Skip to main content

Fresh Calls to End Afghanistan’s ‘Virginity Exams’

Rights Commission Finds Abusive Practice Continues

Imagine being arrested and taken by police to a doctor who examines your vagina and anus –without your consent. Now imagine you are sent for several of these exams, sometimes with other people watching. Now imagine that these “tests” are scientifically invalid and the “findings” are medically meaningless – but still may be critical in sending you to prison.

A woman prisoner looks out a window in Parwan prison north of Kabul, Afghanistan, in February 2011. The woman was convicted of moral crimes after a man from her neighborhood raped her. She later gave birth in prison. © 2011 Farzana Wahidy 314853

Women and girls in Afghanistan don’t have to imagine this because it actually happens. Sex outside marriage – zina – is punishable by between 5 and 15 years in prison. Women and girls suspected of zina – and sometimes completely unrelated crimes like theft or murder – are routinely sent for these exams. And new research by the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) finds this practice continues despite a 2017 Ministry of Public Healthpolicy instructing government health workers not to perform these examinations, and a 2018 amendment to the Penal Code requiring a court order or consent of the person being examined.

The AIHRC surveyed 129 women who had so-called “virginity examinations” after the Penal Code change went into effect. It found that in 92 percent of cases there was neither consent nor a court order. Four respondents said a man conducted the examination, which violates Afghanistan’s Criminal Procedure Code. 

So-called “virginity tests” should never be performed. They have no scientific validity, are demeaning, and can constitute sexual assault. Their use is based on that mistaken belief that “virginity” can be determined by examining a person’s hymen to see if it has been broken during sexual intercourse. In fact, some girls are born without a hymen, hymens often break during daily non-sexual activities, and some hymens remain intact after sexual intercourse. The World Health Organization says the tests have no scientific validity and health workers should never conduct them.    

But the AIHRC findings show they’re still happening, partly because the government has failed to compel officials to comply with even the flimsy protection the revised Penal Code offers.

Afghan women’s rights activists have bravely fought for an end to these examinations but they need more support. Short of a law ending the practice, President Ashraf Ghani should abolish these exams through an executive order – and enforce that order – and end this cruel and pointless abuse once and for all.

Your tax deductible gift can help stop human rights violations and save lives around the world.

Region / Country