Afghan Women Dare Taliban Regime, Stage Street Protest Against University Ban
A small group of Afghan women on Thursday staged a defiant protest in Kabul against a Taliban order banning them from universities.
Some of the protesters were arrested, according to AFP.
The Taliban authorities had ordered a nationwide ban on university education for females.
This is in line with the Islamists’ hardline approach to Afghan women’s right to education and freedom.
Despite promising a softer rule when they seized power last year, the Taliban have ratcheted up restrictions on all aspects of women’s lives, ignoring international outrage, AFP reports.
In the latest move to restrict human rights in Afghanistan, the Taliban’s minister for higher education on Tuesday ordered all public and private universities to bar women from attending.
“They expelled women from universities. Oh, the respected people, support, support. Rights for everyone or no one!” chanted the protesters as they rallied in a Kabul neighbourhood, footage obtained by AFP showed.
The women and girls who protested on the streets of Kabul against the decree reportedly chanted —“Either for everyone or for no one. One for all, all for one,” Shabnam Nasimi, former Policy Special Advisor to Minister for Afghan Resettlement & Minister for Refugees, tweeted on Thursday.
“Taliban reportedly kicked out women & girls from a library in Kabul today. They have nowhere else to go other than stay imprisoned at home,” Nasimi also tweeted.
In one of the videos Nasimi posted on Twitter, she translated some of the things said by the protesters as: “For the crime of learning, they threw us out of university. Oh honourable countrymen, please support us. Countrymen, countrymen, come break your silence.”
However, a protester at the rally told AFP that “some of the girls” had been arrested by women police officers. Two were released, but several remained in custody, she added, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Around two dozen women dressed in hijabs, some wearing masks, could be seen raising their hands and chanting slogans as they marched through the streets.
Women-led protests have become increasingly rare in Afghanistan since the Taliban took over the country last August, after the detention of core activists at the start of the year.
Participants risk arrest, violence and social stigma for taking part.
The women had initially planned to gather in front of Kabul University, the country’s biggest and most prestigious educational institution, but changed locations after the authorities deployed a large number of security personnel there.
Tuesday’s late-night announcement triggered international outrage, with the United States, the United Nations and several Muslim nations denouncing it.
The ban caused disbelief, coming less than three months after thousands were allowed to sit for university entrance exams.
“Afghan girls are dead people, they are crying blood,” said Wahida Wahid Durani, a journalism student at the University of Herat, who was not at the protest.
“They are using all their force against us. I’m afraid that soon they will announce that women are not allowed to breathe.”
Since seizing power, the Taliban have imposed many restrictions on women.
Most teenage girls are barred from secondary school, women have been pushed out of many government jobs, prevented from travelling without a male relative and ordered to cover up outside of the home, ideally with a burqa.
They are also not allowed to enter parks or gardens.