Taliban to shut down all NGOs employing women


Full story

The Taliban announced it plans to close all non-governmental national and foreign groups in Afghanistan that employ women. This comes two years after the group told NGOs to stop employing Afghan women, allegedly because women weren’t wearing their Islamic headscarves correctly.

In a letter posted to X on Sunday, Dec. 29, the Taliban-run Economy Ministry reiterated its order saying, “In case of lack of cooperation, all activities of that institution will be canceled and the activity license of that institution, granted by the ministry, will also be canceled.”

This is the Taliban’s latest attempt to not only control women but intervene in NGOs.

The U.N. Security Council reported it heard female Afghan humanitarian workers were prevented from working even though their work remains essential.

The Taliban denied obstructing aid or interfering with relief operations.

In the three years since the U.S. withdrew from Afghanistan and the Taliban took control, it barred women from several jobs and most public spaces. The group also banned women from getting anything beyond a sixth-grade education.

On Saturday, Dec. 28, the Taliban’s leader ordered buildings should not have windows looking into places where women might sit or stand, including homes.

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

77 total sources

Other (sources without bias rating):

Powered by Ground News™

Full story

The Taliban announced it plans to close all non-governmental national and foreign groups in Afghanistan that employ women. This comes two years after the group told NGOs to stop employing Afghan women, allegedly because women weren’t wearing their Islamic headscarves correctly.

In a letter posted to X on Sunday, Dec. 29, the Taliban-run Economy Ministry reiterated its order saying, “In case of lack of cooperation, all activities of that institution will be canceled and the activity license of that institution, granted by the ministry, will also be canceled.”

This is the Taliban’s latest attempt to not only control women but intervene in NGOs.

The U.N. Security Council reported it heard female Afghan humanitarian workers were prevented from working even though their work remains essential.

The Taliban denied obstructing aid or interfering with relief operations.

In the three years since the U.S. withdrew from Afghanistan and the Taliban took control, it barred women from several jobs and most public spaces. The group also banned women from getting anything beyond a sixth-grade education.

On Saturday, Dec. 28, the Taliban’s leader ordered buildings should not have windows looking into places where women might sit or stand, including homes.

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

77 total sources

Other (sources without bias rating):

Powered by Ground News™