From the BBC:
“Afghanistan: Taliban bans
women from working for NGOs”
Women's freedoms have been
further curtailed in Afghanistan, after the Taliban barred them from working
for non-governmental organisations (NGOs). The Islamist rulers said female NGO
employees had been breaking Sharia law by failing to wear the hijab. It comes
days after female students were banned from universities - the latest
restriction on their education since the Taliban regained power.Women prevented
from going to work told the BBC of their fear and helplessness. One said she
was the main earner in her household, and asked: "If I cannot go to my
job, who can support my family?" Another breadwinner insisted that she had
complied with the Taliban's strict female dress code. "This news is
shocking," she said. "I am confused what will happen to my
life." A third woman questioned the Taliban's "Islamic morals",
saying she would now struggle to pay her bills and feed her children. "The
world is watching us and doing nothing," said another female interviewee.
The BBC is not publishing the women's names in order to protect them.
Saturday's edict was announced in
a letter from the Ministry of Economy to both national and international NGOs.
It threatened to cancel the licence of any organisation that did not swiftly
comply. However, it was not immediately clear whether this would affect United
Nations bodies, which have a large presence carrying out relief and development
work in the country. If NGOs are now only allowed to employ men, it appears
Afghan women will be unable to receive aid directly. Separate rules prevent men
from working with women. One doctor working in the northern city of
Mazar-e-Sharif said she was "sad and devastated" at the development. She
said her job involved giving out medicine in remote villages, where
"people really needed us" as they could not travel to the city. The
doctor predicted "great difficulty" for those women, as they
"can't fully tell their problems to men". Female employees were
"essential" for reaching other women and girls, commented Melissa
Cornet from Care International. She added: "Without them, the humanitarian
situation might deteriorate rapidly, in a situation where most of the country
is already facing life-threatening levels of hunger." Acute food
insecurity persists across much of Afghanistan, according to the country's
Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) - a measure used by
humanitarian workers.
The South Asian branch of Amnesty
International described the ban as "yet another deplorable attempt to
erase women from the political, social and economic spaces" of
Afghanistan. Meanwhile, one imam - whose identity is again being protected by
the BBC - said the Taliban was "not committed to any Islamic value". He
explained: "Islam has not said that men can educate and women cannot. Or
men can work and women cannot. We are confused about this decision." A ban
on women attending Afghan universities earlier this week met similar
condemnation. It triggered protests - including in Herat on Saturday - which
have been rapidly suppressed. Since seizing back control of the country last
year, the Taliban has steadily restricted women's rights - despite promising
its rule would be softer than the regime seen in the 1990s. Secondary schools
for girls remain closed in most provinces. Women have also been prevented from
entering parks and gyms, among other public places.
^ I only hope the Afghans
themselves (Men and Women) and the World will start to stand-up to the Taliban
and their Terror. ^
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