Pakzad is in Washington for the next several days to press that case to a number of U.S. officials, including aides to Amb. Richard Holbrooke, the special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, and on a variety of fronts. Beyond attempting to preserve women’s parliamentary representation, Pazkad, the recipient of a State Department ‘Women of Courage’ award in 2008, wants the U.S. and its allies to press Karzai on allowing women to help draft the terms of any reconciliation offer to Taliban insurgents.
“We’re not just looking at women in parliament, but women at the local and national level,” Pazkad said after a breakfast event on the Hill sponsored by the United Nations’ Development Fund for Women and the Women Thrive Worldwide non-governmental organization. “We need the international community to push the Afghan government that they should not support any reconciliation with the Taliban without women’s presence.”
Pazkad said representatives from her Herat-based organization, Voice of Women in Afghanistan, met with Mohammed Masoom Stanekzai, the Karzai aide responsible for drafting the reconciliation offer, a few days ago, while she herself was traveling to Washington. Even so, she added, “Advocacy doesn’t mean being invited. We raise our voices.”