The National - News

The pain of Afghan women watching their progress in gender equality vanish

- JANINE DI GIOVANNI Janine di Giovanni is a visiting fellow at Johns Hopkins University and a columnist for The National

Ihave just returned from Finland where I attended the Internatio­nal Gender Equality Prize in Tampere, two hours north of Helsinki. Finland has fought hard for the rights of women. It was the first European country to give women the vote, in 1906, and in 1994 it led the world in making marital rape illegal.

The winner of the prize was Mahbouba Seraj, an elegant 75-year-old Afghan women’s rights activist and Nobel Prize nominee, who runs the last safe shelter for women in Afghanista­n and an NGO called Afghan Women Skills Developmen­t Centre. Ms Mahbouba gave a stirring and humble speech, pointing out that with the wars raging in Ukraine and Gaza, Afghanista­n has very much been forgotten.

Ukraine, which was front page news for two years, may now lose American funding. It has also disappeare­d from the evening news. I recently visited Kyiv, where the mood is grim – two years of war erodes a country’s emotional psyche, not to mention the civilian fatalities destroying the fabric of society.

Gaza’s desperate humanitari­an situation is on the top of the agenda – as it should be – but this reminds me much of how quickly Afghanista­n faded from the news after the Taliban gained control in 2021.

When the Taliban came back and the internatio­nal journalist­s and aid agencies fled, Ms Mahbouba, unlike then president Ashraf Ghani, chose to stay. She had trained as a historian at Kabul University, and she remained not only out of loyalty for her country. She knew she could help make the country better. She had left Afghanista­n before, in 1978, and she remembers the bitterness of being in exile when she knew that her country needed her skills.

Returning in 2003, she worked with women and children. Her work is mainly with young women who are escaping violence or early marriages, and she shelters them, giving them a new life. This means she must sometimes have to engage with the Taliban, including (surprising­ly) a bureau of human rights in order to get things done.

Perhaps what is so painful for the women of Afghanista­n is having achieved so much, only to see it disappear. The decades of freedom for Afghan women after the Taliban fell in November 2001 was exhilarati­ng.

I remember being on the streets of Kabul in those heady days and meeting young women who were opening books and talking about university, travel and freedom. Later, there was an expanse of female entreprene­urs who set out to train and educate women. The pain of seeing two decades of work towards gender equality vanishing has been searing for Ms Mahbouba. “The lives of Afghan women have changed 180 degrees,” she said. “The women of Afghanista­n went from existence – from being part of society, from working, from being part of every aspect of life as doctors, judges, nurses, engineers, women running offices – to nothing.”

The right to go to high school was taken away. Women are banned from going to parks, public bathing spaces and gyms. Gender equality vanished, as did their freedom of movement, or as a report by UN Women put it, women in Afghanista­n went from “everywhere to nowhere”. The report stresses that over the past two years, the Taliban have issued 80 edicts, 54 of these target women and girls.

“The rollbacks started as soon as they took power in August 2021, when they ordered women to stay at home because their foot soldiers were ‘not familiar with seeing women outside the house and were not trained to respect women’ … it was clear gender segregatio­n and restrictin­g women’s movement remained the cornerston­e of their vision for society. The so-called ‘Taliban 2.0’ never eventuated.”

Women have been stopped from pursuing education beyond the sixth grade. Their ability to work outside of health and education is all but prohibited.

But the question that should be asked is: what more can be taken away from them? The potential for them to vanish behind the walls of their homes – as they had in the pre2001 Taliban rule – is very real.

We should not push Afghanista­n to the back of the internatio­nal agenda, because it is unjust, but also because the reversal of rights should serve as a powerful example.

Ms Mahbouba has made the point that if rights can be taken from Afghan women so easily, they can be taken from women anywhere – and that includes the US. “Roe versus Wade”, which is the US Supreme Court ruling for the right to have an abortion, is a striking example. The reversal of the legislatio­n last June destroyed years of progress by American feminists.

This meant that women could be forced to backstreet and illegal abortions. It has unfairly targeted women of colour and those economical­ly challenged.

It is easy to sit back and accept that we have hard-earned rights that won’t shift. But gender rights were turned to Ground Zero in Afghanista­n – and it could happen anywhere. Right-wing government­s are on the rise in the world. There is a real chance that Donald Trump will be re-elected in 2024, and if he is, many fundamenta­l human rights will be at stake, perhaps including freedom of press and rule of law. We should look to the women of Afghanista­n as a lesson of what must not happen, and continue to support them, promote them, and try to bring them back into the world.

 ?? AFP ?? We should look to the women of Afghanista­n as a lesson of what must not happen, and continue to support them
Afghan women at a market at Fayzabad district, in Badakhshan province
AFP We should look to the women of Afghanista­n as a lesson of what must not happen, and continue to support them Afghan women at a market at Fayzabad district, in Badakhshan province
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates