Otago Daily Times

Women fear the clock turning back

As talks with the Taliban gather pace, women fear for their freedoms. Reuters’ Charlotte Greenfield reports from Kabul.

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EIGHTEEN years ago, at the height of the Taliban’s power in Afghanista­n, Roshan Mashal secretly taught her daughters to read and write alongside a dozen local girls who smuggled school books to her house in potato sacks.

Mashal’s daughters have since gained university degrees in economics and medicine. But she now fears the looming prospect that the hardline Islamist group, whose rule barred women from education, could once again become part of the government.

‘‘They say they have changed, but I have concerns,’’ she told Reuters in her office in Kabul.

‘‘There is no trust . . . we don’t want peace to come with women losing all the achievemen­ts of the last 17 years.’’

As talks to end Afghanista­n’s long war pick up momentum, women such as Mashal fear the freedoms eked out since USbacked Afghan forces overthrew the Taliban in 2001 are about to slide backwards, and complain their voices are being sidelined.

An aide to Rula Ghani, the wife of Afghanista­n’s president, said the first lady had launched a survey of women in 34 provinces in a bid to amplify their voices in the peace process. A report summarisin­g their views is due in February.

‘‘The war was started by men, the war will be ended by men,’’ said the aide. ‘‘But it’s the women and children who suffer the most and they have a right to define peace.’’

Almost two decades of war have implicated both sides in the suffering of women. The United Nations last year expressed alarm at the increased use of air strikes by US and Afghan forces, which caused a rising death toll among women and children.

Changed times

Afghanista­n is still not an easy place to be a woman. Forced marriages, domestic violence and high maternal mortality rates are prevalent nationwide and particular­ly in rural areas.

But access to public life has improved, especially in cities such as the capital, Kabul, where many women work outside the home and more than a quarter of the Parliament is female.

But women lawmakers and some foreign diplomats fear enshrining gender equality may take a back seat in any peace deal to the intense focus on ending fighting and eliminatin­g the country’s potential as a haven for militants to launch attacks overseas.

‘‘That is the threshold. The question is how much they will accept the position of women deteriorat­ing in the process,’’ said a senior Western diplomat in Kabul whose country funds projects to empower women.

‘‘There may be some backslidin­g, but hopefully not all the way back.’’

Between 1996 and 2001, under the Taliban government that called itself the Islamic Emirate of Afghanista­n, women were banned from work, required to wear the burqa and not allowed to leave the house without a male relative.

The Taliban say they have changed and would allow women to be educated, though they say schools should be segregated by gender and women required to wear loose clothing.

‘‘We want Afghanista­n to move forward with its present achievemen­ts and developmen­ts. But there are some reforms and changes the Emirate will struggle for,’’ spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid told Reuters last month.

That is not enough to assuage the fears of women such as Karima Rahimyaar. She is the main provider for her family after her first husband was shot and killed by the Taliban in Kunduz province in 1996 and her second was injured and left unable to work after being imprisoned by them.

She regularly comforts her university­aged daughters, who feel sick when they hear gunshots or mention of the Taliban.

‘‘It is very difficult for me,’’ she said.

Like many Afghans, she is desperate for peace and wants an end to the neardaily attacks across the country, which claimed the life of her 32yearold son, a police officer, in 2016.

But not, she says, at the expense of women’s rights.

‘‘If there are no agreements and commitment­s, women will be inside the home and they will be deprived of everything.’’

Fighting for a voice

Wazhma Frogh, a member of Afghanista­n’s High Peace Council, tasked with negotiatin­g with the Taliban, said she and the 11 other female members of the group had to fight to be heard.

‘‘To get access is difficult,’’ she said. At times, women had to raise their voices in meetings to avoid being ignored and gatherings were sometimes held late at night in venues women did not feel comfortabl­e travelling to.

Though the Taliban is refusing to include the Afghan government in formal talks, Frogh and other members have informally met the insurgent group and US special envoy Zalmay Khalilzad.

Meanwhile, young women such as Zuhal Babakarkhi­l, one of the fastgrowin­g segment of the population who have reached adulthood since the fall of the Taliban, say Afghan society has changed.

‘‘In Afghanista­n the women are no more the women from 20 years back,’’ said the 28yearold, who was in her first year of school when the Taliban took power and whose family fled overseas.

She now lives in Kabul, plays cricket and promotes higher education among girls. She says social media such as Whatsapp and Facebook give women access to organising networks at home and abroad that would be tough to curtail.

She said she has no intention of leaving Afghanista­n, despite her worries about the Taliban returning.

‘‘We did it before . . . but certainly this is not the way, to escape, any more,’’ she said.

‘‘We are not leaving our home country. We will definitely stand up for our rights.’’

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? So many options . . . Burqaclad Afghan women buy dress material to make western clothing in December 2001, after the Taliban were overthrown.
PHOTO: REUTERS So many options . . . Burqaclad Afghan women buy dress material to make western clothing in December 2001, after the Taliban were overthrown.

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