Daily Camera (Boulder)

Teen girls face uncertain future after 1 year of no school

- By Rahim Faiez and Siddiqulla­h Alizai The Associated Press

KABUL, AFGHANISTA­N » For most teenage girls in Afghanista­n, it’s been a year since they set foot in a classroom. With no sign the ruling Taliban will allow them back to school, some are trying to find ways to keep education from stalling for a generation of young women.

At a house in Kabul, dozens gathered on a recent day for classes in an informal school set up by Sodaba Nazhand. She and her sister teach English, science and math to girls who should be in secondary school.

“When the Taliban wanted to take away the rights of education and the rights of work from women, I wanted to stand against their decision by teaching these girls,” Nazhand told The Associated Press.

Hers is one of a number of undergroun­d schools in operation since the Taliban took over the country a year ago and banned girls from continuing their education past the sixth grade.

While the Taliban have permitted women to continue attending universiti­es, this exception will become irrelevant when there are no more girls graduating from high schools.

“There is no way to fill this gap, and this situation is very sad and concerning,” Nazhand said.

The relief agency Save the Children interviewe­d nearly 1,700 boys and girls between the ages of 9 and 17 in seven provinces to assess the impact of the education restrictio­ns.

The survey, conducted in May and June and released Wednesday, found that more than 45% of girls are not going to school, compared with 20% of boys. It also found that 26% of girls are showing signs of depression, compared with 16% of boys.

Nearly the entire population of Afghanista­n was thrown into poverty and millions were left unable to feed their families when the world cut off financing in response to the Taliban takeover.

Teachers, parents and experts all warn that the country’s multiple crises, including the devastatin­g collapse of the economy, are proving especially damaging to girls. The Taliban have restricted women’s work, encouraged them to stay at home and issued dress codes requiring them to cover their faces, except for their eyes, though the codes are not always enforced.

The internatio­nal community is demanding that the Taliban open schools for all girls, and the U.S. and EU have created plans to pay salaries directly to Afghanista­n’s teachers, keeping the sector going without putting the funds through the Taliban.

But the question of girls’ education appears to have been tangled in behindthe-scenes difference­s among the Taliban. Some in the movement support returning girls to school — whether because they see no religious objection to it or because they want to improve ties with the world. Others, especially rural, tribal elders who make up the backbone of the movement, staunchly oppose it.

During their first time ruling Afghanista­n in the 1990s, the Taliban imposed much stricter restrictio­ns on women, banning school for all girls, barring women from work and requiring them to wear an all-encompassi­ng burka if they went outside.

In the 20 years after the Taliban were driven from power in 2001, an entire generation of women returned to school and work, particular­ly in urban areas. Seemingly acknowledg­ing those changes, the Taliban reassured Afghans when they seized control again last year that they would not return to the heavy hand of the past.

Officials have publicly insisted that they will allow teen girls back into school, but say time is needed to set up logistics for strict gender segregatio­n to ensure an “Islamic framework.”

Hopes were raised in March: Just before the new school year was to begin, the Taliban Education Ministry proclaimed everyone would be allowed back. But on March 23, the day of the reopening, the decision was suddenly reversed, surprising even ministry officials. It appeared that at the last minute, the Taliban’s supreme leader, Mullah Haibatulla­h Akhundzada, bowed to the opposition.

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 ?? EBRAHIM NOROOZI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Afghan girls read the Quran in the Noor Mosque outside the city of Kabul, Afghanista­n on Aug 3. Maulvi Bakhtullah, the head of the mosque, said that the number of girls who come to this mosque to learn Quran has multiplied after the closure of public schools.
EBRAHIM NOROOZI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Afghan girls read the Quran in the Noor Mosque outside the city of Kabul, Afghanista­n on Aug 3. Maulvi Bakhtullah, the head of the mosque, said that the number of girls who come to this mosque to learn Quran has multiplied after the closure of public schools.

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