bly. A compromise was reached in the form of another article which stated that all Afghan citizens, male and female, have equal rights and obligations before the law. 2
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The Transitional Period: Between Revolution and Reconciliation
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Article 38 of the Constitution of the Republic of Afghanistan, ratified in November 1987, stated:
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| | Citizens of the Republic of Afghanistan, both men and women, have equal rights and duties before the law, irrespective of their national, racial, linguistic, tribal, educational and social status, religion, creed, political conviction, occupation, kinship, wealth, and residence. Designation of any illegal privilege of discrimination against rights and duties of citizens are forbidden.
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According to government officials with whom I spoke in February 1989, the above article was a compromise, reached after PDPA members and delegates from the Women's Council failed in their attempts to include an equal rights clause. 3
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Many writers on Afghanistan are loath to discuss the positive aspects of the PDPA state's social program, notably its policy on women's rights. Urban, however, notes that "one genuine achievement of the revolution has been the emancipation of (mainly urban) women." He continues: "There is no doubt that thousands of women are committed to the regime, as their prominent participation in Revolutionary Defense Group militias shows. Eyewitnesses stated that militant militiawomen played a key role in defending the besieged town of Urgun in 1983. Four of the seven militia commanders appointed to the Revolutionary Council in January 1986 were women" (Urban 1988: 209).
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Despite concessions made in the area of family law, women continued to be active in formal politics. Women were present in the different ranks of the party and the government, with the exception of the council of ministers. The Loya Jirga included women delegates; in 1989 the parliament had seven female members. In 1989, women in prominent positions included Massouma Esmaty Wardak, president of the Afghan Women's Council; Shafiqeh Razmandeh,
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