Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Mutilated by the Taliban: The girl of 18 who had nose and ears hacked off for trying to flee cruel in-laws

Wake the HELL UP INFIDELS,, this is the FUTURE OF WOMEN in our civilized Western Countries,,,

there is NO room in this world for islam!!

Mutilated by the Taliban: The girl of 18 who had nose and ears hacked off for trying to flee cruel in-laws

By Defence Correspondent
Last updated at 6:43 AM on 3rd August 2010


With her clear skin and dark, flowing hair, 18-year-old Aisha would ordinarily have stood out from a crowd because of her beauty.

But now, tragically, the young Afghan woman is eye-catching for a horrifically different reason.

Aisha is a victim of Taliban brutality, her nose and ears barbarically hacked off by her own husband in a warped punishment for attempting to flee her cruel in-laws.

Shocking brutality: Aisha, seen here on the cover of US Time magazine, had her nose cut off by her husband

Shocking brutality: Aisha, seen here on the cover of US Time magazine, had her nose cut off by her husband under Taliban orders

Held down by her brother-in-law, the young bride endured the agony of the man she married disfiguring her face with a knife.

Aisha's striking image stares out from the cover of U.S. news magazine Time.

The photograph is a stark reminder of the fate awaiting independent-minded women if the Taliban regain power.

The magazine is running the front page, with the headline What Happens if We Leave Afghanistan, as coalition countries set a timetable for the withdrawal of international forces from the country.

Influential voices in Afghanistan are suggesting that the West must bring the Taliban to the negotiating table to thrash out a peace deal as part of the exit strategy.

But women - who were treated as little more than slaves under the hardline regime's rule - believe they will bear the brunt of any reconciliation.

Touching her face, Aisha told the magazine: 'They are the people who did this to me. How can we reconcile with them?'

Her concerns were echoed by Fawzia Koofi, a female member of the Afghan parliament, who said: 'Women's rights must not be the sacrifice by which peace is achieved.'

Aisha now lives in a secret women's shelter in Kabul, but she dreams of leaving the Afghan capital and flying to the U.S. for reconstructive surgery paid for by a humanitarian organisation.

Coalition countries are setting a timetable for the withdrawal of international forces from Afghanistan but many are worried that Afghan women will find be in more danger if there is reconcilliation

Coalition countries are setting a timetable for the withdrawal of international forces from Afghanistan but many are worried that Afghan women will find be in more danger if there is reconcilliation

She was mutilated after last year attempting to flee her home, where she had been subjected to a life of misery at the hands of her husband's family.

When she was caught, a local Taliban commander acting as judge ordered the medieval-style punishment.

Time managing editor Richard Stengel explained his decision to use the shocking image. He said: 'I would rather confront readers with the Taliban's treatment of women than ignore it.

'I would rather people know that reality as they make up their minds about what the U.S. and its allies should do in Afghanistan.'

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