U.S. team opens shelter for Afghan women

  • Published
  • By Staff Sgt. Mike Andriacco
  • 455th Air Expeditionary Wing Public Affairs
Officials of the Bagram Provincial Reconstruction Team unveiled a new women's shelter during a ribbon-cutting ceremony Dec. 13 in Kapisa Province.

Khuweja Abubaker, the Kapisa Provincial governor; Safura Kohistani, the director of women's affairs for Kapisa Province; and members of the PRT were on hand to open the shelter designed to provide everything a visitor might need..

The purpose of the shelter is to preserve a woman's honor, said Army Capt. Jordan Berry, the PRT's civil affairs team leader for Kapisa Province.

"A woman who is a victim of domestic violence cannot go to the police or another man for help or she will lose honor with her family," he said. "The shelter is run by women and staffed by women."

Any woman who is a victim of domestic violence or who is temporarily displaced from their home or family is eligible to use the shelter, Captain Berry said.

The shelter is designed to provide everything a visitor might need. 

"The shelter is a facility consisting of eight rooms, one kitchen, one office with a desk and chairs, 10 steel-frame bunk beds with mattresses, an interior European-style restroom, an exterior one-stall restroom, a well, a perimeter security wall, a guard house and a generator house," said Master Sgt. Charles Liston, the Bagram PRT's structural superintendent.

The project took nine months for local contractors to complete and the Bagram PRT provided more than $86,000 for the project, Sergeant Liston said. Along with the ribbon cutting, several Kapisan women put on an exhibition of handcrafted items.

"Many members of our team bought items at the exhibition as gifts, which not only helped with their Christmas shopping, but also it put money into the local community," said Capt. Erick Saks, the PRT's executive officer. The exhibition was another example of progress in Afghanistan and the changing view of women's roles in the country.

"The money collected at the exhibition provided income for the local women," Captain Saks said. "There are few business opportunities for women in Afghanistan, so we were glad to help them out." 

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