The case of a woman being blinded by being attacked with her'both eyes' just because she got a job in Afghanistan, where the problem of women's rights is serious, is shocking.



According to Reuters news agency on the 11th, 33-year-old Katera, a female policewoman in Ghazni, Afghanistan, was attacked by three men on a motorcycle on the way home from the police station.



The men fired at Catera, stabbed them in both eyes and ran away.



Catera, who lost her mind and woke up from the hospital, knew she could no longer see.



Catera believes that her father, who was extremely disliked to work outside, asked and attacked the armed rebel organization Taliban, but the Taliban denies intervention.



Catera dreamed of getting a job from a young age, and despite the continued opposition of her father, she did not break her dream. She was supported by her husband and became a police officer three months ago.



"After becoming a police officer, my angry dad followed me to work several times, and I went to the Taliban and asked me to give him my police ID and not work," he said.



Ghazni police arrested Katera's father and announced that it was allegedly committed by the Taliban.



But what's surprising is that all of her family members, including her mother, criticized Catera rather than comforted her.



Catera, who has five children, cuts off contact with her parents and is taking care of them.



"It would have been nice if I had been in the police for at least a year and had this kind of thing, but it was too fast," he said. "I only had my dreams come true for three months."



“If possible, I want to recover my eyesight and return to the police,” he stressed, “I have to earn money, but above all, the passion to have a job remains within me.”



Women's rights in Afghanistan were greatly damaged when the Taliban, who insisted on building a state under Islamic religious law, came to power.



During the past five years of reign, the Taliban strongly regulated women's lives by banning women's education and employment, and wearing burka in public places, and sexual violence and forced marriage were rampant at that time.



Because of this, the fact that the Afghan government and the Taliban are negotiating for peace to end the war, Afghan women are said to be afraid of going back to the past.