{"id":15806,"date":"2026-01-28T10:51:34","date_gmt":"2026-01-28T10:51:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/roma-women-of-iraq-voices-bartered-for-gravel-and-citizenship-assassinated-by-a-label\/"},"modified":"2026-02-02T19:18:43","modified_gmt":"2026-02-02T19:18:43","slug":"roma-women-of-iraq-voices-bartered-for-gravel-and-citizenship-assassinated-by-a-label","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/roma-women-of-iraq-voices-bartered-for-gravel-and-citizenship-assassinated-by-a-label\/","title":{"rendered":"Roma Women of Iraq: Voices Bartered for \u201cGravel\u201d and Citizenship Assassinated by a Label"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><strong>A Joint Report by Tamara Emad and Manar Al-Zubaidi<\/strong><\/p>\n\n<p>In the village of Al-Zuhoor in Al-Diwaniyah province-about 180 km south of Baghdad-all colorful political promises collapse with the first rainfall. The true test of democracy here is whether the \u201cpromise of gravel\u201d can withstand the mud. Here, forty-year-old Um Karim traces her daily route between her home and the school where she works as a cleaner, her steps heavy. She chases not only a livelihood she recently earned after years of unpaid labor, but also a homeland that has given her nothing more than dried purple ink on her finger every election cycle-never once paving her promised road or rescuing her voice from being bartered for a loaf of bread.      <\/p>\n\n<p>Between the school\u2019s narrow corridors, Um Karim grips her broom and her national ID card at the same time. The card grants her the right to vote as a passing electoral number, yet it can also strip her of the label that determines either her integration or her permanent exclusion-under a merciless social and legal stigma.   <\/p>\n\n<p> This is the story of citizenship mortgaged to a field in an electronic form. Roma women in Iraq face compounded marginalization that turns their voices into ink on paper and their fingerprints into mere deeds for bargaining survival at its bare minimum.   <\/p>\n\n<p>Roma women in Iraq are pursued by a social stigma tied to their community\u2019s history in art and dance. This stigma renders their bodies violated in the public imagination, exposing them to harassment and various forms of exploitation.  <\/p>\n\n<p><strong>Researcher Ferial Al-Kaabi<\/strong> argues that \u201cRoma women are subjected to social discrimination due to their ethnic belonging, making them easy targets for all forms of violence. This inferior perception prevents political parties\u2014even those claiming to be civil\u2014from nominating a Roma woman on their lists; her roots alone are enough to exclude her due to societal attitudes.\u201d    <\/p>\n\n<p>Legal researcher Abbas Al-Rubaie says: \u201cBecause of systematic stereotyping, any party or political entity fears for its electoral reputation if a Roma woman is nominated, sacrificing her right to political participation on the altar of prevailing social norms.\u201d This fear, however, quickly disappears when Roma women\u2019s votes are exploited to support those same party lists.     <\/p>\n\n<pre class=\"wp-block-verse w-quote\"><em>From the Iraqi government\u2019s perspective, Roma people are not recognized as an official minority under the constitutional framework;<\/em><br\/>they are treated as a \u201cmarginalized social group.\u201d<\/pre>\n\n<p>Legally, and from the Iraqi government\u2019s standpoint, Roma are not considered an official minority and are treated as a \u201cmarginalized social group.\u201d This designation is not merely linguistic-it is a legal denial of cultural specificity, depriving them of minority protection mechanisms and political quotas granted to other groups such as Christians and Yazidis, according to experts.      <strong>On minority affairs, explains Saad Salloum. <\/strong><\/p>\n\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/mofa.gov.iq\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/85\/2019\/11\/%D8%AF%D8%B3%D8%AA%D9%88%D8%B1-%D8%AC%D9%85%D9%87%D9%88%D8%B1%D9%8A%D8%A9-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B9%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%82.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Article 125 of the Iraqi Constitution states<\/a>: \u201cThis Constitution guarantees the administrative, political, cultural, and educational rights of various nationalities such as Turkmen, Chaldeans, Assyrians, and other components, and this shall be regulated by law.\u201d The constitutional legislator listed specific groups as examples and used the phrase \u201cother components\u201d to cover the rest.       <\/p>\n\n<p>In legislative and practical applications following the Constitution\u2019s adoption, \u201cother components\u201d came to include Yazidis, Shabak, Sabean-Mandaeans, and Faili Kurds-explicitly recognized in later laws. In contrast, no judicial interpretation by the Federal Supreme Court nor parliamentary legislation has included Roma under this umbrella.      <\/p>\n\n<p>Salloum notes that the absence of legal recognition of Roma as a \u201ccomponent\u201d with collective cultural rights entrenches exclusion rather than addressing it. The state treats them as a \u201csocial problem\u201d to be contained, not as citizens to be integrated.  <\/p>\n\n<p><strong>Digital Citizenship: The Minefield of a Missing \u201cSurname\u201d <\/strong><\/p>\n\n<p>Exclusion begins with <strong>official paperwork. Abbas Al-Rubaie<\/strong> explains that while the Iraqi Constitution-particularly Article 14-establishes equality and considers nationality the basis of citizenship, and while the Ministry of Interior in 2019 removed the phrase \u201cexempt from the Personal Status Law\u201d from <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ina-iraq.net\/content.php?id=64429\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">nationality certificates<\/a>, the stigma did not disappear from civil digital records. In many cases, the label \u201cRoma\u201d remains embedded in electronic fields.     <\/p>\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-full is-resized\"><img fetchpriority=\"high\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"579\" height=\"343\" src=\"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/WhatsApp-Image-2026-01-29-at-6.26.59-PM-1-1.jpeg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-15789\" style=\"aspect-ratio:1.6901123514323904;width:750px;height:auto\" srcset=\"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/WhatsApp-Image-2026-01-29-at-6.26.59-PM-1-1.jpeg 579w, https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/WhatsApp-Image-2026-01-29-at-6.26.59-PM-1-1-300x178.jpeg 300w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 579px) 100vw, 579px\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-element-caption\"><sub>An Iraqi girl\u2019s ID card showing the designation of her surname. <\/sub><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n<p>Al-Rubaie says: \u201cIn the era of digital transformation, the surname field has become a major problem. Many Roma have \u2018Roma\u2019 written in that field; the lucky ones find it left blank.\u201d    <\/p>\n\n<p>When a Roma woman applies for employment or a loan through electronic portals, the system rejects her because the surname field is mandatory. She faces two choices: enter false information and risk legal accountability, or be denied the service. This gap is not merely technical\u2014it embodies incomplete citizenship. The state issued national IDs but failed to protect them from social norms that turn origin into a stigma blocking employment or candidacy.         <\/p>\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-full\"><img decoding=\"async\" width=\"768\" height=\"960\" src=\"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/image-1.jpeg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-15765\" srcset=\"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/image-1.jpeg 768w, https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/image-1-240x300.jpeg 240w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 768px) 100vw, 768px\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-element-caption\"><sub>Source: Iraqi Housing Fund <\/sub><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n<p><strong>\u201cGood Conduct\u201d as a Tool of Political Exclusion<\/strong><\/p>\n\n<p>The \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/moj.gov.iq\/uploaded\/4300.pdf#:~:text=*%20:%20%D9%80%D9%80%EF%BB%B4%20%D8%A7%D9%86%20%EF%BB%BB:%20%D8%A7%D9%88%EF%BB%B7%20%EF%BB%98%D9%84,%D9%A1%D9%A0-%20%EF%BB%BB%20%EF%BB%B4%D8%B2%EF%BB%B4%D8%AF%20%EF%BB%8B%D8%AF%D8%AF%20%D8%A7%EF%BB%9F%EF%BB%A4%D8%B1%EF%BA%B8%EF%BA%A4%EF%BB%B4%D9%86%20%EF%BB%93%EF%BB%B2%20%D8%A7%EF%BB%9F%EF%BB%98%EF%BA%8E\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">good conduct and reputation\u201d requirement in election and party laws<\/a> <strong>is among<\/strong> the most dangerous legal obstacles facing Roma women\u2019s political participation. <strong>Party affairs expert Ahmed Al-Khudairi explains <\/strong> that ethnic belonging is innate and should not affect \u201cgood conduct.\u201d Yet in practice, authorities may interpret a Roma woman\u2019s background-linked historically to dance and music, deemed immoral by tribal and religious norms-as a \u201cdeficiency in good conduct.\u201d    <\/p>\n\n<p>Al-Khudairi argues that this vague condition grants discretionary power to decision-makers, turning Roma identity itself into an unwritten moral charge that women must prove themselves innocent of-a burden no other candidate faces.   <\/p>\n\n<p><strong>Votes for Barter and Wills Mortgaged by Proxy<\/strong><\/p>\n\n<p>In Al-Zuhoor village, Mukhtar Fares Al-Moussawi reveals a reality where democracy becomes a hollow ritual. Women are mobilized as tools to improve men\u2019s and families\u2019 conditions. This manifests as forced political proxy voting, where a guardian-father, husband, or brother-dictates the candidate, openly confiscating women\u2019s independent will.    <\/p>\n\n<p>This dependency is not merely social custom but part of patriarchal deals between families and certain candidates. Men claim to boycott elections as protest, while sending women to polling stations to execute bargains for small sums or hollow promises-like repairing a school or covering roads with \u201cgravel.\u201d    <\/p>\n\n<p>According to Al-Moussawi, educational gaps enable this exploitation. Illiteracy among female voters in the village reaches roughly 75%, turning them into a compliant electoral reservoir detached from political programs or candidate engagement.   <\/p>\n\n<pre class=\"wp-block-verse w-quote\"> <em>Illiteracy among female voters reaches approximately 75%,<\/em><br\/><em>turning them into an easily manipulated electoral reservoir.<\/em><\/pre>\n\n<p>Noor Samir (pseudonym) embodies this tragedy. A woman in her forties without even a documented birthdate, she summarizes her relationship with the ballot box: \u201cWe vote for the cash promise because we have lost hope in all others.\u201d Elections, for Noor, are not citizenship but a forced response to those who purchase her misery for a few days with a ballot.     <\/p>\n\n<p>The promise of \u201cgravel\u201d was the price Um Karim and her friends received for their votes\u2014before discovering its emptiness. She recounts simply: \u201cThey promised paved streets. We voted. In the end, the roads remained mud, and the school stayed isolated.\u201d    <\/p>\n\n<p>Here, ballot boxes become not instruments of change but a political slave market, auctioning the poorest women\u2019s voices for meager prices\u2014promises that are, in essence, rights never fulfilled. Citizenship begins and ends at the threshold of material need.    <\/p>\n\n<p><strong>Roma Women and International Commitments: The CEDAW Gap <\/strong><\/p>\n\n<p>Iraq has <a href=\"https:\/\/www.moj.gov.iq\/view.4563\/\" data-type=\"link\" data-id=\"https:\/\/www.moj.gov.iq\/view.4563\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">ratified the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women <\/a>(CEDAW) and adopted UN Resolution 1325 on Women,<a href=\"https:\/\/www.moj.gov.iq\/view.4563\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em> <\/em><\/a>peace, and security. But how does this apply to Roma women? <\/p>\n\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.ohchr.org\/ar\/instruments-mechanisms\/instruments\/convention-elimination-all-forms-discrimination-against-women\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Article 7<\/a> of CEDAW obliges states to eliminate discrimination against women in political and public life.<\/p>\n\n<p>From a feminist legal perspective, <strong>Ferial Al-Kaabi<\/strong> argues that what exists is symbolic rather than substantive participation. Iraq, as a signatory to CEDAW and Resolution 1325, is obligated to include all women. Excluding Roma women reveals a gap between international texts and practice: Roma women suffer compounded discrimination-as women and as Roma-where their rights end at casting a ballot and never begin at decision-making tables.           <\/p>\n\n<p><strong>Academic and women\u2019s rights specialist Bushra Al-Ubaidi<\/strong> agrees, describing the situation as a blatant constitutional violation. She calls for a legislative revolution to reform laws using inclusive language, stressing that improving Roma women\u2019s legal status must start from Article 14 of the Constitution, ensuring full equality for Roma women as Iraqi citizens.  <\/p>\n\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/investpromo.gov.iq\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/06\/Iraqi-constitution-Ar.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Article 14 of the Iraqi Constitution<\/a>: Iraqis are equal before the law without discrimination based on sex, race, nationality, origin, color, religion, sect, belief, opinion, or economic or social status<em>.<\/em><\/p>\n\n<p>Al-Ubaidi emphasizes the need for legislative and educational revolutions to address Roma women\u2019s conditions and secure equal treatment without discrimination, ensuring their rights under international and constitutional frameworks.<\/p>\n\n<p>Our investigation found that published data reveal weak solidarity from the Iraqi feminist movement toward Roma women-particularly in shadow reports submitted to CEDAW. Roma women are rarely included in civil society programs or national plans implementing Resolution 1325. There is \u201cno dedicated space for Roma women\u2019s suffering,\u201d leaving them isolated even within feminist and civil activism due to taboos and stigma.    <\/p>\n\n<p><strong>Will a Roma Woman Ever Run for Office?<\/strong><\/p>\n\n<p>Iraqi election law requires educational qualifications for candidates. Given state and societal marginalization of Roma communities, school destruction in Roma areas after 2003, and exclusion of Roma children from nearby schools due to parental objections and lack of state intervention, educational access remains severely limited.  <\/p>\n\n<p>Children of Al-Zuhoor returned to school only in 2017 after an advocacy campaign titled \u201cRoma Are Human,\u201d which succeeded in opening a primary school and securing national IDs. Despite limited psychosocial support, most Roma women remain illiterate or barely literate.    <\/p>\n\n<p>Um Karim says: \u201cIf I finished my education, I would run.\u201d Her job as a cleaner and her education level-sixth grade-render her political ambition legally impossible.<\/p>\n\n<p>Running for office in Iraq requires vast financial resources for campaigns-resources <a href=\"https:\/\/nirgalgate.com\/%D9%84%D8%B3%D9%86%D8%A7-%D9%86%D8%AC%D8%B3%D9%8A%D9%86-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%BA%D8%AC%D8%B1-%D9%81%D9%8A-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AF%D9%8A%D9%88%D8%A7%D9%86%D9%8A%D8%A9-%D9%8A%D8%B4%D9%83%D9%88%D9%86-%D8%AA%D9%85%D9%8A%D9%8A%D8%B2%D8%A7-%D8%AD%D9%83%D9%88%D9%85%D9%8A%D8%A7-%D9%88%D9%85%D8%AC%D8%AA%D9%85%D8%B9%D9%8A%D8%A7\/%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A3%D8%AE%D8%A8%D8%A7%D8%B1\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Roma women lack due to extreme poverty and discrimination in employment.<\/a> <\/p>\n\n<p>Funding shortages are decisive, notes Abbas Al-Rubaie. Even if education and will exist, political money seals the door. While the law allows choosing a non-stigmatizing surname, collective social scrutiny still searches roots to exclude the other.   <\/p>\n\n<pre class=\"wp-block-verse w-quote\"><em>The issue of Roma women in Iraq is the true test of the state\u2019s seriousness in applying \u201cequal citizenship.\u201d<\/em><\/pre>\n\n<p>It goes beyond quotas or representation; it begins with cultural recognition and criminalizing discrimination based on surname, origin, or ethnicity. <\/p>\n\n<p>Roma women in Iraq face compounded discrimination: oppressed as women in a patriarchal society, as Roma in a racist society, and as poor under a rentier capitalist system.  <\/p>\n\n<p>Between Um Karim\u2019s broom and the ballot boxes, the rights of women holding Iraqi nationality yet lacking existence are lost. Empowering Roma women begins by removing the stigma of \u201cconduct\u201d from their origins and enabling digital systems to recognize them as citizens without imposed labels\u2014or with surnames they choose themselves, beyond tribal customs and the shadows of enduring injustice.     <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>A Joint Report by Tamara Emad and Manar Al-Zubaidi In the village of Al-Zuhoor in Al-Diwaniyah province-about 180 km south of Baghdad-all colorful political promises collapse with the first rainfall. The true test of democracy here is whether the \u201cpromise of gravel\u201d can withstand the mud. Here, forty-year-old Um Karim traces her daily route between her home and the school where she works as a cleaner, her steps heavy. She chases not only a livelihood she recently earned after years of unpaid labor, but also a homeland that has given her nothing more than dried purple ink on her finger every election cycle-never once paving her promised road or rescuing her voice from being bartered for a loaf of bread. Between the school\u2019s narrow corridors, Um Karim grips her broom and her national ID card at the same time. The card grants her the right to vote as a passing electoral number, yet it can also strip her of the label that determines either her integration or her permanent exclusion-under a merciless social and legal stigma. This is the story of citizenship mortgaged to a field in an electronic form. Roma women in Iraq face compounded marginalization that turns their voices into ink on paper and their fingerprints into mere deeds for bargaining survival at its bare minimum. Roma women in Iraq are pursued by a social stigma tied to their community\u2019s history in art and dance. This stigma renders their bodies violated in the public imagination, exposing them to harassment and various forms of exploitation. Researcher Ferial Al-Kaabi argues that \u201cRoma women are subjected to social discrimination due to their ethnic belonging, making them easy targets for all forms of violence. This inferior perception prevents political parties\u2014even those claiming to be civil\u2014from nominating a Roma woman on their lists; her roots alone are enough to exclude her due to societal attitudes.\u201d Legal researcher Abbas Al-Rubaie says: \u201cBecause of systematic stereotyping, any party or political entity fears for its electoral reputation if a Roma woman is nominated, sacrificing her right to political participation on the altar of prevailing social norms.\u201d This fear, however, quickly disappears when Roma women\u2019s votes are exploited to support those same party lists. From the Iraqi government\u2019s perspective, Roma people are not recognized as an official minority under the constitutional framework;they are treated as a \u201cmarginalized social group.\u201d Legally, and from the Iraqi government\u2019s standpoint, Roma are not considered an official minority and are treated as a \u201cmarginalized social group.\u201d This designation is not merely linguistic-it is a legal denial of cultural specificity, depriving them of minority protection mechanisms and political quotas granted to other groups such as Christians and Yazidis, according to experts. On minority affairs, explains Saad Salloum. Article 125 of the Iraqi Constitution states: \u201cThis Constitution guarantees the administrative, political, cultural, and educational rights of various nationalities such as Turkmen, Chaldeans, Assyrians, and other components, and this shall be regulated by law.\u201d The constitutional legislator listed specific groups as examples and used the phrase \u201cother components\u201d to cover the rest. In legislative and practical applications following the Constitution\u2019s adoption, \u201cother components\u201d came to include Yazidis, Shabak, Sabean-Mandaeans, and Faili Kurds-explicitly recognized in later laws. In contrast, no judicial interpretation by the Federal Supreme Court nor parliamentary legislation has included Roma under this umbrella. Salloum notes that the absence of legal recognition of Roma as a \u201ccomponent\u201d with collective cultural rights entrenches exclusion rather than addressing it. The state treats them as a \u201csocial problem\u201d to be contained, not as citizens to be integrated. Digital Citizenship: The Minefield of a Missing \u201cSurname\u201d Exclusion begins with official paperwork. Abbas Al-Rubaie explains that while the Iraqi Constitution-particularly Article 14-establishes equality and considers nationality the basis of citizenship, and while the Ministry of Interior in 2019 removed the phrase \u201cexempt from the Personal Status Law\u201d from nationality certificates, the stigma did not disappear from civil digital records. In many cases, the label \u201cRoma\u201d remains embedded in electronic fields. Al-Rubaie says: \u201cIn the era of digital transformation, the surname field has become a major problem. Many Roma have \u2018Roma\u2019 written in that field; the lucky ones find it left blank.\u201d When a Roma woman applies for employment or a loan through electronic portals, the system rejects her because the surname field is mandatory. She faces two choices: enter false information and risk legal accountability, or be denied the service. This gap is not merely technical\u2014it embodies incomplete citizenship. The state issued national IDs but failed to protect them from social norms that turn origin into a stigma blocking employment or candidacy. \u201cGood Conduct\u201d as a Tool of Political Exclusion The \u201cgood conduct and reputation\u201d requirement in election and party laws is among the most dangerous legal obstacles facing Roma women\u2019s political participation. Party affairs expert Ahmed Al-Khudairi explains that ethnic belonging is innate and should not affect \u201cgood conduct.\u201d Yet in practice, authorities may interpret a Roma woman\u2019s background-linked historically to dance and music, deemed immoral by tribal and religious norms-as a \u201cdeficiency in good conduct.\u201d Al-Khudairi argues that this vague condition grants discretionary power to decision-makers, turning Roma identity itself into an unwritten moral charge that women must prove themselves innocent of-a burden no other candidate faces. Votes for Barter and Wills Mortgaged by Proxy In Al-Zuhoor village, Mukhtar Fares Al-Moussawi reveals a reality where democracy becomes a hollow ritual. Women are mobilized as tools to improve men\u2019s and families\u2019 conditions. This manifests as forced political proxy voting, where a guardian-father, husband, or brother-dictates the candidate, openly confiscating women\u2019s independent will. This dependency is not merely social custom but part of patriarchal deals between families and certain candidates. Men claim to boycott elections as protest, while sending women to polling stations to execute bargains for small sums or hollow promises-like repairing a school or covering roads with \u201cgravel.\u201d According to Al-Moussawi, educational gaps enable this exploitation. Illiteracy among female voters in the village reaches roughly 75%, turning them into a compliant electoral reservoir detached from political<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":53,"featured_media":15805,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"elementor_theme","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[415,499,414,338],"tags":[633,626,482,632,345,449],"class_list":["post-15806","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-rights-are-not-given-they-are-taken","category-arab-intersections","category-voices-from-the-margins","category-we-women","tag-elections","tag-iraq","tag-law","tag-roma-women","tag-women","tag-womens-rights"],"blocksy_meta":[],"acf":[],"rttpg_featured_image_url":{"full":["https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/223-6.jpg",2048,900,false],"landscape":["https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/223-6.jpg",2048,900,false],"portraits":["https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/223-6.jpg",2048,900,false],"thumbnail":["https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/223-6-150x150.jpg",150,150,true],"medium":["https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/223-6-300x132.jpg",300,132,true],"large":["https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/223-6-1024x450.jpg",1024,450,true],"1536x1536":["https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/223-6-1536x675.jpg",1536,675,true],"2048x2048":["https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/01\/223-6.jpg",2048,900,false]},"rttpg_author":{"display_name":"\u0635\u0650\u0644\u0629 \u0648\u064e\u0635\u0644","author_link":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/author\/silat-wassel\/"},"rttpg_comment":0,"rttpg_category":"<a href=\"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/category\/rights-are-not-given-they-are-taken\/\" rel=\"category tag\">Rights Are Not Given\u2026 They Are Taken<\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/category\/arab-intersections\/\" rel=\"category tag\">Arab Intersections<\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/category\/voices-from-the-margins\/\" rel=\"category tag\">Voices from the Margins<\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/category\/we-women\/\" rel=\"category tag\">We, the Women<\/a>","rttpg_excerpt":"A Joint Report by Tamara Emad and Manar Al-Zubaidi In the village of Al-Zuhoor in Al-Diwaniyah province-about 180 km south of Baghdad-all colorful political promises collapse with the first rainfall. The true test of democracy here is whether the \u201cpromise of gravel\u201d can withstand the mud. Here, forty-year-old Um Karim traces her daily route between&hellip;","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/15806","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/53"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=15806"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/15806\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":15810,"href":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/15806\/revisions\/15810"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/15805"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=15806"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=15806"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/silatwassel.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=15806"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}