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Taliban Prevents Girls From Attending High School, Reneging on Promise

The international community has been demanding that the Taliban not discriminate against women and allow them to continue working and attend schools.

March 24, 2022
Taliban Prevents Girls From Attending High School, Reneging on Promise
IMAGE SOURCE: AFP

The Taliban on Wednesday announced that it will not allow girls to attend high school, days after promising the opposite. The abrupt decision was made as hundreds of girls returned to schools across Afghanistan and were later told to go home.

 

The move is expected to complicate the fundamentalist group’s efforts to gain international recognition, as countries have been demanding that Afghan women of all ages be given unrestricted access to education.


Also Read: The Taliban Could Reverse Two Decades of Progress in Women’s Education in Afghanistan


Afghanistan’s Education Ministry released a notice on Wednesday stating that while the Taliban is committed to ensuring the educational rights of all Afghans, these rights must be within the framework of the Islamic Sharia law. In this respect, the Ministry said that girls of sixth grade and above will not be allowed to attend school. It also stated that boys of all ages can continue their education and that a final decision regarding allowing girls to pursue higher education will be made soon.

The Taliban’s Doha spokesperson, Suhail Shaheen, said the move was only meant to postpone the opening of girls’ schools and not indefinitely bar girls from education. Shaheen claimed that a technical issue regarding the standardisation of uniforms for all students was preventing Education Ministry from allowing girls beyond the sixth grade to attend classes. “We hope the uniform issue is resolved and finalised as soon as possible,” he added.

Teachers, students, and parents across the country were shocked by the surprise announcement. Reuters reported that girls returned to campuses in excitement but immediately left in tears when they were told to go home. “We all became totally hopeless when the principal told us, she was also crying,” a student told the news agency.

A teacher based in Kabul told The Guardian girls arrived hours early before school started and were “happy and excited” to begin classes but the Taliban order reversed the mood altogether. “Many of them started arguing. I had nothing to tell them. I left an hour ago. I cried,” she lamented.

An eighth-grade student told The Wall Street Journal that she went to school only to be turned away by the Taliban who started firing in the air to disperse girls gathered outside a school in Kabul. “I’m so sad they didn’t allow me to go to school. They are playing with my future,” she said.

On Monday, the Taliban announced that schools will reopen on March 23 for both boys and girls. An Education Ministry official even published a video congratulating all students on the beginning of a new school year.

One of the Taliban’s key promises following its seizure of power on August 15 was to allow girls to attend schools. The group had promised that girls will continue to have access to education and that the leadership would make sure that all of its fighters abide by this policy.

The international community, too, has been demanding that the group not discriminate against women and allow them to continue working and attend schools. Various countries and international organisations have also stressed that any move to recognise the Taliban would depend on the group fulfilling these demands.

In this context, Wednesday’s announcement dealt a major blow to the credibility of the Taliban. The move to prevent girls from entering schools was widely condemned. UN Secretary-General António Guterres called the move “a profound disappointment and deeply damaging for Afghanistan.”

“The denial of education not only violates the equal rights of women and girls to education, it also jeopardizes the country’s future in view of the tremendous contributions by Afghan women and girls,” Guterres said in a statement. “I urge the Taliban de facto authorities to open schools for all students without any further delay,” he added.

The United States’ (US) Chargé d’Affaires for Afghanistan, Ian McCary, said that he was “deeply troubled” by the development. “This is very disappointing and contradicts many Taliban assurances and statements. All Afghan youth deserve to be educated,” he tweeted.

Echoing these thoughts, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Wednesday that the US “rejects the Taliban’s excuses for reversing their commitment to the people of Afghanistan that all Afghans would be able to return to school at all levels.” Blinken added that the decision will “profoundly harm” the Taliban’s efforts to improve ties with the international community.

The last time the Taliban was in power in Afghanistan, from 1996 to 2001, they banned education and employment for girls guided by an extremist understanding of Islam. Girls were also brutally punished if they were found violating the group’s diktats. As a result, women’s literacy rate during the period plummeted to one of the lowest in the world—13% in urban areas and 4% in rural areas.

While the Afghan government that replaced the Taliban in 2001 following the US invasion was able to make significant strides in increasing access to education, the Taliban’s return to power has threatened to undo two decades of progress.