Afghanistan: Girls still not allowed to study at university

Afghan girls protest for their right to education, in Kabul, in August 2022 (illustration image).

© Ebrahim Noroozi / AP

Text by: RFI Follow

2 mins

This Monday, March 6, the boys resumed classes in Afghan universities after the long winter break.

The girls, to their dismay, are still not allowed to study by the Taliban regime.

Advertisement

Read more

In Afghanistan, the ban on access to university is one of many restrictions on women's rights adopted by the Taliban since they came to power in August 2021. This restriction has drawn a wave of condemnations around the world, including in Muslim countries.

"

 It's total sexual discrimination against girls, because Islam allows us to pursue higher education and be part of society 

," said Rahela, a 22-year-old woman from the province. central Ghor, interviewed by AFP.

Dress code

At the end of December 2022, the Minister of Higher Education announced that universities were now closed to women on the grounds that they did not respect the dress code in force, which requires them to fully veil their body and face.

The universities had however already adopted new rules after the return to power of the Taliban, in particular intended to separate girls and boys during class hours.

Women were thus only allowed to be given lessons by teachers of the same sex or by elderly men.

Several Taliban officials say the ban on women studying is only temporary, but they did not give a timetable on when it would reopen to women.

Secondary schools have also been closed to girls for a year and a half.

The ban on studying came as a shock to Afghan women who, less than three months earlier, had taken university entrance exams.

Austere interpretation of Islam

Despite their promises to be more flexible, the Taliban have returned to the austere interpretation of Islam that marked their first passage to power (1996-2001) and have multiplied measures against women.

Over the months, they have been excluded from many public jobs or are paid a pittance to stay at home.

They are also prohibited from traveling without being accompanied by a male relative and must cover themselves fully when leaving their homes.

In November 2022, the Taliban also banned them from entering parks, gardens, sports halls and public baths.

(

With

AFP)

►Also read

: A report by the International Crisis Group calls for not turning our backs on Afghanistan

Newsletter

Receive all the international news directly in your mailbox

I subscribe

Follow all the international news by downloading the RFI application

Extend your reading on the same topics

  • Afghanistan

  • Womens rights

  • Human rights

  • Education

  • Women

  • Taliban