From Reuters:
“Afghanistan tipping 'towards
authoritarianism', says U.N. rights expert”
A U.N. expert said on Monday that
human rights had deteriorated under the Taliban, describing a "staggering
repression" of women and girls and a "descent towards
authoritarianism", while Afghan women urged the global body to act. Richard
Bennett, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in
Afghanistan, called for radical changes in the country. "The severe
rollback of the rights of women and girls, reprisals targeting opponents and
critics, and a clampdown on freedom of expression by the Taliban amount to a
descent towards authoritarianism," he told a Human Rights Council meeting.
Afghanistan Ambassador Nasir
Ahmad Andisha who represents the toppled government went further, describing a
"gender apartheid" in the country. Several Afghan women addressed the
same meeting, including rights activist Mahbouba Seraj, who urged the 47-member
council to set up a mechanism to investigate abuses. "God only knows what
kind of atrocities are not being reported," she told the room full of U.N.
diplomats in Geneva. "And I want that to be reported because this is not
right. World: this is not right. Please, please, you've got to do something
about it." She described encountering a Taliban official in the streets of
the capital Kabul and feeling invisible: "I don't exist in front of him.
Not me. All of us, the women of that country. We don't exist. He just looks at
us and then that's it. We are erased. Do you know what that feeling is? To be
erased?."
Most girls' secondary schools in
Afghanistan have been closed since the Taliban took over in August 2021 after
the group made a sudden U-turn on promises to open them in March. Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights,
Ilze Brands Kehris, said that some 850,000 girls had so far dropped out of
school, placing them at risk of child marriage and sexual economic
exploitation. The Taliban, a hardline Islamist group whose administration is
not officially recognised by many governments, has said that schools will
remain closed until a plan is drawn up in accordance with Islamic law for them
to reopen. The mandate to monitor human rights violations in Afghanistan was
established by the Geneva-based council almost a year ago. A draft resolution
by the European Union seeks to renew it and a decision is expected by Oct. 7.
^ Sadly, the Taliban have not
changed their violent tactics and continue to butcher their version of Islam
affecting Millions of Ordinary Afghans. I hope the International Community
continues to boycott dealing with the Taliban and gives whatever Afghan
Anti-Taliban Resistance that is left all the support they need. ^
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