Bangkok Post

Sidelined from the workforce

Women lose job, education opportunit­ies out of fear of Taliban’s wrath, writes Emmanuel Duparcq

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Afghan student Fauzia used to make ends meet voicing ads on a radio station in the Taliban heartland of Kandahar, but that came to an abrupt end when the Islamists swept to power in August.

Their order was clear: no female voices on the air.

Afghanista­n’s new rulers have promised more moderate governance than their last stint in power, when women were all but barred from work and education, and prohibited from leaving the house unchaperon­ed.

But there is widespread mistrust in their women’s rights pledge. Most girls around the country have been barred from attending secondary school, and most women have been unable to return to work.

When AFP visited Kandahar last month, only a few women were visible in the dusty shopping streets of the southern city, hastily lugging bags from store to store while wearing the head-to-toe burqa.

The Taliban “posted messages on Facebook saying they did not want to hear any more music or female [voices] on air,” said Fauzia, who asked not to use her real name.

The 20-year-old medical student’s situation has become increasing­ly desperate after losing her income from radio ads — Fauzia and her four younger siblings are orphans, and she is struggling to put food on the table.

Despite Taliban promises of a softer rule this time around, women remain depressed and unclear about their place in society, while businesses that once employed them are wary of upsetting the Islamists.

Fauzia’s former boss said the radio station felt forced to stop airing ads with women’s voices.

She has been handing out our resumes all over Kandahar, without any luck. “I am told to wait,” she said.

Since taking power, the Islamists have repeatedly said they will respect women’s rights in the confines of Islamic law, without elaboratin­g.

Women, with some exceptions, have been barred from returning to work or education, and told that they must hold off until arrangemen­ts have been made, including the segregatio­n of men and women.

So far, “we haven’t banned anything for women”, Mullah Noor Ahmad Saeed, a Taliban official in Kandahar, said. “If they don’t feel secure or don’t go back to work, it is their fault.”

But many are sceptical. “In the streets, people don’t say anything, but we noticed bad looks from the Taliban,” said Fereshteh Nazari, who has been able to return to work as the head of a girls-only primary school.

Women teachers and girls, however, have been excluded from returning to secondary school. “Before we used to be happy to come to school. Now we’re under stress,” Ms Nazari said at the school.

On the day AFP visited, some 700 students were present, less than a third of the 2,500 girls enrolled. “Most parents don’t send their girls to school after the age of 10 because they don’t feel secure,” Ms Nazari said.

Zohra, a mathematic­s major in her 20s who asked not to use her real name, is among the students staying away, her fear compounded by rumours of a looming violent Taliban crackdown.

“For me, life is more important than anything else,” she said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Displaced Afghan women fleeing the violence in their home provinces at a makeshift shelter in Kabul.
REUTERS Displaced Afghan women fleeing the violence in their home provinces at a makeshift shelter in Kabul.

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