Afghanistan: twenty women demonstrate in Kabul for their rights

Women in burkas and a Taliban soldier in the streets of Kabul on Tuesday May 3.

(Illustrative image) © AP - Ebrahim Noroozi

Text by: RFI Follow

2 mins

Twenty Afghan women demonstrated on Sunday, May 29, in Kabul to cries of "

bread, work, freedom 

", to protest against the restrictions imposed by the Taliban on the freedoms of women in Afghanistan.

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Since their return to power last August, fundamentalist Islamists have gradually eroded the freedoms won by women over the past twenty years since the fall of their previous regime (1996-2001).

“ 

Education is my right!

Reopen the schools! 

“, also chanted the demonstrators, many of whom wore veils covering their faces and who gathered in front of the Ministry of Education.

They walked a few hundred meters before being stopped by Taliban in civilian clothes, who came to disperse the demonstration, noted an

AFP

correspondent .

We wanted to read a statement, but the Taliban didn't allow it

 ,"

participant Zholia Parsi told

AFP after the march.

"

 They took some girls' cellphones and also stopped us from taking pictures or videos of our protest

 ," she added.

Restrictions that aim to further subjugate women

Since their return to power, the Taliban have imposed a series of restrictions on civil society, many of which are aimed at subjugating women to their fundamentalist conception of Islam.

They have largely excluded women from public employment, they have

restricted their right to move

, and they have banned girls' access to middle and high school.

The latest restriction dates back to early May, when the government issued an edict, endorsed by the supreme leader of the Taliban and Afghanistan, Hibatullah Akhundzada, making it compulsory for women

to wear the full veil in public

.

The Taliban have clarified that their preference was for the burqa, this integral veil most often blue and meshed at eye level, but that other types of veils revealing only the eyes would be tolerated.

The Taliban also felt that unless women had a pressing reason to go out, it was " 

better for them to stay at home

 ".

To read: Afghanistan: TV presenters appeared on Saturday with their faces uncovered on the air

The indifference of the Taliban in the face of the indignation of the international community

These new measures aroused the indignation of the international community.

On Friday, the Taliban rejected the UN Security Council's call to reverse these restrictions, deeming

the concerns expressed on these issues "

 unfounded  ".

Over the past two decades, Afghan women had gained new freedoms, returning to school or applying for jobs in all industries, even as the country remained socially conservative.

►To listen: Women in Afghanistan: return to hell under the yoke of the Taliban

(

with

AFP

)

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  • Afghanistan

  • Taliban

  • Womens rights

  • Women