From the DW:
“Afghanistan: No more taxis for women without burqas?”
A headscarf is not enough: The Taliban is punishing cab
drivers for transporting women not covered up with burqas. As a result, fewer
and fewer women are traveling in cities. Fereydun, a motorized rickshaw driver
from Herat in western Afghanistan, doesn't transport women anymore. If he were
to carry women who weren't wearing a full-body covering, he would be beaten up
by the Taliban and have his rickshaw confiscated, Fereydun told DW. He has
already had to witness women being humiliated. The Taliban have stopped him
several and pulled women not wearing burqas out of the vehicle to curse and
scream at them. Fereydun said he has also been punished.
Crackdown on women's rights Almost two years since the militant
Islamist Taliban seized power as NATO calamitously withdrew, women in
Afghanistan are still resisting orders. Many refuse to wear burqas and
still walk the streets with their faces uncovered. Last year, Taliban leader Hibatullah
Akhundzada ordered women to hide their faces completely in public "as this
is traditional and respectful," according to the decree issued in May
2022. When the Taliban came to power in August 2021, they pledged to
respect women's rights. Since then, women have been ousted from most
professions and barred from attending universities or higher education
institutions. Most recently, beauty salons were banned. For women who still
dare to show their faces, the pressure is mounting. Eyewitnesses in
Afghanistan report that the Taliban Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and
the Prevention of Vice have stationed morality police all over big cities.
Among other things, the ministry has decreed that drivers of taxis, rickshaws,
and other passenger vehicles can no longer transport women not wearing a hijab
inside cities. "When women travel, they must be accompanied by a
man," Akif Mohajer, a representative of the Ministry of Vice and Virtue,
told the media. "When they travel inside the city, no man is allowed to
sit next to them and they must wear a full hijab. It doesn't matter if they
wear a chador or not — their hijab must be fully Islamic." What exactly a
"full Islamic hijab" constitutes does not seem to be clearly defined.
Dina, a woman from Herat, said that she had been removed from rickshaws several
times and insulted for wearing a long coat and headscarf rather than a full
body covering. Mirza, a cab driver from Kabul, also confirmed this in an
interview with DW. The Taliban had told him several times that women without
veils or burqas were not allowed to ride in taxis, otherwise he would be
punished and his cab confiscated.
Squeezing women from public space The primary goal of these measures is
to push women out of the public eye, according to Maryam Marof Arwin, founder
of a welfare organization for women and children in Afghanistan. "With
the recent restrictions, the Taliban have shown that they are sticking to the
policies they implemented in their first period in power, except that now they
are systematically and specifically eliminating women from society," she
said. During the Taliban's first stint in power between 1996 to 2001,
they were known for their degrading treatment of women. Back then, women were
forced to wear the burqa in public, were not allowed to leave the house without
a male escort, and were barred from seeing male doctors, resulting in many
diseases going untreated. Experts warn that the Taliban are now trying to turn
back time without thinking about the consequences. Back in February, the
Taliban had announced that female medical students would not be allowed to sit
their final exams. They had already banned women from attending universities in
December 2022. In every
conversation, women in Afghanistan stress that the world should not stand idly
by. They need the support and solidarity of the world community. Dina from
Herat does, too.
^ Sadly, the World does little to nothing to help the Afghans
(those inside Afghanistan being tortured and murdered by the Taliban) and those
outside of Afghanistan who want a better life.
The Taliban Terrorists continue to focus on stupid rules
(like this one) rather than the real issues affecting the People of Afghanistan
- High Unemployment, a Food Crisis, etc.
The Taliban should focus on those but they are too scared of Women – having hidden
in caves for 20 years – to know what else to do. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/afghanistan-no-more-taxis-for-women-without-burqas/a-66380634
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