Baltimore Sun

Aid crisis hits Afghan women hard

Relief groups halting work due to Taliban ban on female staff

- By Christina Goldbaum and Najim Rahim

For years before the Taliban seized power and the economy collapsed, Jamila and her four children had clung to the edge of survival. After her husband died trying to cross the Iranian border, she and her children moved to a camp for displaced people in northweste­rn Afghanista­n and relied on aid organizati­ons.

One group brought her oil, flour and rice — food that kept her family from starving. Another gave her children pens and notebooks — the only supplies they had in primary school. A third vaccinated them against measles, polio and other illnesses.

But when Jamila tried to arrange an emergency parcel of food in late December, the aid worker cut the call short, explaining that the organizati­on had suspended its operations: Last month, the Afghan government barred women from working in most local and internatio­nal aid groups, prompting many to stop their work. Jamila’s heart sank.

“If they are not allowed, we will die of hunger,” said Jamila, 27, who goes by only one name, like many women in rural Afghanista­n. “We are starving.”

Just weeks since the Taliban administra­tion’s decree, women across the country are grappling with the disappeara­nce of lifesaving aid that their families and the country have relied on since the country plunged into a humanitari­an crisis.

It has been a dual tragedy: for Afghanista­n, and for Afghan women in particular.

For many women and girls who had already faced increasing restrictio­ns

under the new government — including being barred from many jobs, high schools, universiti­es and public parks — the new edict removed one of the few remaining outlets for employment and public life. Given the conservati­ve system that had existed in Afghanista­n even before the Taliban took power in 2021 and amplified the most hardline traditions, aid groups had relied on female workers to reach other women and their families, who were often segregated from any contact with outside men.

Now, amid a malnutriti­on and health care crisis that has worsened as the Afghan government’s changes have turned the world away, many aid groups say the banning of those female workers has made it nearly impossible for them to work in the country. Those organizati­ons described the move as a “red line” that violated humanitari­an principles and that, if it remains

in place, could permanentl­y shut down their operations in Afghanista­n.

The result is likely to be millions of Afghans left without critical aid during the harsh winter months. A record two-thirds of the population — or 28.3 million Afghans — are expected to need some form of humanitari­an assistance this year as a hunger crisis looms over the country, according to United Nations estimates.

“We cannot do our job if we do not have a female staff in place to work,” Adam Combs, regional director at the Norwegian Refugee Council, said in a news conference late last month.

In recent weeks, U.N. officials have met several times with Afghan authoritie­s to try to resolve the crisis, they said. But while Afghan officials have urged the resumption of aid programs, they have also indicated that the Taliban administra­tion’s top leadership is unwilling to reverse the edict. Instead,

the leadership has doubled down on accusation­s that female aid workers had not worn Islamic headscarve­s, or hijabs, in accordance with the new government’s laws on women’s attire, according to summaries of those meetings and other documents obtained by The New York Times.

In a meeting in late December between U.N. officials and officials with the Taliban administra­tion in Kandahar — the heartland of the Taliban movement and center of power of the new government — Afghan officials accused Western countries, particular­ly the United States, of using aid as political leverage to push unwelcome Western values on the country, according to the documents.

Late last month, Zabihullah Mujahid, a spokespers­on for the Taliban administra­tion, said on Twitter that all organizati­ons within Afghanista­n must comply with the country’s laws, adding,

“We do not allow anyone to talk rubbish or make threats regarding the decisions of our leaders under the title of humanitari­an aid.”

Afghan officials have said that the ban does not directly apply to the U.N. — one of the last Western entities to maintain a presence in Afghanista­n. Still, most U.N. aid agencies work with nongovernm­ent organizati­ons to implement their operations — many of which had relied on female aid workers to reach women and families in need and have now suspended their programs.

Many internatio­nal donors also require that women make up at least half of the people an aid organizati­on reaches in order to receive funding.

For women across the country, the effects of the ban and the suspension of aid have been devastatin­g.

The situation “is a disaster,” said Abeda Mosavi, an employee of the Norwegian Refugee Council who works with Afghan widows in Kunduz, an economic hub in northern Afghanista­n. “I don’t know the extent to which the Taliban understood the role of women in aid organizati­ons and the crises that women will face after this.”

Since the ban was issued and the council suspended its operations, Mosavi has barely been able to sleep, she said, haunted by worries about the women she worked with to help make ends meet.

Other female aid workers — many of whom are the sole providers for their families — have themselves worried about how to put food on the table if the ban remains in place.

Since the fall of the Western-backed government in August 2021, the new authoritie­s’ initial promises that women would have opportunit­ies like employment and a public life — requiremen­ts for engagement with Western donors — have nearly all been reversed.

Habiba Akbari, who works for Afghan Aid, a British humanitari­an and developmen­t organizati­on, spent much of the past four years dodging sporadic fighting between the Western-backed government and Taliban forces to travel between her hometown in Badakhshan province and her university in Kunduz City.

Akbari graduated last year — just before the Taliban administra­tion banned women from attending university — and secured a job with the aid group. Her monthly salary of around $350 sustained her seven siblings and parents after her oldest sister and the family’s main provider was dismissed from her post as a prosecutor. But now her work has been suspended — and any hope she held for her future has vanished.

“The Taliban are burying us alive,” Akbari said.

 ?? KIANA HAYERI/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2022 ?? Nurses treat a measles patient March 6 in a hospital in Herat, Afghanista­n. Since the Taliban administra­tion banned women from aid work, many groups have suspended their operations in the country.
KIANA HAYERI/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2022 Nurses treat a measles patient March 6 in a hospital in Herat, Afghanista­n. Since the Taliban administra­tion banned women from aid work, many groups have suspended their operations in the country.

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