MADRE has released a groundbreaking report on the incidence, causes, and legalization of gender-based violence in Iraq since the US-led invasion. Amidst the chaos and violence of US-occupied Iraq, women—in particular those who are perceived to pose a challenge to the political project of their attackers—have increasingly been targeted because they are women. Today, they are subjected to unprecedented levels of assault in the public sphere, "honor killings," torture in detention, and other forms of gender-based violence. Promising Democracy, Imposing Theocracy documents the use of gender-based violence by Iraqi Islamists, brought to power by the US overthrow of Iraq's secular Ba'ath regime, and highlights the role of the United States in fomenting the human rights crisis confronting Iraqi women today.
A re-telling of the Iraq war from the perspective of Iraqi women illuminates the strong links between women's human rights and democratic rights in general and the Bush Administration's clear contempt for both.
Special thanks to Yanar Mohammed, director of the Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq.
Letter from the Executive Director
Part I. Towards Gender Apartheid in Iraq
Part II. Iraq's Other War: Imposing Theocracy through Gender–based Violence
Part III. The Rise of US–backed Death Squads
Part IV. Violence against Women within Families
Part VI. Gender–based Violence against Men
Part VII. Violence against Women in Detention
Conclusion: Standing with Iraqi Women in a Time of War