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Taliban Fails to Reopen Girls’ Schools, Closes Them Instead

On the day the Taliban’s Ministry of Education promised to reopen girls’ schools in Afghanistan, it announced that these schools would remain closed until further notice. In a statement on the matter, reference was made to the issue of “appropriate school uniforms.”

Wednesday, March 23 (Farvardin 3) could have been an important day for schoolgirls in Afghanistan. With the Taliban’s promise to “reopen girls’ schools,” girls were supposed to be allowed to attend classes like boys starting that day. However, according to published reports, the Taliban’s decision did not last, and girls’ schools remain closed “until further notice.”

According to a report by “Tolo News” (a news network in Afghanistan), Aziz Ahmad Rayan, spokesman for the Taliban’s Ministry of Education, said: “All girls’ schools above sixth grade will remain closed until further notice.” According to him, “the final decision on this will be made by the leadership of the Islamic Emirate.”

In a statement issued by the Ministry of Education on this matter, reference was made to the issue of “appropriate school uniforms.” According to this statement, “whenever school uniforms are designed according to Islamic law and Afghan culture, then based on the ruling of the leadership of the Islamic Emirate, the aforementioned schools [girls’ schools] will commence.”

The prevention of girls from attending school has also had widespread resonance on social media. Videos and photographs have been published on these networks showing schoolgirls with tears in their eyes asking: “Is it a sin that we are girls? Is it a sin that we study?”

French news agency Agence France-Presse also released footage of girls gathered in front of “Zarghona” high school in Kabul and wrote that reporters were present at the moment when a teacher arrived and asked students to leave the school.

More than seven months after the Taliban came to power in Afghanistan, schoolgirls on Wednesday (Farvardin 3/Hamedan 3, 1401) set out to attend classes, including in grades above sixth grade.

All schools in Afghanistan were closed due to the coronavirus pandemic from the time the Taliban took control of the country in August. Two months after that, only students in grades below sixth (in some provinces) were allowed to return to school.

The Taliban’s Ministry of Education had announced last week that schools at all educational levels would reopen for both girls and boys in several provinces.

The story of women being deprived of many legitimate rights in Afghanistan, including the right to education, is not a new one. During the years 1996 to 2001, when the Taliban was in power in the country, girls were deprived of education and access to many professions and jobs.

Source: DW

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