The Korea Times

Taliban must allow girls proper education

- By Metra Mehran and Natalie Gonnella-Platts Metra Mehran is an Afghan human rights advocate, member of the Bush Institute’s Afghan Education Working Group and Afghan Crisis Fellow at New York University. Natalie Gonnella-Platts is director of women’s adva

The student is a woman majoring in computer science at a private university in Afghanista­n, but since the Taliban retook control of Afghanista­n last year, the main thing that she seems to be studying is the regime’s manipulati­on of Islam.

The authoritie­s mandated that she and her classmates take — and pay for — four religion classes each semester, leaving little time for computer science. But she’s one of the lucky ones. Her university is open. And she can still take classes in her field.

Other women doing graduate work in computer science were forced to switch concentrat­ions because the university said it can’t afford to have gender-segregated computer science classes for women. And while the Taliban permitted thousands of female university applicants to take entrance exams in recent weeks, a number of subjects were noticeably missing from the limited list of course offerings. These included but were not limited to economics, engineerin­g, journalism, and natural and social sciences.

With calculated steps like these, the Taliban are doing their best to push women out of classrooms and begin educating another generation of fundamenta­lists. If the internatio­nal community wants to prevent that, it must take a stand on education.

Reopening schools for women and girls is critical, but it’s not enough on its own: We need to talk about the quality of the curriculum for girls and boys and contextual­ize how the Taliban follow through on any pledges they actually try to fulfill around education.

The internatio­nal community still has tools to hold the Taliban to account, such as imposing sanctions on individual leaders and pressuring internatio­nal actors who enable the Taliban to source revenue and hide their assets. The latter include some U.S. allies.

Despite the dire circumstan­ces, the world still has leverage, and the internatio­nal community must use it now. Because failure to act would yield significan­t consequenc­es for the well-being of Afghan society and stability and security worldwide. Already, the Taliban have taken notable steps to transform public schools into madrassas.

While curriculum issues affect female and male students, many women and girls don’t have access to an education at all because of nationwide edicts banning their ability to attend school and freedom of movement.

Even with overwhelmi­ng support across the country for gender parity in education, the Taliban continue to restrict access for female students, including an overall ban on girls older than 12 from studying in person.

The Taliban have made hollow promises to follow through on education access, but their actions regularly demonstrat­e that their end goal is an uneducated society that stifles critical thinking, agency and resistance.

In the last few weeks alone, the Taliban have regularly used psychologi­cal and physical force in response to female students protesting the strategic oppression of the rights and well-being of all, especially within the context of education and opportunit­y. This includes the violent targeting of Afghans within the Hazara community, one of the largest ethnic minority groups in Afghanista­n.

Unarmed against the gravity of the Taliban’s response, protesting students have been continuous­ly met with beatings, arrests, interrogat­ion, verbal threats of suicide bombings, expulsion from university dormitorie­s and detention.

High-quality education is one of the only weapons Afghan women and girls have to counter the Taliban.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic