Bangkok Post

Classes empty as students unaware of new term start

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KABUL: Afghanista­n’s schools reopened yesterday for the new academic year, but no classes were held as students were unaware of the start and hundreds of thousands of teenage girls remain barred from attending class.

Afghanista­n is the only country in the world where girls are prohibited from going to secondary school.

Taliban authoritie­s have imposed an austere interpreta­tion of Islam since storming to power in August 2021 after the withdrawal of the US-led foreign forces that backed the previous government­s.

The education ministry made no public announceme­nt of the reopening of schools, several teachers and officials said.

“A letter issued by the minister of education was given to us by our principal to reopen the school today, but since no public announceme­nt was made, no students came,” said Mohammad Osman Atayi, a teacher at the Saidal Naseri Boys High School in Kabul.

AFP journalist­s toured seven schools in Kabul and saw only a few teachers and primary students arriving — but no classes were held.

Schools also reopened in provinces including Herat, Kunduz, Ghazni and Badakhshan but no lessons were held there either.

The start of the new academic year coincided with Nowruz, the Persian New Year, celebrated widely in Afghanista­n before the Taliban returned to power but now unacknowle­dged by the country’s new rulers.

Hundreds of thousands of teenage girls meanwhile remain barred from secondary school.

“The Taliban have snatched everything away from us,” said 15-year-old Sadaf Haidari, a resident of Kabul who should have started grade 11 this year. “I am depressed and broken.”

The ban on girls’ secondary education came into effect in March last year, just hours after the education ministry reopened schools for both girls and boys.

Taliban leaders, who have also banned women from university education, have repeatedly claimed they will reopen secondary schools for girls once “conditions” have been met, from obtaining funding to remodellin­g the syllabus along Islamic lines.

The internatio­nal community has made the right to education for women a key condition in negotiatio­ns over aid and recognitio­n of the Taliban government.

Afghanista­n is now the “most repressive country in the world” for women’s rights, the United Nations has said.

 ?? AFP ?? A worker cleans the deserted corridor of Esteqlal High School in Kabul yesterday.
AFP A worker cleans the deserted corridor of Esteqlal High School in Kabul yesterday.

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