
Some Taliban men have walked out of classrooms and many professors in Afghanistan’s universities have resigned in protest against the Taliban’s hardline measure to not allow women students in educational institutions.
According
to report, the Taliban rulers of Afghanistan have fenced off at least one
university in Kabul with barbed wire and posted armed guards to keep women out,
according to several media reports.
As the Taliban
diktat on women’s higher education came into force, video obtained by The
Associated Press showed women weeping and consoling each other outside a campus
in Kabul.
“The
Taliban have used barbed wire and armed guards to prevent Afghan women from
entering universities. Yet, despite the intimidation, they protest alongside
brave Afghan men, demanding women and girls be given their basic rights,”
tweeted BBC anchor and correspondent Yalda Hakim. Hakim also posted a video of
women holding up placards and raising slogans.
Shabnam
Nasimi, former policy advisor to minister for afghan resettlement &
minister for refugee, tweeted an image of a burqa-clad woman standing outside a
barbed wire gate, captioned: “If this image doesn’t break you, I don’t know
what will. Despite Taliban banning female university education, this young
woman stood outside Kabul University today, hoping that they may still let her
in. The Taliban barbwired the main gate & only allowed male students to
enter.”
The
Taliban banned all female students from universities in Afghanistan on 20
December.
Following
a meeting of the Taliban government, universities were instructed in a letter –
confirmed by the regime’s higher education ministry – to suspend female
students’ access immediately until further notice, in accordance with a cabinet
decision.
The
Taliban reassumed control of Kabul last August, as western forces brought a
hasty end to their decades-long presence in the South Asian country.
Taliban
armed guards were seen outside four Kabul universities on Wednesday. Rahimullah
Nadeem, a spokesman for Kabul University, confirmed to AP that classes for
female students had stopped. He said some women were allowed to enter the
campus for paperwork and administrative reasons.
Despite
initially promising a more moderate rule respecting rights for women and
minorities, the Taliban have widely implemented their interpretation of Islamic
law, or Sharia, since they seized power in August 2021.
They have
banned girls from middle school and high school, barred women from most fields
of employment and ordered them to wear head-to-toe clothing in public. Women
are also banned from parks and gyms.
The move
will hurt efforts by the Taliban to win international recognition for their
government and aid from potential donors at a time when Afghanistan is mired in
a worsening humanitarian crisis. The international community has urged Taliban
leaders to reopen schools and give women their right to public space.
The Voice
of America reported that dozens of Afghan women’s rights activists and female
students staged protests in Kabul, Takhar, and Nangarhar provinces. According
to Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper, political activists and students also held a
protest on Friday in Quetta.
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