She should consider herself lucky that, like so many innocent Afghans, her face wasn`t torn off, or worse her head blown off, by some bored American soldier armed to the teeth (and like so many of them), saddled from birth with the IQ of a sewer rat.
And here, CNN is happy to report, the US is jumping out of it`s way to `rescue` and treat this one.
What hipocrites!
Afghan woman whose nose, ears cut off travels to U.S. - CNN.com
But not a word about the injustice of this - Your poor wife must live in fear of your anger - Only a man that is an abuser of women, the weak and unprotected could twist this as you have done. You are an abomination for how you twist and turn.
I fell pity and empathy for your family, but rest assured the hate that you spew will come home to roost when you are older and weaker in physical strength and can no longer exert thru fear and itimidation will come - And judging by your age it is not far away - That day will come when your family tells you what a sick bastarxrd your are.
She eventually ran away but was caught by police in Kandahar. And although running away is not a crime, in places throughout Afghanistan, it is treated as one if you are a woman. Eventually her father-in-law found her and took her back to her abusive home.
She was taken to a Taliban court for dishonoring her husband's family and bringing them shame. The court ruled that her nose and ears must be cut off, an act carried out by her husband in the mountains of Oruzgan, where they left her to die.
After Aisha's story was exposed to the world through various news organizations, offers of help poured in.
But there are many more women still suffering.
The United Nations estimates that nearly 90 percent of Afghanistan's women face some sort of domestic abuse. This in a country where there are fewer than a dozen women's shelters providing sanctuary from the cruelty they face. And all of them are privately run.
"Bibi Aisha is only one example of thousands of girls and women in Afghanistan and throughout the world who are treated this way. Who suffer abuses like this -- like this and worse," Women for Afghan Women board member Esther Hyneman said.