Taliban stop women from working for aid organisations

  • 12/24/2022
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Afghanistan’s Taliban-run administration has ordered all local and foreign non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to stop female employees from coming to work, according to a letter from the economy ministry. The letter, the contents of which were confirmed by economy ministry spokesperson Abdulrahman Habib, said female employees of NGOs were not allowed to work until further notice. It stated that the move was the result of some women allegedly not adhering to the administration’s interpretation of Islamic dress code for women. Aid workers have said female personnel are critical to ensuring women can access support. Habib said the ban applied to organisations under Afghanistan’s coordinating body for humanitarian organisations, known as ACBAR. While ACBAR does not include the United Nations, it does include more than 180 local and international NGOs and the UN often contracts such groups registered in Afghanistan to carry out its humanitarian work. Quite how this order will affect UN agencies, which have a large presence in Afghanistan delivering services amid the country’s humanitarian crisis, is not clear. It was also unclear whether the rule also applied to foreign women. This latest attack on women’s rights and freedoms comes days after the administration ordered universities to close to women. The move prompted international condemnation. This week foreign ministers from the G7 called on the Taliban to lift the ban, warning that “gender persecution may amount to a crime against humanity”. The ministers added that “Taliban policies designed to erase women from public life will have consequences for how our countries engage with the Taliban”. However, the Afghan minister of higher education in defended the ban. Nida Mohammad Nadim said the banwould prevent men and women mixing at universities and he believed some subjects being taught violated the principles of Islam. “We told girls to have proper hijab but they didn’t and they wore dresses like they are going to a wedding ceremony,” he said. “Girls were studying agriculture and engineering, but this didn’t match Afghan culture. Girls should learn, but not in areas that go against Islam and Afghan honour.” He said universities would reopen for women once these issues, which he said were being worked on, were resolved. However, this echoes the Taliban’s promises about secondary school access for girls, which was banned last year. It had insisted classes would resume for girls once “technical issues” concerning uniforms and transport were sorted out. However the ban remains in place. This week, the Taliban banned girls and all female staff including teachers from primary schools meaning there is now in effect a total ban on education for women in the country.

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