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- Taliban Enforces Ban on Women's Voices in Public Spaces in Afghanistan
Taliban Enforces Ban on Women's Voices in Public Spaces in Afghanistan
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Afghan women are protesting against the Taliban's laws, which deem women's voices as potential instruments of vice. The 35-article document bans women from singing, reciting poetry or reading aloud in public, and requires them to cover the lower half of their faces in addition to wearing a head covering. The ban also prohibits women from raising their voices, reciting the Quran in public, and looking at men other than their husbands or relatives. Afghan women are pushing back against these restrictions, with some posting videos of themselves singing in protest.
Recognizing gender apartheid as a crime against humanity would pave the way for accountability both from Afghanistan as a state, and from specific individuals in the country.
We must continue supporting women and their organizations inside and outside Afghanistan, gather strong support for the campaigns and put more pressure on governments, and these on the UN General Assembly and the Security Council. It was achieved in South Africa. It took more than 20 years, though. Hopefully here we won't have to wait so long.
We do not go to the field with a gun, but our voice, our image.
If the Taliban continues like this and the world remains silent, we will see a human crisis in Afghanistan.
Afghanistan under Taliban rule
- International Criminal Court seeks arrest of Taliban leaders for persecution of Afghan women
- Afghan Women's Education Ban Under Review
- Taliban threaten to close NGOs employing Afghan women
sources
perspectives
- 1.US Foreign Policy
- 2.Islamic Terrorism
- 3.Ethnic tensions
- 4.Authoritarianism
- 5.Human rights
- 6.Women's Rights
- 7.Afghanistan under Taliban rule
- 8.War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)
countries
organizations
- 1.Taliban
- 2.Development Research and Policy Studies Organisation
- 3.European Union
- 4.International Court of Justice
- 5.RTA
- 6.Socialist Party
- 7.UN Human Rights Council
- 8.United Nations
- 9.UN Working Group
- 10.Virtue and Vice Ministry
persons
- 1.Dorothy Estrada-Tanck
- 2.Ali Khara
- 3.Sayed Hassib
- 4.Barakatullah Rasouli
- 5.Fawzia Koofi
- 6.Hoda Khamosh
- 7.Mariam Safi
- 8.Ravina Shamdasani
- 9.Richard Bennett
- 10.Sodaba Noorai