Taliban Torches Music Instruments in Kabul, Setting Culture and Music Ablaze

The Taliban-led Ministry of Vice and Virtue says its officials burned down musical instruments which were collected nationwide over the past few months and which were used “for the promotion of music and corruption.” They were destroyed according to the Taliban’s interpretation of Sharia law. 

The Ministry of Vice and Virtue did not provide any more details of the instrument, but pictures posted of the bonfires on Twitter showed drums, cassettes, harmoniums and other items. The Ministry tweeted that the materials had been seized from “immoral programs” in Kabul and other provinces and which allegedly caused “the loss of our youth and the deterioration of society.” 

Afghanistan has a long history of art and music at the center of its rich culture. Since the Taliban takeover in 2021, many Afghan musicians have fled to Iran to live in exiled communities to avoid persecution at home.

Source:

Pajhwok News 07/19/2023

Afghan women face economic challenges—three personal stories of resilience and hardship amidst Taliban bans. 

In a feature story by the Afghanistan Analysts Network, three resilient Afghan women open up about their experiences enduring economic hardships under the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. 

Despite different backgrounds, these women share a common thread – they all face the oppressive bans imposed by the Taliban prohibiting them from employment and numerous other opportunities. 

These narratives only represent the stories of three remarkable women, providing insights into the struggles millions of Afghan women face across all generations. Afghan women are not allowed to work, they cannot leave their homes “unless necessary,” they cannot seek education, and so much more, but despite the numerous bans, they continue to find ways to earn an income and survive in the face of adversity. 

Nilofar, for example, is a 26-year-old Afghan woman who had a government job before the Taliban takeover in 2021. She had to support her family: two children, her disabled husband, his father and four sisters. Her husband was in the military and lost both his legs and damaged his spine. 

“I used some of my savings to buy a karachi [handcart]. I sold soda, cigarettes and cold water, but my husband’s injuries required medical attention, so I had to sell the handcart to pay for his treatment.”

Then she started selling ice cream for a company. She gets a percentage of what is sold – 2 afghanis (about two and a half U.S. cents) for every small ice cream cone, which sells for 10 afghanis (12 U.S. cents) and 5 afghanis (about 5 and a half U.S. cents) for the larger ones, which go for 20 afghanis (24 U.S. cents).

At the end of the day Nilofar makes 100 to 200 afghanis, or 1.17 to 2.33 U.S. dollars. That covers basic needs including rent and utilities.

“Life is hard for a woman in this country and for women street peddlers, it’s doubly hard. We have to endure street harassment which is an unfortunate pastime of some Afghan men. They say and do disgusting things without a second thought.”

In the early days of the Taliban takeover, they wouldn’t allow women to work without a mahram, or male guardian. She now moves around, observing the hijab, searching for crowded places where customers will buy a luxury like ice cream in a country that is facing an economic crisis. 

“So this is how I spend my days, peddling ice cream from Kart-e Parwan to Shahr-e Naw and Wazir Akbar Khan and sometimes all the way to the airport…I take my meager earnings and rush home. I pick up some bread along the way. Sometimes when I have the money, I get some vegetables or yogurt, but I’m worried about the winter when people don’t buy ice cream.”

Leilama is another women, doing everything she can to survive. The 35-year-old Leialma from Kabul, supports her two daughters and infant son by selling socks and masks in the west part of the city. She used to work for a private company as a cook, alongside her husband. Her husband traveled to Iran, searching for work but because of the high cost of living, he is unable to send much money back, leaving Leilama to support the family. With no jobs for women, Leilama decided to sell socks and masks. She makes about 2 afghanis (2 and a half U.S. cents) in profit for each mask and 5 afghanis (5 and a half U.S. cents) for a pair of socks. Most days she returns home without enough money to buy bread for her children.

“My infant son is now malnourished. I heard some organizations give people food and treat malnourished children, but we haven’t received anything and I don’t know where to go to get help. We don’t have a man at home to follow up on these things and find the offices and I don’t have time to do it myself. I can’t miss time from work because every hour I’m not on the street is money lost.”

The Taliban bother her about the rules against street peddlers staying in one place, and even sometimes confiscate her karachi (handcart). When she gets it back from the police station, her stock is missing and she has to find money to buy more things to sell.

“They made me sign a paper several times promising I would not sell on the main roads, but I don’t have a choice; there is no footfall and no customers on the side streets.”

The 48-year-old Maryam is her family’s breadwinner since her husband was killed by a suicide attacker. She used to work at an international organization but when the Republic fell, she lost her job and couldn’t find a new one since the Taliban barred women from working in offices. She has six daughters and a son. Her older daughters once helped her work, but she decided to leave them at home to protect them from Taliban attention and street harassment.

“Most people are friendly and respectful, but there are always those few bad apples who say off-color or hurtful things. What can I say? It’s the lot of women on the streets of Kabul. We hear a thousand and one unpleasant things every day. We have to tolerate it; there is no other way. Sadly, this is our culture. When you’re down, people look down on you.”

The Taliban believes that women should not be working outside the home, especially not as street peddlers where men can see them. They tell Maryam that she cannot operate a karachi among non-mahrams. She is adamant on getting around such obstacles in order to feed her family.

“Life is getting more difficult every day. I wish the Taliban would let women work for the government or foreign organizations. Many women don’t have a husband to provide for them and have to find ways to provide for their children.”

Maryam says that if she could get a job, she could make as much as 5,000 afghanis a month (58 USD). She is prepared to do any kind of work. 

“I wish I had enough money to start a small business at home and put my girls to work. But I have borrowed money from everyone I know and no one will lend me any more money because they don’t think I can pay them back.”

Earning about 150 to 200 afghanis (1.75 to 2.3 USD) is enough to meet expenses if Maryam works every day. But sometimes business is bad, or she is prevented from selling by the Taliban. If she gets sick, that’s one day’s earnings gone. Some days, she cannot afford to buy much stock if the prices of vegetables have increased overnight. She is behind on the rent, 3,000 afghanis (35 USD), which keeps her up at night worrying that her family will end up without a roof over their heads. At the end of the day, she takes the wilted greens and rotten vegetables home for her family to eat. It eats into the profits, but keeps food on the table and losses to a minimum.

“During the Republic, my husband and I had so much hope for our daughters. They were all in school and we helped them with their homework. We thought they would grow up educated, get office jobs and support us in our old age. Now that future seems like an impossible dream. I don’t know what to do. Where should I raise my voice to ask for help? There is no one to hear us.”

Source:

Afghanistan Analysts Network July 2023. 

The Taliban officials confirmed that only men will take the university entrance exams. Afghan women and men demand equal access to education for the sake of Afghanistan’s future. 

The National Examination Authority (NEXA) in Afghanistan announced that only male students can attend the university entrance examination this year. This came from a letter written by the Ministry of Higher Education stating that only male students should be recruited to universities. 

This removal of women from society will negatively impact the country, many women worry. Suraya Paikan, a women’s rights activist, expressed her disappointment, “unfortunately, the interim government has failed in this regard and has not been able to reopen the doors of the schools and universities for the girls.” 

Female students have urged the de facto authorities to allow women to attend classes. Kubra, a student, said “we call on the Islamic Emirate to respect us as humans, as girls, and reopen the doors of the schools.” Another student, Sahar, added that “we should not be forced to migrate from Afghanistan because of lack of access to education.” Even male students have called for the attendance of women in the university entrance exam. Elham, a male student, explained that the Taliban government should “provide educational opportunities to females, as the girls also have the right to education.” 

U.S. special envoy for Afghan women and human rights, Rina Amiri, shared in a tweet, “stand with Afghan girls’ demand to be allowed to take university exams,” noting in particular that “their success will be Afghanistan’s success, leading to food on the table, an improved economy & future.” She added, “the Taliban should put the country and people before their ideology.” As of 2023, six million Afghans are currently on the brink of starvation and 9 in 10 people are living in poverty. Access to education is a fundamental right for everyone, regardless of gender or sex.

Source: 

Tolonews, 7/19/2023

“We are here for justice.” Afghan Women Take to the Streets to Protest Against Latest Taliban Edicts

Dozens of women took to the streets in Kabul on Wednesday to protest against the Taliban’s closing of women’s beauty salons. The order forces thousands of beauty parlors across the country, run by women, to close. 

The Taliban government has banned women from high schools and universities, parks, gyms, working for NGOs, and in the latest move, operating and proving services at beauty salons. This is part of a concerted effort to erase women from public life. This is known as gender apartheid and is defined by the United Nations as “the economic and social sexual discrimination against individuals because of their gender or sex. It is a system enforced by using either physical or legal practices to relegate individuals to subordinate positions.” A report by the Human Rights Council last month found that the situation for women and girls in Afghanistan was “among the worst in the world,” due to systematic harsh discrimination. 

Beauty salons are often the only source of income for households. This prevents women from socializing outside the home away from men and seeking business opportunities. One of the protestors carried a sign saying, “don’t take my bread and water.”

Public protests in Afghanistan have become rare under the Taliban and often dispersed violently by the Taliban officials. Nearly 50 women took part in the demonstration, which attracted national attention. Security forces tried to break up the women using fire hoses, tasers and gun shots in the air. Two or three women were put into cars and taken away by the Taliban. 

“Today no one came to talk to us, to listen to us. They didn’t pay any attention to us and after a while, they dispersed us by aerial firing and water cannon,” a salon worker explained. Her name has been withheld for safety reasons. Farzana stated, “we are here for justice. We want work, food and freedom.” The purpose of the demonstration, as explained by Farzana, was to make the Taliban reconsider and reverse the decision to close beauty salons because it affects women’s livelihoods. 

The Taliban claimed that salons were closed because they are too “extravagant” and un-Islamic. More than half a million people have been forced out of jobs since the Taliban took over, worsening the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan. The spokesman for the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, Akif Muhajir, commented “the protestors should have paid attention to the notification we had issued earlier.” 

According to the Taliban leader, Haibatullah Akhunzada, women’s status as “free and dignified human beings” has been restored, by forcing them to stay home and not receive an education or be able to work. 

Source:

Aljazeera 07/19/2023

UN report underscores the Taliban’s growing restrictions on Afghan women and girls.

As the two-year anniversary of the Taliban takeover approaches, the UN released a report on the human rights situation in Afghanistan. The report highlights increased restrictions on the freedom of Afghan women and girls. The Taliban has also firmly enforced limitations on women’s freedom of movement and employment. Despite promises of being more moderate than the 1990s regime, the Taliban has instituted harsh policies since taking over Afghanistan in August 2021, which includes barring women from most areas of public life and work, and cracking down on the media. The UN report underlined several key areas where life has been severely restricted under the Taliban regime.

Only men can continue higher education

The Ministry of Public Health announced recently that only males can take the exams required to pursue further medical studies. This follows a ban on female medical students taking graduation exams in February and a prohibition issued last December on women attending university at all. The Taliban has banned girls from attending school beyond sixth grade, making Afghanistan the only country in the world with such restrictions. 

Threats, arrests, and detentions of NGO workers

Throughout the months of May and June, the de facto authorities have obstructed NGOs led by women or employing women. Two female staff of an INGO were arrested in May at an airport for traveling without a mahram, or male guardian escorting a woman. The de facto General Directorate of Intelligence stopped a midwife on her way to work, detained and questioned her for 5 hours on her work with an INGO, threatening to kill her if she continued. She resigned two days later. 

NGOs have either had their assets seized or licenses suspended altogether. Matiullah Wesa, head of NGO PenPath – an organization campaigning for the reopening of girls’ schools – continues to be detained after his arrest in March on unknown charges. Both male and female staff at the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) work from home in order to prevent discrimination in the workplace after the Taliban banned women from working at local and non-governmental organizations. This move faced intense backlash due to the severe ongoing humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan. 

Increased security threats and civilians in danger

The daily lives of civilians are affected from decades of conflict and violence. Suicide attacks are still a significant concern in Afghanistan since the Taliban takeover, and although there have been fewer incidents, these have resulted in higher numbers of civilian casualties. Between August and May 2023, UNAMA recorded a total of 3,774 civilian casualties from improvised explosive device (IED) attacks in populated areas, such as places of worship, schools and markets. The terrorist group, ISIL-KP, claimed responsibility for most of the attacks. UNAMA also noted victims of unexploded ordnance (UXO) were children who mistakenly picked them up to sell for scrap metal. Victims struggle to access medical, financial and psychosocial support after the attacks. According to the UN report, the de facto authorities have a duty to respect and ensure the rights of all individuals in Afghanistan to live without the fear of an attack. 

Extrajudicial killings and public punishments

Under the first Taliban regime, corporal punishment and executions were carried out publicly, often in sports stadiums, against people convicted of crimes. A woman in Parwan province was convicted of adultery in May and lashed 39 times. Three days later, six men were publicly lashed in Kandahar City, after being convicted of sodomy and adultery. 2,000 people were in attendance. In June, a 35-year-old man was executed, the second instance of the death penalty being carried out since the Taliban takeover in August 2021. He was convicted of allegedly killing three children and a man. The victims’ families rejected an offer for financial compensation in exchange for sparing his life. UNAMA has continued to record cases of extrajudicial killings of former government and military personnel nationwide. 

Journalists forced not to report Taliban violations

On a daily basis, journalists continue to be arbitrarily arrested and detained. In May, four journalists were arrested in Khost city and told not to publish reports against the de facto authorities. French-Afghan journalist, Mortaza Behboudi, arrested in January, remains in custody on unknown charges. The de facto authorities created the Department of Information and Culture without any mandate explaining its purpose. It conducted an unannounced visit to a private radio station in Kabul, leading journalists to worry about media independence being jeopardized. A delegation of officials from the General Directorate of Intelligence’s Unit 53, which oversees media activities, traveled to several northern provinces to meet with media outlets and recapitulate restrictions placed upon them. 

Justice system doesn’t exist under the Taliban

To date, approximately 15,000 people are imprisoned, an increase from the 2022 average of 10,000. Many detainees are women and girls who have served their time, but will not be released without mahrams or male guardians. UNAMA engaged with the de facto Office of Prison Administration to advocate for an investigation into allegations of sexual abuse in prisons across the country. After a visit to the prisons, they reportedly concluded that the allegations were baseless.

Edicts and decrees increase daily

The Ministry for Virtue and Prevention of Vice has been at the forefront of enforcing Taliban edicts and decrees, particularly against women. A group of women, men and girls were beaten, arrested and detained at a checkpoint for failing to comply with the beard and hijab orders. In June, Taliban officials beat a woman for being at a public park. The Ministry gave beauty salons orders to close in early July, and all licenses will be suspended by July 25th. Afghan women continue to protest the closure of beauty salons, risking their safety and the safety of their families. 

Sources:

UN 07/15/2023

The Taliban in Afghanistan seeks instructors from Pakistan for Afghan youth but denies local teachers job opportunities.

Taliban officials in Kabul have asked Pakistan to send teachers to Afghanistan, meanwhile firing thousands of Afghan professionals and staff members at academic institutions across the country. 

The Taliban Minister of Higher Education, Neda Mohammed Nadeem, announced calls to Pakistan to send teachers to Afghanistan. Nadeem requested a meeting with Pakistani Ambassador to Afghanistan, Obaid ur-Rehman Nizamani, where they discussed cooperation between the two countries over academic affairs.

This comes at a moment when over thousands of teachers and university professors, particularly women have lost their jobs over the past two years under the Taliban regime. Last week, in a decree of the Taliban, the teachers training institutes were closed, leaving thousands of teachers and staff members out of jobs. The order affected 49 teacher training centers and 198 supporting centers, vastly affecting the future generations of teachers and quality of education in Afghanistan.

The Taliban is likely to continue its war on eradicating all forms of secular education, including removing those from their jobs who taught secular education for 20 years under the Western-backed republic regime. Inviting teachers and professors from Pakistan guarantees that they will not resist the curriculum of the Taliban, mostly removing secular education from the curriculum. 

This type of engagement from Pakistan also symbolizes diplomatic relations between the two countries, representing a shift in the status of the Taliban from de-facto authorities to an unofficial legitimate government. During the first regime of the Taliban, Pakistan was one of three countries only that granted recognition to the Taliban. The United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia were the two other countries. 

Such cooperation allows the Taliban to continue their brutal regime and institution of gender apartheid without facing accountability. Worst of all, it normalizes Taliban control, which has led to acute starvation, mass unemployment, and a loss of rights and freedoms for women. 

The Feminist Majority Foundation urges the U.S. and the greater international community to not recognize the Taliban.

Source:

Arian New, 07/15/2023; FMF 07/15/2023

The Taliban shut down teacher training centers, leaving thousands out of jobs. The majority of the student were women. 

The Taliban announced it will shut down teacher training centers throughout the country, leaving 4,000 Afghan professionals running the centers without jobs. Historically, a majority of trainees and aspiring teachers at teacher training centers were women until the Taliban took control of the government. Many of them have been subjected to a ban by the Taliban for nearly two years. 

According to a letter from the Ministry of Education of Afghanistan, higher teacher training centers have been removed from the Ministry of Education’s organizational structure, deemed “ineffective” and “unnecessary” by the Taliban. This guideline was approved by Taliban directorates and will take effect in Kabul and other provinces. 

According to the Taliban letter, staff members will be appointed to open positions in the Taliban’s religious schools, madrassas, and seminaries, Darul-Uloom.

The Taliban has resumed the implementation of religious learning institutions in several provinces across the country. Hundreds of schools are turned into seminaries which in addition to teaching religious studies, have been used as centers brainwashing the young generation. 

Political activists express uneasiness that the increase and prevalence of seminaries – madrassas would fuel hatred and extremism among youth and would deprive them of any modern education. While religious education is not always negative, these institutions follow the Taliban’s interpretation of religious text and mindset that focuses on war, killing, violence, and hate. 

Instructors of the teacher training centers shared concerns over this decision. “An administration of the Ministry of Education, a backbone of the society, has been demolished,” said Hamid Ahmadzada, an instructor of Parwan Darul-Mualimeen – teacher training center in Parwan, near Kabul. 

This creates an uncertain future for academic figures in the country and for education itself. Fahrad Ibrar, a university instructor called the decision “unwise” and explained, “we will face a shortage of teachers in the future.”

In total, there are nearly 50 teacher training centers and nearly 200 supporting training centers of teachers and public servants. An overwhelming majority of the trainees or aspiring teachers have been women. 

Sources: 

Tolonew 07/12/2023; Khaam Press 07/13/2023;

With increasing Taliban restrictions against Afghan women, the mental health crisis worsens. “I feel like an empty shell of a human being.” 

For nearly two years, Afghan women find themselves at the forefront of a mental health crisis over the bleak outlook for their future and the future of their country. Afghan women and girls in Afghanistan are suffering from depression, anxiety and suicidal thoughts, as a direct result of being forced into isolation by the Taliban. 

“I just want someone to hear my voice. I’m in pain, and I’m not the only one,” an Afghan university student told the BBC, holding back tears. The university student attempted to end her life a few months ago. 

When the Taliban took power by force in August of 2021, their representatives said they would be more moderate. The Taliban broke its promises of being a more moderate government than it was during the 1990s when women were forbidden from attending school or working outside the home. 

There have been over 100 edicts issued restricting freedom of media, women’s education, employment, and many other areas since the Taliban takeover in 2021. A majority of the orders are about women and girls, restricting their rights and freedoms. Many Afghan women say the return of the Taliban feels like “being sentenced to a life in prison.” 

In December 2022, the Taliban banned Afghan women from attending university and for many, that ended their dream of higher education and the life they had envisioned for themselves for years. Even those who were in the last year of their studies were forced to stop. The ban on higher education added to a growing list of Taliban edicts, banning women from employment, education, leaving home and accessing healthcare, among other areas. 

“Pandemic” of suicide

There is an underlying but urgent mental health crisis in Afghanistan on top of unemployment, hunger, poverty, and gender apartheid against women. Psychologist Dr. Amal*, reports that Afghanistan has “a pandemic of suicidal thoughts” and that “the situation is the worst ever, and the world rarely thinks or talks about it.” 

United Nations estimates show that one in two people in Afghanistan –mostly women – suffered from psychological distress even before 2021. Before 2021, nearly 2 million Afghan women had been diagnosed with severe depression, according to Ayesha Ahmad, an expert on global mental health at St. Georges University in London. Afghanistan is the only country in the world where the suicide rate is higher for women than men – 80% of suicides each year are women

In the days following the university ban, Dr. Amal received 170 calls for help. Now she gets about 7 to 10 new calls for help daily. Most of them are from girls and young women. With the latest restrictions on women’s freedom and the economic decline, the problem has only worsened. 

“I feel like an empty shell of a human being,” Maryam Rezaei told Radio Free Europe back in December of 2021, about being forced to leave university and being confined to her home. 

A hopeless generation – with no breaks 

Nadir* is the father of a girl who took her life in March this year. She had believed that schools would reopen and couldn’t cope when they didn’t. She became distressed and would cry a lot, according to her father. He painfully describes his daughter, saying “she loved school” and was “smart, thoughtful and wanted to study and serve our country.” Another father of a woman in her twenties recalled that his daughter “lost all hope” when she wasn’t allowed to sit for the university entrance exam. 

A teacher and breadwinner for her family, Meher*, reports trying to take her own life twice after losing her job and leaving her with unbearable expenses. The options for her were bleak, facing pressure to get married and no plans, goals or hope for the future. Being forced to stay home, “I feel exhausted and indifferent to everything. It’s like nothing matters anymore,” a teenage girl says while crying at her doctor’s office with her mother. Even women helping other women with psychosocial support are feeling the toll of the crisis. Saghar Yousoufi, who works in a women-focused group, said “breathing is getting really, really hard.”

The Taliban blames women for their suicide and won’t record suicide statistics.

Local news agencies began reporting on multiple suicides across the country. The Taliban does not record suicide numbers or respond to escalating figures. Dr. Shaan, a psychiatrist, said that they are not allowed to record or assess suicide statistics, but that there is hardly anyone who is not suffering from a mental illness. Because of the stigma attached to suicides, however, many families avoid reporting them. 

In Herat province, the Afghanistan Center for Epidemiological Studies released a report in March showing that two-thirds of Afghan adolescents reported symptoms of depression. Most of the patients at the mental health department at Herat District Hospital are women’s rights activists, former government employees, and journalists. 

Afghan men suffer from mental health crisis too.

Dr. Amal discussed the impact on men, as well. Men are brought up to believe they are powerful, but right now they can’t express themselves or provide sufficiently for their families. She suggests that people try to form support teams of family members, friends and neighbors in order to avoid isolation. A study conducted last year by the World Health Organization (WHO) as part of a mental health initiative, found that education would be an effective intervention for clinically depressed women – but those options are not available under the Taliban. Asra*, a master’s student at Kabul university studying Islamic religious law asserts that “it’s not right that women cannot go to school. They have the same rights that men have.”

Jamila Afghani of WILPF who has launched a mental health program stated that the international community has “a role to play in alleviating the suffering of these women.” 

She said governments should stop meeting with the Taliban behind closed doors. Additionally, countries should restrict funding and monitor spending of humanitarian aid closely.

“Now I’m worried about the future of my daughter,” Frishta Rahmani, an NGO worker in Afghanistan lamented, “what will happen to her?” 

*Names have been changed or withheld to protect the interviewees 

Sources:

Springer 03/06/2023; BBC 06/05/2023; RFE/RL 11/04/2021; Analyst News 03/30/2023

Afghan women barred from beauty salons in latest Taliban edict: “Don’t we have the right to work or live?”

The Taliban has decided in their latest announcement to outlaw women’s beauty salons in Afghanistan. This follows restrictions on many rights and freedoms for Afghan women in education, employment and public spaces. 

The order came from Taliban supreme leader, Hibatullah Akhundzada and was publicly declared by the Virtue and Vice Ministry. There was no reason given for the ban, but beauty salons in Kabul were given a month’s warning to close down businesses. This comes just days after the Taliban Supreme Leader claimed the government was improving the lives of Afghan women. 

The UN reported that the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) urged the de facto authorities to reverse the ban on beauty salons, citing that the “new restriction on women’s rights” would “impact negatively on the economy and contradicts stated support for women entrepreneurship.” 

A beauty salon owner said that she was her family’s sole breadwinner after her husband’s death in a car bombing in 2017. She said everyday the Taliban imposes new restrictions on women and asked “why are they [the Taliban] only targeting women? Aren’t we human? Don’t we have the right to work or live?”

The Taliban’s recent ban specifically targets women-owned beauty salons and men salons will continue operating. Previously, the Taliban issued a warning to men’s salons as well, imposing restrictions on beard length or prohibit shaving. Around 90% of the beauty salons in Afghanistan are owned by women, making this ban particularly detrimental to women’s employment and their ability to support their families. Women beauty salons are popular in Afghanistan and historically have catered to women clients. The men salons serve male customers. 

Since the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in 2021, women have been barred from education, employment, and public spaces like parks and gyms among many other restrictions. These policies have been condemned internationally, further politically isolating Afghanistan at a time of humanitarian crisis, but the Taliban has been clear that they would not concede or make any changes to their brutal restrictions against women and the Afghan people. 

Sources:

NPR 07/05/2023; AP 07/04/2023

Facing Restrictions on Freedom and Rights, Afghanistan Ranks as the Unhappiest Country in the World

Afghanistan ranks as the unhappiest country in the world another year in a row, in the latest annual Gallup World Happiness Report. The report specifically noted that life for people in Afghanistan one year after the Taliban rose to power has declined. Gallup surveyed adults in 142 countries and areas in 2022 about different negative experiences they had on that day. Negative experiences varied from worry, stress, physical pain, sadness and anger – all of which were at a record high. 

Afghanistan has ranked as the unhappiest in the world since 2017 (with a hiatus in 2020 when surveys were not conducted). The country’s score in 2022 was 34 which is “the lowest in the world.” Even before the Taliban rose to power, the positive daily experiences in Afghanistan were low, but any positive emotions “largely disappeared from Afghanistan in 2021 – and did not return in 2022.” Afghans reported record lows of feeling enjoyment, learning something interesting, or feeling well rested – all measures of happiness. The Taliban has placed heavy restrictions on many freedoms and rights. 

Afghan women who were forced to stop working and became unemployed after the Taliban barred women from the workplace continue their calls on the Taliban to remove these restrictions immediately. Over the past two years, the Taliban has issued over 100 edicts against Afghan women and girls, including preventing them from going to work and school. Women emphasized the importance of providing work for women as a government responsibility for the de facto authorities.

Masoda, a woman who worked to support her family, stated that “knowledge and work are the basic right of every person.” Human rights have no cultural or geographic boundaries, they are universal. She added that many breadwinners in Afghanistan are women who don’t have brothers and fathers, and that the government should provide the opportunity to work instead of depriving them.

Sema, an employee of an organization, urged the Taliban to end the ban on work for girls and women which would allow them to participate in Afghanistan’s society and help it develop. In response, Zabihullah Mujahid, the Taliban spokesman claimed that “work is underway” to let women return to work as long as there is conflict with Sharia law. 

UNICEF expressed concern about international organizations not being allowed to operate in Afghanistan, which will affect the education of 500,000 children, including over 300,000 girls. It said “every child has the right to learn” and that Afghanistan will “lose out on quality learning through community-based education” if intergovernmental organizations are no longer allowed to work.

A women’s rights activist said “such suspension of (NGO) operations will damage the education of Afghanistan and the Afghan children will be vulnerable.” Under the current Taliban regime, Afghanistan is facing its worst humanitarian crisis and women are being denied critical rights. Millions of people are affected by economic challenges and acute starvation. 

Sources:

World Happiness Report; ANI 06/29/2023

Afghan men demand the right of women to pursue higher education. They say, “we need female and male doctors.”

At a graduation ceremony, 146 graduates from Paktia University Medical School walked the stage. There was not a single female graduate among them.

Graduates of the medical school used this day as a moment to call for the Taliban to open up schools and universities for girls immediately, asserting that “girls also have the right to education and their time should not be wasted.” 

Baraktullah Takal, a graduate student, urged higher education to allow girls to go to schools and universities because “in a society we need female and male doctors.” Family members of the graduate students voiced their support and reflected hopefulness that one day their daughters would receive graduation certificates, too.

Paktia University, located in the Southeast region of Afghanistan, a predominantly Pashto speaking region of the country, openly opposed the Taliban’s policy of banning women and girls from pursuing higher education. Notably, the Taliban, who are themselves mostly Pashto speakers, have often faced opposition from the Pashto speaking regions of Afghanistan for their policies and treatment of the people, especially women and girls. 

Unemployment at highest since Taliban Takeover

In the current environment under the Taliban restrictions as well as economic challenges, those who are educated have been struggling to find jobs and are forced to leave Afghanistan in search of better opportunities. This leaves a population of students who are highly educated, but unemployed. Fardin, 26, has a degree in law and political sciences, but because of scarce opportunities, he faces having to leave his homeland in search of a job. 

“I studied for 16 years and nobody thinks about us…we are obliged to leave the country,” he explained. Another unemployed graduate added “I am jobless because there are no opportunities in Afghanistan.” This trend is explained by a political analyst in Afghanistan as the consequence of economic challenges that leave young people with no hope for their future. According to an International Red Cross finding, the number of unemployed people in Afghanistan has increased dramatically.

A spokesman for the Ministry of Economy stated their intention to “pay serious attention to investment in infrastructure and development of small and medium industries…” The Ministry of Economy then announced ongoing projects in order to reduce poverty and provide work for young people in Qosh Tepa in northern Afghanistan, either mining or transferring oil and gas. This comes after various edicts barring women from working and studying. 

The Taliban Deputy Prime Minister Blames the “foreigners” for encouraging Afghans to leave 

The Taliban’s Deputy Prime Minister Abdul Ghani Baradar delivered an address on Eid in response to these concerns, saying “foreigners are spreading rumors about the country’s economic problems while encouraging people to leave Afghanistan,” and that “any economic problems are the result of  the occupation of the last 20 years and the continuous drought in the country.” 

A large number of people have left the country due to these issues since August 2021 after the Taliban takeover. Mawlawi Abdul Kabir, the Taliban’s acting chief minister, emphasized the Taliban’s commitment to “development in the country and strengthening security in Afghanistan.” Meanwhile, 28.8 million Afghans – representing 60% of the population – require humanitarian assistance in 2023.

Sources: 

Amu 06/28/2023; TOLOnews 06/26/2023; TOLOnews 06/26/2023; 

Afghanistan’s Neighboring Countries Express Concerns over the Taliban’s Counter-Terrorism Efforts, but the Taliban Dismisses Them

During the recent Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) meeting, countries neighboring Afghanistan exhibited a lack of unity and presented diverse views and approaches addressing terrorism concerns from Afghanistan. Tajikistan expressed specific concerns over “concentrated terror groups in Afghanistan,” while China has a different approach to staying engaged with the Taliban. The envoy from Tajikistan listed 6 terror organizations, including Al-Qaida, Hizb ut-Tahrir, the Islamic Movement of Eastern Turkistan, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, Tehreek Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Jamaat Ansarullah – that currently have presence in Afghanistan and pose a threat to Afghanistan, neighboring countries and member states. 

The SCO is a defense and economic organization established in Shanghai in 2001 with 8 Member States: China, India, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Pakistan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Afghanistan occupies an Observer State status. The organization focuses on regional security issues, fighting against regional terrorism, ethnic tensions and religious extremism. The SCO has established partnerships with different United Nations agencies and international organizations, including the UN Center for Preventive Diplomacy for Central Asia, to counter terrorism and prevent violent extremism.

During the SCO meeting, Russia and Tajikistan reported that Afghanistan has become a “breeding ground” for terrorist groups since the Taliban’s takeover in 2021. Initially, Russia handed over the Afghan Embassy in Moscow to the Taliban and maintained Russian diplomats in Kabul. They shut down the diplomatic mission in Afghanistan when a suicide attack killed two Russian Embassy staff. Today, Russia’s Defense Minister, Sergei Shoigu, emphasized that the Taliban’s rise to power has strengthened terrorist organizations working in Afghanistan and that these groups are now concentrating in the country to an extent never seen before. Another Russian diplomat described Afghanistan as “an epicenter for the dissemination of terrorism.” The worry is that terrorism emanating from Afghanistan poses a threat to the Central Asian region, which holds key interests for Russia. 

Publicly, China has avoided criticism of Afghanistan’s security issues and instead has sought to aid the Taliban in achieving stability and economic prosperity by engaging with the de facto authorities in Kabul. Shortcomings within the SCO have caused Member States to use different back-channels in order to continue ties with the Taliban for individual security guarantees. Jiayi Zhou, an expert at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, said “differing threat perceptions of particular extremist or separatist groups, political sensitivities and sovereignty concerns, as well as lack of genuine trust among member states,” have made “concrete counterterrorism cooperation very difficult,” stagnating the immediate response and fight against terrorism in the region. 

Despite Taliban leaders claiming that they do not harbor terrorist groups or pose threats to other states, their actions contradict these assertions. Shortly after assuming control of the government in Kabul, the Taliban appointed some of the “most-wanted” individuals within their ranks to prominent positions in the new cabinet. For example, 

For example, one of Washington’s “most-wanted” Taliban and al-Qaeda leaders in Afghanistan, Qari Baryal, is accused of supervising IED (improvised explosive devices) production, suicide personnel allocation and attack planning and executing was appointed by the Taliban to be governor of Kabul province. He is one of the al-Qaeda leaders listed in a UN report as “affiliated” with the Taliban. Several al-Qaeda members have been appointed to important roles within the Taliban. 400 al-Qaeda groups are reported to be in Afghanistan and it appears the group is rebuilding their operations. In a new report of the UN Security Council, the UN describes the relations between them as “strong and symbiotic.”

The presence of a well-known al-Qaeda leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, in Kabul demonstrated to the U.S. that the Taliban had broken the 2020 Doha Agreement, by hosting and sheltering the al-Qaeda leader. The Doha Agreement between the U.S. and the Taliban stated that the “Taliban will send a clear message that those who pose a threat to the security of the United States and its allies will have no place in Afghanistan.” 

Sources: 

VoA 06/22/2023; UN-SCO; VoA 06/14/2023

The Taliban “Suggests” the UN replace its national Afghan women staff with men. The UN says it is “steadfast” not to replace Afghan women with men. 

In a recent meeting, the UN Envoy for Afghanistan told the UN Security Council that the Taliban, “act against the key values expressed in the United Nations Charter.” Roza Otunbayeva stated that while the Taliban wants to be recognized by the UN and its 192 member nations, the group continues to imposes restrictions against the fundamental human rights of Afghan women and girls. 

The UN Envoy said she has been “blunt” with the Taliban leaders about the “obstacles” the group has created for themselves, making international recognition “nearly impossible.” 

During the briefing, Roza Otunbayeva also highlighted that despite the Taliban’s request to replace the UN’s national Afghan women staff with Afghan men, the UN remains “steadfast” not to replace Afghan women with Afghan men. 

The people of Afghanistan and the international community “share a common anguish with women and girls again banned from receiving a quality education and participating in public office,” said the representative of Afghanistan, calling it “gender apartheid.” 

The UN faces a concerning dilemma for continued activity in Afghanistan and delivery of humanitarian assistance to civilians. Otunbayeva stated that the UN will not “put its national female staff in danger,” which means women are no longer reporting to the office. But in order to respect the principle of non-discrimination, all male staff performing non-essential tasks have been asked to stay home. The UN is standing firm on its decision to not replace female national staff with male national staff, despite requests and pressure from the de facto authorities.

This exacerbates an existing humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan, where high poverty levels and starvation have made people reliant on donor funding and UN cash shipments to survive. The UN World Food Programme (WFP) Deputy Executive Director and Chief Operating Officer, Carl Skau, visited Afghanistan and reported witnessing “one of the world’s largest humanitarian crises.” As a result of the latest restrictions on women’s employment combined with funding cuts from the WFP, rations have been reduced, affecting 8 million highly-vulnerable people. 

The Taliban is responsible for creating these difficult conditions by issuing edicts against women and girls and establishing a gender apartheid in Afghanistan. As long as these restrictions are in place, they will not, and should not, be recognized by the international community. According to Otunbayeva, during UN conversations with Afghans across the country, they reveal that the Taliban decrees are unpopular. The Taliban is missing both domestic and international legitimacy, in addition to “inflicting suffering on their population and damaging their economy.”

The United States currently has 3,900 staff in Afghanistan through the United Nations Assistance Mission In Afghanistan (UNAMA), including 400 women nationals and 200 women internationals. The UN directive is that the Taliban must change its behavior in order to get the recognition they seek. Until then, the UN has not abandoned the people of Afghanistan under these trying circumstances and continues to call for an end to the de facto regime’s discriminatory policies. 

UN 06/21/2023; AP 06/21/2023

Public Executions and Floggings Resume and on the Rise Under Taliban Regime

The Taliban has now carried out its second public execution since their takeover of the government nearly two years ago. In December, the Taliban executed a man from the Herat province named Tajmir, convicted of murdering a man named Mustafa – without any due process. 

The second execution occurred this week, according to the Taliban packed Supreme Court. A man from Kabul, Ajmal, was executed after being convicted of killing five people in two separate incidents and sentenced to death. According to the Taliban, both cases were reviewed carefully by three top courts in the country before they approved the death sentence. The Taliban supreme leader since 2016, Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada, also approved the executions. 

These incidents confirm the Taliban’s goal of implementing hard-line policies in keeping with their interpretations of Sharia law, despite international human rights laws and widespread condemnation. Much of the Taliban policies are neither cultural or religious but only their implementation and ideas of a society. 

Father Asked to Execute His Son

The first execution occurred in the western province of Farah, carried out by the victim’s father, who used his own assault rifle. Tajmir was executed after being convicted five years ago for allegedly killing Mustafa and stealing his motorcycle and phone. He was arrested after the victim’s family accused him. The execution was attended by hundreds of spectators, including Taliban officials who traveled from Kabul, according to Zabihullah Mujahid, the top Taliban government spokesman. The second execution was carried out in the eastern province of Laghman using an assault rifle, this time used by the son of Said Wali, one of the people killed by Ajmal. 

Public Executions and Flogging is Common Practice Under the Taliban 

During the previous Taliban regime of the 1990s, public executions were regularly carried out, including violent practices of floggings and stoning for those convicted in Taliban courts. The Taliban promised, after their takeover in 2021, to ensure rights for women, girls, and minorities. But since then, they have restricted freedoms and continued public lashings in order to punish men and women accused of crimes such as theft, adultery, or relationships outside marriage. Young men and women have also been flogged by simply speaking with each other. 

The U.N. condemned the Taliban for public executions, stoning and floggings in a report issued recently, and called for the end of such practices. The United Nations Assistance Mission to Afghanistan (UNAMA), which monitors human rights conditions in Afghanistan, said that in the past month, 274 men, 58 women, and two boys were publicly flogged in Afghanistan. Amnesty International‘s findings on global executions in 2022 show that Afghanistan is one of five countries to resume executions.

Sources:

NPR 12/07/2023; AP 06/20/2023; Amnesty International 05/16/2023

Afghan Refugee: “Our lives in Pakistan are no lives at all” On World Refugee Day, Recognize the Struggles of Afghan Refugees.

Earlier today, Amnesty International released a statement for World Refugee Day imploring the Pakistani government to “stop harassing and arbitrarily arresting Afghans seeking refuge.” Since the takeover of Afghanistan by the Taliban in August 2021, many Afghans have fled to the bordering countries of Pakistan and Iran, becoming refugees.

While Amnesty International’s statement focuses on Afghan refugees in Pakistan, Iranian authorities have been treating Afghan refugees in a similar manner.

The treatment of Afghan refugees in Pakistan raises concerns about the violations of rights under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the UN Refugee Convention, according to Amnesty International. Article 14 of The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) states that “everyone has the right to seek and enjoy asylum from persecution in other countries.” At the same time, the UN Refugee Convention of 1951 and its 1967 Protocol protect refugees from being returned to countries where they risk being persecuted. For Afghans who worked under the former government, returning to Afghanistan is impossible. 

Despite these established protections, Afghan refugees in Pakistan and Iran constantly face detentions, arrests and threats of deportation without any due process. Most people do not hold “Proof of Registration” (PoR) cards, allowing Afghans to remain in Pakistan, due to delays in the registration process. Those who arrived with visas, which have now expired, are left in a precarious legal status. 

According to Amnesty International’s Deputy Regional Director for South Asia, Dinushika Dissanayake, “it is deeply concerning that the situation of Afghan refugees in Pakistan is not receiving due international attention. Being unable to return home fearing persecution or stay permanently in Pakistan, they are caught in an impossible situation from which there is no escape.” In February 2023, police raided the homes of several Afghan families, after which they were detained and inexplicably had their passports taken away. They reported paying fines in the thousands of rupees (equivalent to several hundred US dollars) but received no documentation or proof confirming the detention and fines. 

One of the most difficult obstacles to solving this crisis is that countries which offered special relocation plans to Afghan individuals facing persecution by the Taliban, such as the United States of America, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Germany, are currently not issuing visas within Afghanistan because they do not have diplomatic representation. In Pakistan, these countries are also unable to schedules appointments and process interviews in a timely manner Additionally, Afghans seeking asylum must wait a long time to obtain proof of registration from the UNHCR. 

The Society for Human Rights and Prisoners’ Aid (SHARP) agency is tasked with registering Afghans seeking asylum, providing them with PoR cards and determining whether they qualify as refugees but it takes a long time to schedule interviews and make calls, so receiving documentation has been slow. In the meantime, other Pakistani authorities have been able to extort money from the vulnerable status of Afghan refugees in the province of Sindh, and cities such as Karachi, Peshawar, Chaman, and Quetta. For example, landlords are taking bribes from Afghans without PoR cards. Refugees, especially women and girls, report feeling that their freedom of expression is limited since they face threats from their perilous legal status and gender discrimination in both Pakistan and Afghanistan. 

Dissayanake added that “the international community has failed to provide adequate protection to those fleeing persecution in Afghanistan, in sharp contrast to the initial promises made.” On World Refugee Day, the status of refugees is in jeopardy. It is time to recognize refugee rights as human rights and move quickly to ensure their safety.

Source:

Amnesty International 06/20/2023; UNHCR – Convention and Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees; UN – Universal Declaration of Human Rights

What Does the Future Hold for Education in Afghanistan? The Taliban Takes Control of All Education Programs. 

In a new development, international education programs in Afghanistan will hand control over to local groups, under the control of the Taliban and its de facto Ministry of Education. NGOs have been crucial in providing support to Afghan children, especially girls by means of food, education and healthcare services after the takeover of the government in August 2021. 

UNICEF said it has been in talks with the Taliban on the “timelines and practicalities” on handing over its education programs. Last week, the Taliban issued an order that international organizations could no longer be involved in education projects in Afghanistan and that they have to hand over the control to local groups, in coordination with the Taliban Ministry of Education. 

Afghan women and girls worry about this new development leading to further discrimination against their academic opportunities. UNICEF (the United Nations Children’s Fund) reported that the order from the Taliban to stop all NGO activities will have an impact on “over 500,000 children, including more than 300,000 girls.” 

In the southern provinces of Kandahar and Helmand, the Taliban has closed education centers that focused on girls’ education beyond the sixth grade. The Taliban did not give a reason for the closures, but simply said they are suspended “until further notice.” After nearly two years, the schools have not reopened. 

Meanwhile, the Taliban has resumed the implementation of new madrassas, religious learning institutions, in at least five provinces across the country. In addition to teaching religious studies, jihadi madrassas have been used as centers for training suicide bombers and weapon use. 

Advocates and political analysts expressed concerns that the establishment of madrassas would fuel extremism among youth and would deprive them of any modern education. While religious education is not always negative, these institutions follow the Taliban’s interpretation of religious text and mindset that focuses on war, killing, violence, and hate. 

There are 1,200 madrassas officially registered and the Taliban plans to add about 4,200 more, 10 in each district. There are a total of 419 districts in Afghanistan.

Secondary schools, however, remain closed for girls, preventing nearly one million girls from receiving a high school education. The ban on girls’ education makes Afghanistan the only country in the world where girls and young women are forbidden from attending secondary school and higher education institutions.

Sources:

Reuters 06/15/2022; Amu TV 06/15/2023; FMF 06/09/2023

Taliban’s Rule in Afghanistan Sets Dangerous Precedent for Global Peace 

In a recent statement, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken reiterated the U.S. position on the Taliban, emphasizing the focus on US “national security interests in preventing a resurgence of terrorism emanating from Afghanistan, and if necessary, taking action to deal with it.” 

According to a recent report of the United Nations Security Council, however, the Taliban has not fulfilled its counterterrorism commitment under the Agreement for Bringing Peace to Afghanistan between the United States of America and the Taliban. 

In fact, the same UN report stated that the link between the Taliban and both Al-Qaida and Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) “remains strong and symbiotic.” The report highlighted that different terrorist groups have “greater freedom of maneuver under the Taliban de facto authorities.” 

The Taliban’s stance and support for other terrorist groups underscores the need to hold the group accountable for its own policies of terror in Afghanistan. The Taliban remains fully in control of Afghanistan and since its takeover in 2021 has reverted the country to its “exclusionary and autocratic policies of the Taliban administration of the late 1990s,” according to a UN report. 

While the Taliban may claim to fight against IS-K, the UN report warns that the threat of terrorism is “rising” in Afghanistan and the region, partly due to the Taliban allowing sanctuaries for certain terrorist groups. 

The Taliban regime is not recognized as the legitimate governing force of Afghanistan and it is crucial that the international community holds consensus on this. Until the Taliban ends gender apartheid and respects human rights, it continues to be an enemy of peace and equality in Afghanistan and around the world. 

Sources:

Ariana News 06/10/2023; UNSC Report 06/01/2023

UN Report: Acute Starvation Grips Afghanistan, Affecting Women and Children

Food insecurity, acute starvation, and hunger continue to plague numerous regions worldwide, with Afghanistan ranking among the most affected countries.  

U.N. agencies have sounded the alarm about the risk of starvation in eight nations, including Afghanistan, Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, Yemen, Haiti, Burkina Faso, and Mali. The World Food Program (WFP) and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) both call for attention to save lives from food insecurity. 

The FAO Director General, Qu Dongyu said, “immediate action” is needed “to pull people back from the brink of hunger, help them rebuild their lives and provide long-term solutions to address the root causes of food insecurities.” Executive director of the WFP, Cindy McCain added that there will be “catastrophic consequences” unless there is action “to help people adapt to a changing climate and ultimately prevent famine.” 

There are 15.3 million people living in acute food insecurity in Afghanistan in 2023, representing 35% of the population. Afghanistan is marked as a hotspot of highest concern for food insecurity in the FAO-WFP outlook report on hunger hotspots for June to November 2023. 

Afghanistan has experienced natural hazards in the past, such as droughts. It is currently facing below-average rainfall combined with above-average temperatures, leading to water scarcity for crop growth this season. 

The economic situation in Afghanistan has further deteriorated due to a reduction in foreign aid from humanitarian funding and from exports, caused by ongoing sanctions imposed by the donor governments on the Taliban.

The Taliban’s ban on female education, employment and participation in the humanitarian response poses a challenge to the delivery of humanitarian assistance and places more constraints on those most vulnerable: women and children. Approximately 3.2 million children and 804,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women are acutely malnourished, according to the FAO-WFP findings.

The Taliban’s seizure of power in 2021 triggered an economic collapse that led to inflation and mass unemployment. As a result, the number of child laborers increased dramatically. Around one million children work polishing shoes, washing cars, begging, or toiling in mines to provide for their families, since incomes have plummeted and “millions are on the brink of starvation.” 

Last month, for example, the UN found that 85% of Afghans were living below the poverty line, an increase of 15 million people since 2020. They polish shoes, wash cars, beg in the streets or work in mines. Female-led households that previously relied on cash and food assistance have lost those sources of livelihood since the ban on organizations by the Taliban in December. A survey by the REACH initiative found that the prevalence of child labor is higher in female-led households than male-led households.

Feminist Majority Foundation urges rapid humanitarian action to support the lives of Afghan women, children and families.

Sources:

UN; RFERL; UN-FAO; REACH; FMF

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