The Asian Age

Taliban ban ‘forced marriages’ for women, silent on girls’ schooling

-

Kabul, Dec. 3: The Taliban issued a decree Friday in the name of their supreme leader instructin­g Afghan ministries “to take serious action” on women’s rights, but failed to mention girls’ access to schools.

The move comes after the Islamists seized power in mid-August and as they seek to restore Afghanista­n’s access to billions of dollars in assets and aid suspended when the previous, Western-backed regime collapsed in the final stages of a US military withdrawal.

“The Islamic Emirate’s leadership directs all relevant organisati­ons... to take serious action to enforce Women’s Rights,” the decree states, quoting elusive supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada.

The decree centres on marriage and widows’ rights, stating “no one can force women to marry by coercion or pressure” and that a widow is entitled to an unspecifie­d fixed share of her husband’s inheritanc­e.

It instructs the ministry of culture and informatio­n to publish material on women’s rights “to prevent... ongoing repression”.

Respect for women’s rights has repeatedly been cited by key global donors as a condition for restoring aid.

The decree crucially makes no mention of girls’ secondary education — which has been suspended for millions — or the employment of women, who have been barred from returning to jobs in the public sector.

Women’s rights were severely curtailed during the Taliban’s previous stint in power, which lasted from 1996 to late 2001.

Women were forced to wear the all covering burqa, only allowed to leave the home with a male chaperone and banned from work and education.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India