in Afghanistan?

She argues that domestic violence, aggravated by poverty, is a major factor in marital breakdown. “Arguments start when a family is in a fragile economic position and the man is unable to provide for his family’s needs and meet his wife’s requirements. This can lead to violence and cause family disintegration,” she said.

When do you forget things in a divorce?

Sometimes when you are in the midst of fighting and deciding you want to get divorced, far too many things and feelings are forgotten about and not considered because you are in the heat of the moment, the midst of what you feel is a definite finality in your marriage. Some of those feelings may deceive you.

Rising divorce rates may indicate that women are increasingly aware of their rights, although the law is restrictive and unevenly applied. Rising divorce rates may indicate that women are increasingly aware of their rights, although the law is restrictive and unevenly applied. Women’s rights discussed in Kabul, August 30, 2015.

Where is the worst place to be a woman in Afghanistan?

Herat, a province in western Afghanistan near the border of Iran, has some of the highest rates of violence against women in the country and some of the highest rates of suicide among women. Psychologist Naema Nikaed, who was working with Khadija, said she handles several cases of attempted suicide every week.

She argues that domestic violence, aggravated by poverty, is a major factor in marital breakdown. “Arguments start when a family is in a fragile economic position and the man is unable to provide for his family’s needs and meet his wife’s requirements. This can lead to violence and cause family disintegration,” she said.

Who are the victims of domestic abuse in Afghanistan?

Like the majority of Afghan women, Khadija was a victim of domestic abuse. For four years, she said, her husband beat her and told her that she’s ugly and dumb – “a nobody.” “Women never have any choices,” Khadija said last December in the hospital, as tears streamed down her face, a barely recognizable charred patchwork of fresh scars.