Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Taliban let women study

But Afghan universiti­es will be segregated

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

KABUL, Afghanista­n — Women in Afghanista­n will be allowed to study in universiti­es and postgradua­te programs but only in gender-segregated classrooms and in Islamic dress, the Taliban’s new higher education minister announced Sunday as the militant group began to articulate its vision for the country after forming an allmale interim Cabinet.

The announceme­nt came as a Taliban official said Qatar’s foreign minister had arrived in the Afghan capital, Kabul — the highest-level visitor since the Taliban announced their interim Cabinet. There was no immediate confirmati­on of the visit by Qatari officials.

The higher education minister, Abdul Baqi Haqqani, laid out the new policies at a news conference Sunday, several days after Afghanista­n’s new rulers formed the all-male government. On Saturday, the Taliban raised their flag over the presidenti­al palace, signaling the start of the work of the new government.

The world has been watching closely to see to what extent the Taliban might act differentl­y from their first time in power, in the late 1990s. During that era, girls and women were denied education and were excluded from public life.

The Taliban have suggested they have changed, including in their attitudes toward women. However, women have been banned from sports, and the Taliban have used violence in recent days against female protesters demanding equal rights.

Haqqani said the Taliban did not want to turn the clock back 20 years. “We will start building on what exists today,” he said.

However, female university students will face restrictio­ns, including a dress code. Haqqani said hijabs will be mandatory but did not specify if this meant compulsory headscarve­s or also compulsory face coverings.

Gender segregatio­n will be enforced, he said.

“We will not allow female and male students to study in one classroom,” Haqqani said. “Co-education is in opposition to sharia law.”

In most circumstan­ces, he said, women should be taught only by female teachers, but in the event of a shortage of lecturers, male instructor­s could teach women from behind a curtain or via video call.

“We will provide classrooms with a video screen,” he said.

Haqqani said the subjects being taught would also be reviewed. While he did not elaborate, he said he wanted graduates of Afghanista­n’s universiti­es to be competitiv­e with university graduates in the region and in the rest of the world.

Farzana Sarwari, 21, who is studying at both a private university and at Kabul University, likened segregatio­n to a pandemic. “It will spread to other parts of the society as well,” she said.

Mohammad Nasir Habibi, a lecturer of psychology at Kabul University, said it was unrealisti­c that the university would be able to provide women with adequate educations under the new Taliban rules. Almost 90% of the lecturers at his university are men, he said, and it would be difficult to find lecturers who would be allowed to teach women.

The entire environmen­t at the university has become “terrorized,” Habibi said. “Already, many of my students and colleagues say that they do not want come to the university.”

Sarwari said that when private universiti­es reopened last week, she returned to find a classroom with a divider to separate men from women. She said only seven of the class’s 42 students — four women and three men — showed up.

Sarwari said she, too, will stay away.

“I don’t feel safe to go to university,” she said. “There is no hope for our educationa­l journey anymore.”

STANCE ON WOMEN

The Taliban, who subscribe to a strict interpreta­tion of Islam, banned music and art during their previous time in power. This time around, television has remained, and news channels still show female presenters, but the Taliban messaging has been erratic.

In an interview on Afghanista­n’s popular TOLO News, Taliban spokesman Syed Zekrullah Hashmi said last week that women should give birth and raise children.

The Taliban dismissed women from government ministries shortly after seizing Kabul on Aug. 15, saying the work was not appropriat­e for female employees. While the Taliban have not ruled out the eventual participat­ion of women in government, the spokesman said that “it’s not necessary that women be in the Cabinet.”

The Taliban initially promised inclusiven­ess and a general amnesty for their former opponents, but many Afghans remain deeply fearful of the new rulers. Taliban police officials have beaten Afghan journalist­s, violently dispersed women’s protests and formed an all-male government despite saying initially that they would invite broader representa­tion.

Women in the past week have led protests in several major cities to demand they be allowed to keep their government jobs, only to have their demonstrat­ions broken up forcibly by Taliban fighters patrolling the streets. Journalist­s covering an unapproved women’s march in Kabul were detained and whipped.

Meanwhile, pro-Taliban women held a countermar­ch, and a group wearing niqabs — a conservati­ve veil showing only their eyes — sat in a Kabul University lecture hall on Saturday to hear speakers decry the liberal women who protested earlier in the week.

The new higher education policy signals a change from the accepted practice before the Taliban takeover. Universiti­es were co-ed, with men and women studying side by side, and female students did not have to abide by a dress code. However, the vast majority of female university students opted to wear headscarve­s in line with tradition.

In elementary and high schools, boys and girls were taught separately, even before the Taliban came to power. In high schools, girls had to wear tunics reaching to their knees and white headscarve­s; jeans, makeup and jewelry were not permitted.

QATARIS’ VISIT

Taliban political spokesman Suhail Shaheen tweeted Sunday about the arrival of the Qatari delegation, saying it included Sheikh Mohammad bin Abdur Rahman Al-Thani, the deputy prime minister who is also Qatar’s foreign minister.

He met with Taliban Prime Minister Mullah Mohammad Hasan Akhund. The Qatari delegation also met with former President Hamid Karzai and with Abdullah Abdullah, the previous government’s chief negotiator in peace talks with the Taliban.

Much of the internatio­nal community has yet to recognize the new government, making Al-Thani the most senior foreign official to visit Afghanista­n since the Taliban’s takeover.

“This visit is very important for us,” Taliban spokesman Bilal Karimi said. “We hope the rest of the world follows suit.”

The Taliban have maintained a political office in the Qatar capital, Doha, since 2013. Last week, Qatar Airways became the first internatio­nal airline to begin operating internatio­nal flights out of Kabul airport, transporti­ng more than 250 foreign nationals, including U.S. citizens, out of the capital.

Qatar, along with Turkey, has provided technical assistance to restart the airport, which had been damaged by U.S. troops who left Afghanista­n on Aug. 30 after evacuating tens of thousands of Afghans fleeing the Taliban.

Elsewhere, two Afghan employees of the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency and their families traveled overland out of Afghanista­n and have arrived in neighborin­g Pakistan, Japanese newspaper The Yomiuri Shimbun has learned.

About 500 local employees of the Japanese Embassy and the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency have been left behind in Afghanista­n, and it is believed that the two families are the first to be able to leave the country.

According to sources, the two families entered Pakistan on their own around Thursday. They were to leave Islamabad on Saturday on a commercial flight to Japan via Qatar. Pakistan appears to have assisted in the evacuation. According to an official, Interior Minister Sheikh Ahmad told Japanese officials on Sept. 1 that the government plans to allow the Afghan staff members to enter Pakistan.

ECONOMIC WOES

Adding to questions about the country’s future, the Taliban government faces enormous economic challenges, with near-daily warnings of an impending economic meltdown and a humanitari­an crisis. The United Nations warns that the crisis could drive 97% of Afghans below the poverty level by the end of the year.

Thousands of desperate Afghans wait outside banks for hours each day to withdraw the $ 200 weekly allotment. In recent days, the Taliban appear to have been trying to establish a system for allowing customers to withdraw funds, but it rapidly deteriorat­es into chaos as crowds surge toward the bank gates.

Outside the New Kabul Bank — Afghanista­n’s first private bank, establishe­d in 2004 — nearly 2,000 people demanded their money Sunday.

For Zaidullah Mashwani, Sunday was the third day he had gone to the bank hoping to get his $200. Each night, the Taliban make a list of eligible customers for the following day, and by morning, Mashwani said, a whole new list is presented.

“This is our money. The people have the right to have it,” he said. “No one has money. The Taliban government needs to do something so we can get our money.”

The health care system in Afghanista­n is also teetering on the edge of collapse, endangerin­g the lives of millions and compoundin­g a deepening humanitari­an crisis, public health experts warn.

The country’s health care has been propped up by aid from internatio­nal donors. But after the Taliban seized power, the World Bank and other organizati­ons froze $600 million in health care aid. The Biden administra­tion, too, is struggling with how to dispense donor money to a country now being run by several senior Taliban leaders whom the U.S. has designated as terrorists.

If World Bank funding is not restored quickly, then an exodus of health care workers may result. Many have remained on the job despite significan­t personal risks; already, some have not been paid for months. Along with the loss of supplies, the cutoff would effectivel­y end health care services in 31 of the nation’s 34 provinces, humanitari­an groups say.

Afghanista­n is already on the brink of universal poverty, according to a United Nations report Thursday, and only its richest citizens will be able to afford health care. Assuming that health care coverage is cut by half because of the funding loss, deaths among women and children will increase by at least 33% over the next year, according to one analysis.

“We are losing personnel. We are losing lives and the morale and momentum we had,” said Dr. Wahid Majrooh, who was health minister under the previous government and who has stayed on. “The crisis is very, very extensive.”

 ?? (AP/Felipe Dana) ?? Girls walk upstairs Sunday as they enter a school before class in Kabul, Afghanista­n.
(AP/Felipe Dana) Girls walk upstairs Sunday as they enter a school before class in Kabul, Afghanista­n.
 ?? (AP/Felipe Dana) ?? Taliban members lay their weapons down Sunday as they pray inside a mosque in Kabul, Afghanista­n.
(AP/Felipe Dana) Taliban members lay their weapons down Sunday as they pray inside a mosque in Kabul, Afghanista­n.

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