In Afghanistan, dozens of women took to the streets at the weekend to protest against the exclusion of girls from school. Meanwhile, the Taliban government is further restricting public life.
Dozens of people have protested in Kabul against the decision by the militant Islamist Taliban to bar girls from attending secondary schools in Afghanistan.
Video footage from local media showed dozens of women and girls demanding their right to go to school and work on Saturday.
Contrary to their promise, the Taliban had announced that schoolgirls from the 7th grade onwards would not be allowed to attend classes until further notice. According to the organizers, the demonstration against the school exclusion ended peacefully. In previous protests, the Taliban intimidated and harassed participants and journalists.
Public life further restricted
This week, the Islamists further restricted public life in the country with further orders: Afghan women will no longer be allowed to fly without a male companion. The Taliban ordered airlines in the country to stop selling tickets to unaccompanied women, according to a document seen by the German Press Agency. In addition, amusement parks in the capital Kabul and the surrounding area may only be visited separately by gender: women on Sundays to Tuesdays, men on Wednesdays to Saturdays. This was announced by the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice on Sunday.
Since returning to power in mid-August 2021, the Taliban have imposed increasingly strict regulations on public life. Women should not be allowed to travel more than 45 miles (about 72 kilometers) without a male companion. In many cases, women cannot go back to their jobs. During the first Taliban rule from 1996 to 2001, women and girls were almost completely excluded from education and work outside the home. Western countries make recognition of the Taliban government dependent, among other things, on progress in women’s rights.
Source: Stern

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