Artist pays homage to abused Iraq Kurd women with 5-km-long artwork
Along a five-kilometer (three-mile) stretch of road in Sulaimaniyah, an Iraqi Kurdish artist on Monday unveiled a stitched collage of clothes from women survivors of domestic violence.
“Three months ago, I started collecting the clothes of women subjected to violence by their husbands and families throughout the region,” Tara Abdallah, who stitched the artwork that has been strung up across the city, told AFP.
The visual artist had asked women survivors to donate a scrap of clothing that symbolized their trauma and sewed them together to create a giant, colorful patchwork.
For all the latest headlines follow our Google News channel online or via the app.

“I heard lots of stories about violence that women in our society endured in the course of my research... Every piece in this work has a story behind it,” she said.
The UN regularly condemns “honor killings” of women in Iraqi Kurdistan, which promotes itself as progressive, over sexual conduct.
About 37.5 percent of Kurdish women aged between 15 and 49 are also forced to undergo female genital mutilation (FGM) in the autonomous Kurdistan region of northern Iraqi, according to the United Nations.

The figure is less than one percent for women in the rest of Iraq.
Out of desperation, Iraqi Kurdish women often commit suicide to escape domestic violence or forced marriages.
Rights groups say domestic violence surged globally during the lockdown earlier this year to curb the coronavirus pandemic.
Read more:
Shock in Iraq after woman throws her two children into the Tigris River
Violence mounts against Iraqi doctors as COVID-19 cases spike
Coronavirus: Refugee women face heightened risk of violence, UNHCR says
-
Cross-dressing Kurdish men champion women’s rights
Iranian men from the country’s Kurdish community are championing women’s rights in a rather peculiar fashion, by dressing in women’s ... Middle East -
Thousands of Kurds protest in Paris over women’s murders
A Turkish national, 33-year-old Omer Guney, has been sent to trial charged with the killings World News -
Kurds ‘paying’ to save Yazidi women enslaved by ISIS
ISIS militants ‘buy’ the women for as low as $50 then sell them for $2,000-$2,500, an official said Middle East