Deccan Chronicle

Afghan women’s rights in firing line

-

FULL FACE coverings became mandatory in public and they could not leave home without a male companion.

Hong Kong, Aug. 16: Aisha Khurram spent a sleepless first night under Taliban rule, the sound of gunfire and evacuation planes puncturing the silence as she reflected on a day that “shattered our souls and spirits to the core.” “It was like a doomsday for the entire nation to see everything collapse in (the) blink of an eye,” she said in a series of messages via Twitter on Monday after Taliban fighters swept into Kabul, and her neighbourh­ood, unconteste­d.

Khurram, a 22-year-old former youth representa­tive to the United Nations, is just months away from graduating from Kabul University.

But she and fellow female students now face an uncertain future.

“The world and Afghan leaders failed the younger generation of Afghanista­n in the cruellest way imaginable,” she said.

“It is a nightmare for educated women who envisioned a brighter future for themselves and generation­s to come.” In the weeks leading up to their return to power, the Taliban’s leadership have strived to portray a softer image than when they last ruled Afghanista­n between 1996 and 2001. But women struggle to take comfort from such assurances.

Under the hardline version of sharia law that the Taliban imposed the last time they controlled the capital, women and girls were mostly denied education or employment.

Full face coverings became mandatory in public and they could not leave home without a male companion.

Public floggings and executions, including stoning for adultery, were carried out in city squares and stadiums. The Taliban’s ouster did not spell the end of abuses. Women remained marginalis­ed, especially in rural areas.

But over the last two decades, significan­t progress was made in cities with women filling universiti­es and entering the workforce in ambitious positions in the media, politics, the judiciary and even the security forces.

In the last 24 hours, prominent women in Kabul have taken to social media to express their pain for both a country and a way of life.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India