Afghan women face 'daily danger'
By Crispin Thorold
BBC, Kabul
The plight of Afghan women has improved little since the fall of the Taleban, according to the human rights organisation Amnesty International.
There have been big changes for some women since the fall of the fundamentalist Taleban regime nearly two years ago - thousands of girls are now attending school and many women have returned to work.
But according to Amnesty International, most women are not being protected.
A draft constitution is expected to enshrine equal rights for both sexes
It says the risk of rape is very high, and girls as young as eight are being forced into marriage.
Women are not protected by the criminal justice system, the report says.
During the war against the Taleban, world leaders said the conflict would liberate Afghanistan's women, yet many today are as oppressed as ever.
Amnesty International's report comes days before the release of a draft constitution which activists hope will transform the way women are treated in this devoutly Islamic state.
But even if new laws are ratified by the mainly male constitutional loya jirga that will consider the document, there is some doubt the measures will be enforced.
Much of Afghanistan is lawless and President Hamid Karzai's administration has little control outside the capital, Kabul.
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