Afghan women stage protest, demand Taliban reopen schools
More than two dozen girls and women stage protests in front of the Ministry of Education against the Taliban’s decision to shut schools.
More than two dozen girls and women have staged protests in front of the Ministry of Education in the capital, Kabul, days after the Taliban administration shut secondary schools for girls until further notice, following which the Afghan group has been accused of reneging on its promise on higher education for girls.
Thousands of jubilant girls across Afghanistan had flocked to learning institutions on Wednesday – the date the education ministry had set for classes to resume for girls of all ages. But just hours into the first day, the ministry announced a shock policy reversal that left youngsters saying they felt betrayed and foreign governments expressing outrage.
On Friday, the United States cancelled planned talks with the Taliban in Qatar that were set to address key economic issues after the group’s decision to close schools.
The decision, which the Taliban has yet to explain, means girls above the sixth grade will not be able to attend school.
“Open the schools! Justice, justice!” chanted protesters on Saturday, some carrying school books as they gathered at a city square in Kabul.
They held banners that said “Education is our fundamental right, not a political plan”, as they marched for a short distance and later dispersed as Taliban fighters arrived at the scene.
School reopening stalled
The protest was the first held by women in weeks after the Taliban rounded up the leaders of initial demonstrations held after they returned to power in August after the West-backed government of Ashraf Ghani collapsed in the wake of months-long Taliban military offensive.
The group promised to protect women’s rights and press freedom in its first news conference following its stunning takeover of Afghanistan in August last year.
The US-led NATO forces withdrew from the country in August – 20 years after a military invasion toppled the Taliban armed group from power. The Taliban’s six years in power (1996-2001) were marked by human rights violations and a ban on women’s education and jobs.
“We are going to allow women to work and study. We have got frameworks, of course. Women are going to be very active in the society but within the framework of Islam,” Zabihullah Mujahid, the group’s spokesman, had said at a news conference on August 16, 2021.
But since then the opening of high school for girls has been stalled and press freedom has deteriorated, forcing hundreds of journalists to flee the country for safety.
The decision to shut schools on Wednesday came after a meeting late on Tuesday of senior officials in the southern city of Kandahar, the Taliban’s de facto power centre and spiritual heartland.
It followed months of work by some foreign countries on a plan to support the payment of teachers’ wages.
Afghan secondary school girls have now been out of education for more than seven months.
“Even the Prophet [Muhammad] said everyone has the right to education, but the Taliban has snatched this right from us,” said youngster Nawesa at the demonstration, which was organised by two women’s rights groups.
“The Taliban cannot oppress the women of Afghanistan,” said another protester, Laila Basim.
Some Afghan women initially pushed back against the Taliban’s curbs, holding small protests where they demanded the right to education and work.
Since returning to power on August 15, the Taliban has rolled back 20 years of gains made by the country’s women, who have been squeezed out of many government jobs, barred from travelling alone, and ordered diktats about women’s dresses.
But the Taliban soon rounded up the protest leaders, holding them incommunicado while denying that they had been detained.