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Posts tagged as “Taliban”

College Education is Banned for Afghan Women

On Tuesday morning, a woman named Zahra was preparing to take the final exam to complete her art degree at a university in Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul. In the evening, she was effectively expelled because of her gender, like other female university students in Afghanistan. The Taliban government has issued a statement banning all women from going to university, the highest education most Afghan girls will be able to reach is level 6 – the last year of primary school.

The spokesperson for the Ministry of Higher Education, Ziaullah Hashmi, confirmed the news to NPR and tweeted himself with the words “important news”.

“What news could be worse than this? Zahra said in a voice message to NPR, left in response to questions about her feelings. He asked that his last name not be used, fearing that he would be known by Taliban operatives. “I was shaking with anger. I can’t cry.”

“The Taliban took away our last hope. The students have their final exams tomorrow,” he said. “But the Taliban closed the doors of the university today.”

Another Thing That Discourages Girls and Women

This is another Taliban plan to stop girls’ education. When the Taliban took over Afghanistan in August 2021, they banned many girls and women from attending high school. Despite repeated assurances from the international community that the ban was temporary, in March 에볼루션 카지노사이트, the group suddenly broke its promise to allow many girls to return to school. The decision was made so suddenly that many female students returned to class after their teachers were forced to dismiss them. Many students cried.

Taliban leaders have come up with a number of excuses for keeping the ban, from wanting to scan girls’ reproductive systems to discussing their clothing. But because of the confusion in the decision-making process, women are still allowed to go to university, although under strict conditions: they must always cover their hair and face, wear short black dresses and adheres strictly to gender segregation.

It is not known how many women are still going to university. Earlier this month, the Taliban government even allowed women to take university entrance exams for the coming school year.

Read: Technology in Aspects of Education

It’s a trick, says Obaidullah Baheer, a teacher from Kabul at the American University of Afghanistan. “The ban is in effect,” he told NPR. About two months ago, he said, “there are rumors from the Taliban themselves that a law will be issued to ban women from going to university.”

He believes that some Taliban officials are spreading the rumors, hoping that it will provoke international pressure and “will be a reason for the leaders to reconsider such a ban”.

Baheer’s comments show the frustration expressed in secrecy among many middle-ranking Taliban officials and the continued restrictions on women’s education. The ban was met with resistance from a broad segment of Afghan society, including clerics associated with groups that publicly denounced the Taliban for immigration; respected elders; high school teachers who run private schools; and the girls themselves.

Adding Restrictions and Conditions

Western investigators and diplomats who have spoken to senior Taliban leaders say the ban on girls from school came from the Taliban’s top leader, Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada, and several young men. He was surrounded by other powerful people. “I really think the man in charge thinks that’s what a Muslim party should look like,” Baheer says, referring to Akhundzada. “He also had this very specific vision of the position of women or girls in society, 카지노사이트 주소 namely in their homes. So I think this is gender apartheid. Nothing less than that.”

The Taliban’s swift decision sparked a reaction from the international community, which refused to accept the Islamist group’s takeover of Afghanistan. “The United States condemns the Taliban’s unwavering decision to bar women from college, to close high schools to girls, and to continue to impose other restrictions on the rights of women and girls in Afghanistan to access human rights,” State Department spokesman Ned. Price said in a statement. video statement posted on Twitter.

The ban on almost all education for women comes at a time of worsening humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan. Many Afghans skip meals because they don’t have enough money to buy food. The international community has not recognized the Taliban government and continues to impose sanctions on the country, which has damaged the economy. Western diplomats have repeatedly said that the Taliban’s lifting of the ban on women and girls going to school is essential for talks on international recognition to begin.

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