It has come to the attention of the people that very few men are charged for Bacha Bazi, and the “denial” of the tradition is something “echoed by the law enforcement” (Frost 47). They are shown attending Bacha parties in Quraishi’s documentary, but they insist that they will “arrest any bacha masters they find” during their interviews (Frost 47). This exhibits the conflict of Afghan laws, those set in place to prevent child abuse, being rarely …show more content…
The authors proposed that U.S. and its NATO members should support a judicial reform of Afghanistan’s flawed justice system by assisting its government in: “implementing better recruitment programs”, “enforcing personnel assessments” (method of gathering information on someone), “establishing systematic construction of judicial centers and prisons”, and aligning “ Afghanistan to the international standard detention practices” to inhibit courts from engaging in underhanded tricks outside of the “official court proceedings” (9). Not only that, Afghanistan should also pass laws that “respect the rights of children facing persecution” (11). In addition, the article mentions an organization called One Free World International, a human rights organization that “raise awareness”for the child prostitution in Afghanistan (11). One Free World International supplies links that are capable of sending letters to several “relevant” U.S. officials to claim their support for the cause (11). With One Free World International spreading its knowledge about the system of Bacha Bazi, individuals will realize