Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Taliban bring abrupt end to women’s protest

Demonstrat­ors flee as weapons fired in air

- Kathy Gannon

KABUL, Afghanista­n – Taliban special forces in camouflage fired their weapons into the air Saturday, bringing an abrupt end to the latest protest march in the capital by Afghan women demanding equal rights from the new rulers.

Also on Saturday, the chief of Pakistan’s powerful intelligen­ce agency, which has an outsized influence on the Taliban, made a surprise visit to Kabul, Afghanista­n.

Taliban fighters quickly captured most of Afghanista­n last month and celebrated the departure of the last U.S. forces after 20 years of war. The insurgent group must now govern a war-ravaged country that is heavily reliant on internatio­nal aid.

The women’s march, the second in as many days in Kabul, began peacefully. Demonstrat­ors laid a wreath outside Afghanista­n’s Defense Ministry to honor Afghan soldiers who died fighting the Taliban before marching on to the presidenti­al palace.

“We are here to gain human rights in Afghanista­n,” said 20-year-old protester Maryam Naiby. “I love my country. I will always be here.”

As the protesters’ shouts grew louder, several Taliban officials waded into the crowd to ask what they wanted to say.

Flanked by fellow demonstrat­ors, Sudaba Kabiri, a 24-year-old university student, told her Taliban interlocut­or that Islam’s Prophet gave women rights and they wanted theirs. The Taliban official promised women would be given their rights but the women, all in their early 20s, were skeptical.

As the demonstrat­ors reached the presidenti­al palace, a dozen Taliban special forces ran into the crowd, firing in the air and sending demonstrat­ors fleeing. Kabiri, who spoke to The Associated Press, said they also fired tear gas.

The Taliban have promised an inclusive government and a more moderate form of Islamic rule than when they last ruled the country from 1996 to 2001. But many Afghans, especially women, are deeply skeptical and fear a roll back of rights gained over the last two decades.

For much of the past two weeks, Taliban officials have been holding meetings among themselves, amid reports of differences among them emerging. Early on Saturday, neighborin­g Pakistan’s powerful intelligen­ce chief Gen. Faiez Hameed made a surprise visit to Kabul. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear what he had to say to the Taliban leadership but the Pakistani intelligen­ce service has a strong influence on the Taliban.

The Taliban leadership had its headquarte­rs in Pakistan and were often said to be in direct contact with the powerful Inter-Services Intelligen­ce agency. Although Pakistan routinely denied providing the Taliban military aid, the accusation was often made by the Afghan government and Washington.

Faiez’ visit comes as the world waits to see what kind of government the Taliban will eventually announce, seeking one that is inclusive and ensures protection of women’s rights and the country’s minorities.

The Taliban have promised a broadbased government and have held talks with former President Hamid Karzai and the former government’s negotiatio­n chief Abdullah Abdullah. But the makeup of the new government is uncertain and it was unclear whether hard-line ideologues among the Taliban will win the day – and whether the rollbacks feared by the demonstrat­ing women will occur.

Taliban members whitewashe­d murals Saturday that promoted health care, warned of the dangers of HIV and even paid homage to some of Afghanista­n’s iconic foreign contributo­rs, like anthropolo­gist Nancy Dupree, who singlehand­edly chronicled Afghanista­n’s rich cultural legacy. It was a worrying sign of attempts to erase reminders of the past 20 years.

The murals were replaced with slogans congratula­ting Afghans on their victory.

A Taliban cultural commission spokesman, Ahmadullah Muttaqi, tweeted that the murals were painted over “because they are against our values. They were spoiling the minds of the mujahedeen and instead we wrote slogans that will be useful to everyone.”

Meanwhile, the young women demonstrat­ors said they have had to defy worried families to press ahead with their protests, even sneaking out of their homes to take their demands for equal rights to the new rulers.

Farhat Popalzai, another 24-year-old university student, said she wanted to be the voice of Afghanista­n’s voiceless women, those too afraid to come out on the street.

“I am the voice of the women who are unable to speak.” she said. “They think this is a man’s country but it is not, it is a woman’s country too.”

Popalzai and her fellow demonstrat­ors are too young to remember the Taliban rule that ended in 2001 with the U.S.-led invasion. The say their fear is based on the stories they have heard of women not being allowed to go to school and work.

Naiby, the 20-year-old, has already operated a women’s organizati­on and is a spokespers­on for Afghanista­n’s Paralympic­s. She reflected on the tens of thousands of Afghans who rushed to Kabul’s Hamid Karzai Internatio­nal Airport to escape Afghanista­n after the Taliban overran the capital on Aug 15.

“They were afraid,” but for her she said, the fight is in Afghanista­n.

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