From Yahoo/AFP:
“Afghan universities reopen,
but few women return”
(Female students chat near Kabul
University after classes ended when the institution reopened its doors.)
Afghanistan's main universities
reopened Saturday six months after the Taliban returned to power, but only a
trickle of women went back to now-segregated classes. Most secondary schools
for girls and all public universities were shuttered following the Taliban's
August 15 takeover, sparking fears women would be barred from education -- as
happened during the first rule of the hardline Islamists, from 1996-2001. The
Taliban insist they will allow girls and women to be educated this time around
-- but only in segregated classes and according to an Islamic curriculum.
Some public tertiary institutions
in the south of the country resumed last month, but on Saturday Kabul
University, the oldest and biggest with a student body of around 25,000 last
year, re-opened without fanfare -- and few students in attendance. Taliban
guards refused journalists access to the sprawling campus and chased away media
teams lingering near the entrance.
AFP, however, spoke to some
students away from the gates, who expressed mixed feelings after their first
day back. "I am happy that the university resumed... we want to continue
our studies," said an English major who asked to be identified only as
Basira. But she said there were "some difficulties" -- including
students being scolded by Taliban guards for bringing their mobile phones to
class. "They did not behave well with us... they were rude," she
said. Another English student, Maryam, said only seven women attended her
class. "Before we were 56 students, boys and girls," she said.
- No students in Panjshir - There
was also a shortage of lecturers, she said, adding: "Maybe because some
have left the country." A similar picture emerged from campuses
across the country, although no students returned to class at Panjshir
University, in the heartland of a nascent resistance to the Taliban's rule. "I
do not know if they will come tomorrow, or the day after tomorrow, or
not," said Professor Noor-ur-Rehman Afzali. Panjshir was the last
province to fall to the Taliban last year, and Jaber Jibran, a faculty head,
said several classrooms destroyed in that fighting had still not been repaired.
Some students said they thought many stayed away out of fear of the new
authorities, or because they could not afford the fees.
Long dependent on foreign aid for
survival, Afghanistan has plunged into economic crisis and the country's
overseas assets have been seized by the United States. "Most of the
students might not be able to afford it," said one named Haseenat, while
another said her friends had asked her to "report back" on what
conditions were like before they decided on attending. The Taliban have said
previously that women students must wear a black abaya over their bodies and
hijab on their heads, but stopped short of insisting on the all-covering burqa
that was compulsory during their previous rule. Several students, however,
appeared dressed no differently Saturday than they would have before the
Taliban takeover, with a simple shawl covering their heads. "I have never
worn any hijab before... it's new for me," said Sohaila Rostami, a biology
student in her last semester at Bamiyam University. "I used to wear jeans and
other normal clothes. It will be difficult for me to observe hijab," she
told AFP.
In Herat, the ancient Silk Road
city near the Iranian border and once one of the Islamic world's most important
intellectual centres, students also complained about a lack of tutors. "Some
of our professors have also left the country, but we are happy that the
university gates are open," said Parisa Narwan, studying arts. Tens of
thousands of Afghans fled the country as the Taliban stormed back to power --
among them teachers and lecturers who had been vociferously critical of the
hardline Islamist group. No country has yet recognised the new regime, which
has imposed several restrictions on women -- including banning them from many
government jobs. In Kabul, student Haseenat said campus life for women was now
very different to before. "We are told not to go out of our classes,"
she told AFP. "There is no cafeteria anymore... we are not allowed to go
to the university's courtyard."
^ While I am glad to see Afghan
Women now allowed back in Schools and Universities there is still a long way to
go to make them equal citizens under the Taliban. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/afghan-universities-reopen-few-women-124047708.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
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