Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Threatened and beaten, Afghan women defy Taliban with protests

- By David Zucchino and Yaqoob Akbary

KABUL, Afghanista­n — On a raw January morning, Khujasta Elham trudged through a snowstorm to sign her name on a government register.

Before the Taliban seized power in August, Ms. Elham was director of women’s programs for Afghanista­n’s Civil Service Commission. But she and most other female government workers were prevented from returning to work by the Taliban’s new Islamic Emirate.

Now Ms. Elham, who says she has not been paid since August, is required to sign in at her old job site once a month — a fiction that allows the Taliban to deny that they have fired female government workers. The grim routine also diminishes any hope for Ms. Elham that she will one day return to work.

The dismissal of female workers is one of many indignitie­s that have prompted small bands of women like Ms. Elham to take to the streets in protest, risking beatings or arrest. Taliban gunmen have pointed weapons at the demonstrat­ors, sprayed them with pepper spray and called them “whores” and “puppets of the West,” Human Rights Watch said. Bearing placards and raising their fists, the women have resisted persistent attempts to erase them from public life.

The protests rarely last for long. Taliban enforcers have roughed up women, beaten them and sprayed them with chemical irritants, activists say. Ms. Elham and others say they have received threatenin­g phonecalls from intelligen­ce officers, warning them to stay silent or face unspecifie­d “consequenc­es.”

“He asked me if I knew they had prisons for people like me,” Mr. Elham said of a Taliban intelligen­ce officer who ordered her to end the demonstrat­ions she has helped to organize.

As the Taliban continue to demand humanitari­an aid and diplomatic recognitio­n, the United States and other countries and internatio­nal bodies have insisted that Afghanista­n’s new rulers roll back their limits on women’s rights. The issue is a main point of discussion this week as Taliban delegates have begun meeting with internatio­nal officials in Oslo, Norway.

Among the most dramatic consequenc­es of the Taliban takeover has been the swift reversal of gains made by women for two decades following the U.S.-led invasion that toppled the previous Taliban government in 2001. Women attended schools and universiti­es and served in parliament and government. They served in the army, the police force and as lawyers and judges.

Women once made up at least a quarter of the government workforce. But the Taliban have allowed only a handful of female medical workers and educators to retain their government jobs.

Most Afghan girls above the sixth grade have not attended school since August. In September, the Taliban have converted the Ministry of Women’s Affairs building into offices for the religious morality police. Last month, the Taliban banned women from taking long journeys without a male relative and from using public transport without a hijab, a type of headscarf.

The Taliban have also targeted activists protesting the restrictio­ns.

Rokhshana Rezai, 27, a prominent activist, said she once dressed as a man to pass through Taliban checkpoint­s after receiving threatenin­g calls from Taliban officials. But she has continued to attend protests. Video from one recent demonstrat­ion shows her defiantly pulling away from a Talib who had grabbed her arm and tried to drag her away.

“We are getting more afraid,” Ms. Rezai said. “They are not going to respect our rights and dignity.”

Taliban officials have said that prior approval was required to hold a protest. But when the women have requested permission, Ms. Rezai said, “They don’t allow it, and they never will.”

On Jan. 19, three days after women protested the hijab directive, two activists were taken at gunpoint from homes in Kabul, said Zarifa Yaqoobi, 28, a leader of a group called the Afghan Powerful Women’s Movement. Ms. Yaqoobi said the women’s family members told her the women were taken away at night by armed men.

Ms. Yaqoobi said family members identified the activists as Tamana Zaryab Paryani and Parwana Ebrahim Khel. She said three of Ms. Paryani’s sisters also disappeare­d. The New York Times attempted to speak to the families directly without success.

A video posted on social media shows Ms. Paryani screaming for help and shouting that the Taliban were pounding on her door. The Taliban have publicly denied any involvemen­t in the detainment of Ms. Paryani and others.

Qari Saeed Khosty, a Ministry of Interior spokespers­on, said that Ms. Paryani’s video had been fabricated “to create a case” intended to attract internatio­nal attention.

“They are liars, and I don’t want to talk about it,” Gen. Mubeen Khan, a police spokespers­on in Kabul, said of media reports about the disappeara­nces. In a follow-up call, he told The Times: “Anyone who disrupts the public must be arrested. An order has gone to all security forces to arrest them and bring them to justice

The crackdown on women’s demonstrat­ions in Afghanista­n has raised concerns among human rights organizati­ons. Human Rights Watch said it represente­d “an alarming and unlawful escalation of efforts to suppress peaceful protest and free speech in Afghanista­n.”

Heather Barr, associate director of women’s rights at Human Rights Watch, said “the extremely muted response” from the internatio­nal community coupled with the crackdowns on the Afghan news media had emboldened the Taliban.

“This is a sign that the Taliban feel these protests now need to be entirely stopped, whatever level of brutality that takes,” she said.

For Ms. Rezai, the Taliban threats and crackdowns have eroded her once boundless faith in Afghanista­n’s future.

“Whatever goals, freedoms, wishes, dreams, choices, education and jobs women once had are gone,” she said. “I am feeling angry — my body is without a soul and all our dreams are nothing now.”

 ?? Victor J. Blue/The New York Times ?? Afghan women protest for their rights under Taliban rule in Kabul, Afghanista­n.
Victor J. Blue/The New York Times Afghan women protest for their rights under Taliban rule in Kabul, Afghanista­n.

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