The Guardian (USA)

#DoNotTouch­MyClothes: Afghan women’s social media protest against Taliban

- Stefanie Glinski in Kabul

After street demonstrat­ions across major cities in Afghanista­n, women have now taken to social media to protest against the Taliban’s hardline policies towards them.

An online campaign has seen Afghan women around the world share photos of themselves wearing traditiona­l colourful clothes, using the hashtag #DoNotTouch­MyClothes.

The protest is a response to a sitdown demonstrat­ion orchestrat­ed by the Taliban at Kabul University, where about 300 women appeared in all-black garments covering their faces, hands and feet – the sort of dress previously never seen across the country.

Waving Taliban flags, the women said they supported the militants who have announced that women would not be allowed to hold high-ranking government positions and that schools and universiti­es needed to be gendersegr­egated.

Since the Taliban took the capital Kabul, it has set up an all-male interim government with just a handful of Tajik and Uzbek representa­tives and no member of the ethnic Hazara minority. The ministry of women’s affairs is not part of the new regime, which has brought back the ministry for the propagatio­n of virtue and the prevention of vice, ensuring that sharia law is implemente­d throughout the country.

Many Afghan women, especially in urban centres, fear that their hardgained freedoms might be limited, rememberin­g the 1996 to 2001 Taliban regime that saw women largely confined to their homes.

Dr Bahar Jalali, an Afghan historian and gender studies expert, posted the first photo using the #DoNotTouch­MyClothes hashtag, which has since inspired Afghan women across the globe.

Peymana Assad, the first person of Afghan origin to be elected to public office in the UK, posted a photo of herself in colourful garments and tweeted: “This is Afghan culture. My traditiona­l dress.”

The BBC’s Sana Safi, posting a similar photo, wrote: “So how do Afghan women dress then? This is how. If I was in Afghanista­n then I would have the scarf on my head. This is as ‘conservati­ve’ and ‘traditiona­l’ as I/you can get.”

Musician Ariana Delawari shared a photo of her mother “with me in her belly”, she wrote, wearing traditiona­l dresses and no headscarve­s decades ago in Afghanista­n.

Despite the Taliban’s announceme­nt that further protests would only be allowed if approved by the ministry of justice, women in Kabul have pledged to continue their demonstrat­ions.

Samira, a Kabul University student, said that this was her only way forward. “The Taliban is already starting to limit women’s freedoms,” she said. “I have nothing to lose. I will either be locked inside my house, unable to continue my education, or I can fight. Even if I risk my life, even if they kill me, it’s better than being silenced.”

 ??  ?? Sara Wahedi, Peymana Assad, and Sana Safi who are among the many women posting images of themselves in colourful traditiona­l Afghan clothing on social media. Photograph: Twitter
Sara Wahedi, Peymana Assad, and Sana Safi who are among the many women posting images of themselves in colourful traditiona­l Afghan clothing on social media. Photograph: Twitter

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