Forced Child Marriage … an Afghan Tragedy

Gul Meena showed the scars on her face. After she ran away from an arranged marriage, her brother and uncle found her and attacked her with an ax. Credit Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times
Gul Meena showed the scars on her face. After she ran away from an arranged marriage, her brother and uncle found her and attacked her with an ax. Credit Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times
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Forced Child Marriage … an Afghan Tragedy

Gul Meena showed the scars on her face. After she ran away from an arranged marriage, her brother and uncle found her and attacked her with an ax. Credit Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times
Gul Meena showed the scars on her face. After she ran away from an arranged marriage, her brother and uncle found her and attacked her with an ax. Credit Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times

Afghanistan is a place where all too often a young girl’s dreams die. But not always.

So it has been with three Afghan friends, whose unrelated cases were all so awful that they are painful to talk about even now that the three are young women, years after the trauma. Each of them escaped a forced marriage as a child, is lucky to be alive, and knows it. Each of them has big dreams — despite what has happened, and because of it.

For one of them, Gul Meena, 18, dreams have already started coming true. Last month she boarded a flight from Kabul to Östersund, Sweden, via Istanbul and Stockholm, accompanied by an American lawyer. It was Gul Meena’s first time in an airplane, first time out of her country, first time that, as she put it before, “I will be free.”

Gul Meena’s first dream was to escape Afghanistan. Her next was to have a television set in her room. She said she wanted to see how her favorite Indian soap opera ends.

Her biggest dream is to become a doctor, an ambition inspired by the three months Gul Meena spent in the hospital — a time of three operations that she remembers, and several more she does not.

“I want to help other girls who suffered violence,” she said. First, though, she is hopeful that Swedish medical care will be able to cure the severe headaches that have made it hard for her to concentrate on her studies; she has reached only fifth grade and can barely read.

Gul Meena was illegally married at age 13. When she discovered that she had become the third wife of a grandfather, she ran away in horror. Her brother and uncle, intent on avenging the family’s honor, tracked her down and attacked her with an ax, smashing her head so badly that part of her brain spilled out of her skull. Somehow she survived, and was given refuge in the Women for Afghan Women shelter in Kabul.

There she made two fast friends, Sahar Gul and Mumtaz. They did not discuss their traumatic pasts with one another, but they were otherwise quite close, all survivors of violence and wrongful marriages.

On one of her visits to the shelter, their American pro bono lawyer, Kimberley Motley, brought along several picture books, easy readers for young children. Sahar Gul is also 18; she is now in the seventh grade and can read a bit, so she read the books to Gul Meena and to Mumtaz, who is now 26.

Sahar Gul took the news of her friend’s departure hard, even though she knew it was coming. “When I heard, I thought that I am a ghost,” she said last month. “I am so sad to be losing my friend. On the other side, I am so happy that she will be free, and will make a life for herself.”

Gul Meena, on her last full day in Afghanistan, was so nervous that she couldn’t steady her hands; the other girls in the shelter helped her dress. Her housemates approached her, bursting into tears.

“I’m not going to miss Afghanistan because I don’t even know how Afghanistan looks,” Gul Meena said. She entered the shelter as a child, and like the other girls there, she has not been allowed outside the compound since then, except under escort by staff — for safety, and under government-imposed restrictions on women’s shelters.

Sahar Gul’s family sold her as a child, at age 13 or even younger, to people who tried to force her into prostitution through torture; they pulled out her fingernails, drugged and raped her, and sexually assaulted her with hot pokers.

“My brother sold me like a sheep to that family,” Sahar Gul said. “I was so small when they sent me to that husband, I didn’t even know what a husband was.” After she was rescued from her two-year ordeal, doctors discovered that she had not yet begun to menstruate.

As with the other two friends, Sahar Gul’s plight drew international publicity, and Women for Afghan Women brought her to its shelter. For months, she barely spoke.

Gul Meena was the same: “Every night I couldn’t sleep, I thought that someone was coming to kill me with an ax.”

Gul Meena, a Pashto speaker, and Sahar Gul, a Dari speaker, did not know each other’s language, and knew none of the details of what had happened to the other, but they began keeping each other company for reasons neither can explain.

The shelter staff had kept mirrors away from Gul Meena, but one day she saw herself and was stunned at how badly her face had been damaged. “I didn’t even recognize myself,” she said. “I was so ugly.” Sahar Gul consoled her, telling her friend she was beautiful.

Gradually the girls came out of their shells. Sahar Gul applied herself to her studies, determined to become a lawyer. “If I am a lawyer, I can help other women, too,” she said.

Mumtaz was the last of the three to arrive at the shelter. She was the victim of an acid attack by a militia commander angry that her family had refused his offer of marriage because, among other things, she was too young.

Both of the younger girls were seeking asylum abroad, but only Gul Meena had any prospect of success. 

The New York Times



Report: Iranian Man Found Dead After Burning Picture of Khamenei

A handout picture provided by the office of Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei shows him addressing a meeting with students in Tehran on November 3, 2025. (KHAMENEI.IR / AFP)
A handout picture provided by the office of Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei shows him addressing a meeting with students in Tehran on November 3, 2025. (KHAMENEI.IR / AFP)
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Report: Iranian Man Found Dead After Burning Picture of Khamenei

A handout picture provided by the office of Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei shows him addressing a meeting with students in Tehran on November 3, 2025. (KHAMENEI.IR / AFP)
A handout picture provided by the office of Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei shows him addressing a meeting with students in Tehran on November 3, 2025. (KHAMENEI.IR / AFP)

An Iranian man has been found dead with a gunshot wound after posting an image of himself burning a picture of the supreme leader, with mourners blaming the authorities, according to opposition media based outside of Iran.

Omid Sarlak, from Lorestan province in western Iran, had published on Instagram an image of himself setting alight the image of Ali Khamenei in a forested area on Friday, hours before being found dead at the weekend.

Iran's official IRNA news agency carried a report citing Ali Asadollahi, the police chief in his town of Aligudarz, saying a man had been found dead in his car after taking his life with a pistol that was found by his side.

But at Sarlak's funeral on Monday, dozens of mourners shouted slogans including "they killed him!" and "death to Khamenei", according to social media footage broadcast by opposition media based outside Iran, including Iran International and Radio Farda.

In his video Sarlak, who was in his 20s, included a recording of the voice of deposed shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, indicating his sympathy for the Iranian monarchy that was ousted by the 1979 revolution.

The ousted shah's US-based son, Reza Pahlavi, wrote on X that Sarlak had "stood against the oppression of the Islamic republic and sacrificed his life for Iran's freedom".

The Iranian Tasnim news agency on Monday rejected what it described as claims in "anti-revolution media" that he "was prosecuted for critical statements and was murdered in a suspicious manner", saying there had been no case against Sarlak and he had killed himself with a gunshot to the head.

Sarlak's father was shown in a video posted on social media by Iranian opposition outlets weeping and saying "they killed my boy".

But he later gave an interview to local state-run television urging people not to believe what they saw on social media.

Activists say the authorities are pressing an intensified crackdown three years after nationwide protests shook the authorities and months after the 12-day war between Israel and Iran in June.

"External aggression has fueled deeper internal repression," the UN's special rapporteur on human rights in Iran, Mai Sato, said last week, noting an "alarming" surge in executions and "mass arrests" of activists.


Iran Commemorates Storming of US Embassy with Missile Replicas

People sit and others stand next to models missiles and nuclear enrichment centrifuge during a rally outside the former US embassy in Tehran as Iranians mark the 46th anniversary of the start of the Iran hostage crisis, on November 4, 2025. (AFP)
People sit and others stand next to models missiles and nuclear enrichment centrifuge during a rally outside the former US embassy in Tehran as Iranians mark the 46th anniversary of the start of the Iran hostage crisis, on November 4, 2025. (AFP)
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Iran Commemorates Storming of US Embassy with Missile Replicas

People sit and others stand next to models missiles and nuclear enrichment centrifuge during a rally outside the former US embassy in Tehran as Iranians mark the 46th anniversary of the start of the Iran hostage crisis, on November 4, 2025. (AFP)
People sit and others stand next to models missiles and nuclear enrichment centrifuge during a rally outside the former US embassy in Tehran as Iranians mark the 46th anniversary of the start of the Iran hostage crisis, on November 4, 2025. (AFP)

With replicas of missiles on display and effigies of Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu hanging from a crane, thousands of Iranians commemorated on Tuesday the 1979 storming of the US embassy in Tehran.

Five months after a brief war with Israel that saw the US join in with strikes on key nuclear facilities, demonstrators chanted "Death to America, death to Israel!" and sang revolutionary songs in a particularly charged outing for the annual event.

Though the commemorations are held annually, "this year, the country is under a bit of pressure" from its two arch foes, said student Mohammad Hossein, 15, standing next to a friend whose shoes bore the trademark swoosh of American apparel giant Nike.

"We must be more visible this year so that the authorities, the army and others can feel at ease and know that we are behind them," he added.

Throughout the day, US and Israeli flags were burned and trampled, and participants dressed as Israeli soldiers pretended to mourn over fake coffins draped with the Star of David, mocking the country's losses in Gaza.

The swinging effigies of Trump and Netanyahu, meanwhile, called to mind the public executions sometimes carried out by Iran.

"America's hostility towards us will never end," said Malek, 57, a laborer who declined to give his full name, adding "America's job is to deceive".

In mid-June, Israel launched an unprecedented wave of air strikes on targets across Iran, including military sites, nuclear facilities and residential areas, killing dozens of senior officials and scientists.

Over the course of the 12-day war that followed, Washington joined its ally in striking three nuclear sites, despite having been involved in ongoing talks with Tehran over its atomic program.

"Our feeling is much different (this year) because our country has been seriously attacked," said Sareh Habibi, a 17-year-old student.

"Our peers, teenagers and the youth, were martyred, and somehow it seems like a mission on our shoulders to come" to the demonstration, she added.

Along the parade route, replicas of missiles -- similar to the ones fired at Israeli cities during the war -- were displayed bearing the slogan "We love to fight the Israeli regime".

Mock uranium centrifuges were also set out, a nod to Iran's insistence on its right to develop a civilian nuclear program despite Western suspicions it is seeking a bomb -- an accusation Tehran denies.

According to state media, similar commemorations took place in several other cities, including Mashhad in the northeast, Kerman in the south and Rasht in the north.

Some participants carried portraits of Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei, while others hoisted the image of Hassan Nasrallah, the longtime leader of the Iran-backed Lebanese Hezbollah group who was killed in an Israeli strike last year.

On November 4, 1979, less than nine months after the overthrow of Iran's monarchy and the establishment of the current republic, a group of students stormed the US embassy in Tehran, deeming it a "nest of spies".

Several dozen American diplomats were held hostage, some for 444 days, marking a break between Tehran and Washington, which were previously allies.

The animosity has persisted for decades, and Khamenei ruled out on Monday any cooperation with the United States until Washington changed its policy towards the region, including its support for Israel.


US Government Shutdown Ties Record, as Congressional Inaction Takes Toll

Signage informs visitors that the US Capitol Visitor Center is closed due to the federal government shutdown on November 4, 2025, in Washington, DC. (AFP)
Signage informs visitors that the US Capitol Visitor Center is closed due to the federal government shutdown on November 4, 2025, in Washington, DC. (AFP)
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US Government Shutdown Ties Record, as Congressional Inaction Takes Toll

Signage informs visitors that the US Capitol Visitor Center is closed due to the federal government shutdown on November 4, 2025, in Washington, DC. (AFP)
Signage informs visitors that the US Capitol Visitor Center is closed due to the federal government shutdown on November 4, 2025, in Washington, DC. (AFP)

The US government shutdown on Tuesday entered its 35th day, matching a record set during President Donald Trump's first term for the longest in history, as Republicans and Democrats in Congress continue to blame each other for the standoff.

The toll increases by the day. Food assistance for the poor was halted for the first time, federal workers from airports to law enforcement and the military are going unpaid and the economy is flying blind with limited government reporting.

The Senate has voted more than a dozen times against a stopgap funding measure passed by the House of Representatives, and no lawmakers have changed their position. Trump's Republicans hold a 53-47 majority in the Senate but need votes from at least seven Democrats to meet the chamber's 60-vote threshold for most legislation. Democrats are withholding their votes to extract an extension of some healthcare insurance subsidies.

"The victims of the Democrats’ shutdown are starting to pile up," Republican Senate Majority Leader John Thune said on Monday. "The question is how long are Democrats going to continue this. Another month? Two? Three?"

His Democratic counterpart Chuck Schumer on Monday pointed out how Trump's attention has been focused elsewhere.

"While Donald Trump is bragging about remodeling bathrooms at the White House, Americans are panicking about how they will afford healthcare next year," Schumer said, referring to a remodeling Trump unveiled on Friday.

On Monday, however, there was talk rippling through the Senate that closed-door conversations between the two parties might be making some progress.

A SHUTDOWN UNLIKE ITS PREDECESSORS

The 15th shutdown since 1981 stands out not just for its length. It has inverted the normal partisan dynamic in which shutdowns have often been provoked by Republicans.

In addition, little effort has been put into ending this latest shutdown. The House has been out of session since September 19 and Trump has repeatedly left Washington.

"The political climate and the tensions that exist between the parties were so wide at the beginning of the shutdown, and even though bipartisan talks have continued through it, remain at this point still just as wide," said Rachel Snyderman, managing director of economic policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center.

Food assistance for approximately 42 million Americans in the SNAP program ran out on Saturday. Many families are now without the approximately $180 per month on average of food stamps.

The Trump administration on Monday said it would partially fund November food benefits but warned that it could take weeks or months for the aid to be distributed.

A portion of Head Start early learning programs for low-income children also faces some closed doors as new funding was not available on November 1.

Federal workers like law enforcement and members of the military are now missing paychecks, as are airport security screeners and air traffic controllers, resulting in staffing challenges and travel delays. More than 3.2 million US air passengers have been hit by delays or cancellations since the shutdown began, an airline group said on Monday.

The Congressional Budget Office estimated the shutdown could cost the US economy $11 billion if it lasts another week. No federal funding means limited government data for the US Federal Reserve to pinpoint jobs and economic data as the central bank steers policy.

The American Federation of Government Employees, the largest union of federal workers, is pushing for a stopgap funding measure that the Democrats have voted against.

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION TESTS SHUTDOWN BOUNDS

During the shutdown, Trump has focused on foreign policy from Gaza to Russia to Asia. But recently he began digging in, calling for Republicans to abolish the Senate's 60-vote filibuster threshold.

Asked if he could broker a deal, Trump told CBS "60 Minutes" on Sunday: "I'm not gonna do it by being extorted by the Democrats who have lost their way."

On Tuesday, he again urged Senate Republicans to act or risk losing next year's midterm elections.

"Elections, including the Midterms, will be rightfully brutal. If we do terminate the Filibuster, we will get EVERYTHING approved... if we don’t do it, they are far more likely to do well in the upcoming Elections," he wrote in a social media post.

Thune repeatedly has rejected the idea.

Recent Reuters/Ipsos polling suggests that Americans blame both parties in Congress for the shutdown, with 50% saying most of the blame goes to Republicans and 43% blaming Democrats.

Three moderate Democratic senators have voted with Republicans to reopen government, arguing the immediate harm of the shutdown outweighs any long-term gains. Some Democrats say they are holding out for Republican concessions in part to reassert congressional funding powers in the face of Trump's executive overreach.

"The trust deficit has been there for a long time because of how Trump's acted," Senator Andy Kim, a New Jersey Democrat who has voted against the stopgap funding bills, said in a hallway interview, "This is a big part of the challenge that we have before us right now: any deal we get, how do we know that a deal is going to be a deal?"