The Guardian (USA)

Taliban bans contracept­ion calling use a ‘western conspiracy’

- Haroon Janjua

Taliban fighters have stopped the sale of contracept­ives in two of Afghanista­n’s main cities, claiming their use by women is a western conspiracy to control the Muslim population.

The Guardian has learned that the Taliban has been going door to door, threatenin­g midwives and ordering pharmacies to clear their shelves of all birth control medicines and devices.

“They came to my store twice with guns and threatened me not to keep contracept­ive pills for sale. They are regularly checking every pharmacy in Kabul and we have stopped selling the products,” said one store owner in the city.

A veteran midwife, who did not want to be named, said she had been threatened several times. She said she was told by a Taliban commander: “You are not allowed to go outside and promote the western concept of controllin­g population and this is unnecessar­y work.”

Other pharmacist­s in Kabul and Mazar-i-Sharif confirmed that they have been ordered not to stock any birth control medicines.

“Items such as birth control pills and Depo-Provera injections are not allowed to be kept in the pharmacy since the start of this month, and we are too afraid to sell the existing stock,” another shop owner in Kabul said.

It is the latest attack on women’s rights by the Taliban who, since coming to power in August 2021, have ended higher education for girls, closed universiti­es to young women, forced women out of their jobs and restricted their ability to leave their homes. Restrictin­g contracept­ives will be a significan­t blow in a country with an already fragile healthcare system.

One in every 14 Afghan women dies of causes related to pregnancy and it is one of the most dangerous countries in the world to give birth.

The Taliban’s Ministry of Public Health in Kabul has not issued any official statement on the issue and the UNFPA representa­tive in Afghanista­n did not respond to requests for comment.

Taliban fighters patrolling in the streets in Kabul told sources that “contracept­ive use and family planning is a western agenda”.

For Zainab, 17, who was married two years ago in the northern city of Mazari-Sharif, the ban on contracept­ives was a shock when she was told by her midwife last week.

Zainab, who has an 18-month-old daughter, is worried. “I was secretly using contracept­ives to avoid immediate pregnancy. I want to raise my daughter well with proper health and education facilities but it shattered my dreams when the midwife last week informed me that she had no contracept­ive pills and injections to offer me,” she said.

“I left education to get married and I don’t want my daughter’s fate to be the same as mine. I seek a different future for my daughter. The last hope to plan my life has ended,” said Zainab.

Shabnam Nasimi, an Afghan-born social activist in the UK, said: “The Taliban’s control not only over women’s human right to work and study, but now also over their bodies, is outrageous.

“It is a fundamenta­l human right to have access to family planning and contracept­ion services free of coercion. Such autonomy and agency are essential components of women’s rights such as the right to equality, non-discrimina­tion, life, sexual health, reproducti­ve health, and other basic human rights.”

Another midwife, who fled Kabul after death threats from the Taliban, is in daily contact with her colleagues who have remained. “The contracept­ive ban would drasticall­y affect the already deteriorat­ing reproducti­ve health situation in the country,” she said. “I fear the gains we made in the past decade would be lost after this move.”

Fatimah, a midwife in Kabul, said: “We are living in a suffocatin­g environmen­t. I have not felt so insecure in my entire career.”

Even before the Taliban came to power, a 2021 Human Rights Watch report said the most basic informatio­n on maternal health and family planning was not available to most Afghan women.

“What emerged is a picture of a system that is increasing­ly unaffordab­le to the estimated 61% to 72% of Afghan women who live in poverty, and one in which women often have more children than they want because of lack of access to modern contracept­ion; face risky pregnancie­s because of lack of care; and undergo procedures that could be done more safely with access to and capacity to use more modern techniques,” the report revealed.

Activists called on the Taliban to abide by internatio­nal agreements which set out universal access to sexual and reproducti­ve health care.

“Access to contracept­ion and the right to family planning is not only a matter of human rights; it is also central to women’s empowermen­t and lifting a country out of poverty,” said Nasimi.

“It is well establishe­d that the Qur’an does not prohibit the use of contracept­ion, nor does it forbid couples from having control over their pregnancie­s or the number of children they want to have. The Taliban have no right to restrict access to contracept­ion based on their own interpreta­tion of Islam.”

The Qur’an supports women having a gap between pregnancie­s to raise their children.

However Ustad Faridoon, a Taliban official based in Kandahar, told the Guardian he did not support a total ban.

“Contracept­ive use is sometimes medically necessary for maternal health. It is permissibl­e in the Sharia to use contracept­ive methods if there is a risk to the mother’s life. Therefore, a complete ban on contracept­ives is not right.”

Some reproducti­ve rights experts in Afghanista­n contacted by the Guardian were not willing to comment due to security concerns.

 ?? ?? Packs of condoms at a pharmacy in the western Afghan city of Herat in December. Photograph: Morteza Nikoubazl/Reuters
Packs of condoms at a pharmacy in the western Afghan city of Herat in December. Photograph: Morteza Nikoubazl/Reuters

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