Afghan Women Protest Taliban's Dress Code Edicts Amidst Increased Repression

🚀 Space 📰 Pakistan 🕐 1 hr ago
Afghan Women Protest Taliban's Dress Code Edicts Amidst Increased Repression

EVER since Kabul fell to the Taliban in August 2021 , the world has turned very bleak for Afghan women. As they did when they first took power in the 1990s, the Taliban immediately set about erasing women from public spaces in Afghanistan. Deploying a self-serving interpretation of religion, they issued edicts requiring women to cover themselves completely in public and be constantly accompanied by a male guardian. In later months, they imposed even more draconian restriction

Afghan women are increasingly speaking out against the Taliban's oppressive rule, particularly their stringent dress code edicts. Recent protests in Herat saw women demonstrating against the morality police's tactics. Reports indicate that several women were arrested for alleged dress code violations. This follows a June 5 announcement urging greater compliance with hijab rules. The Taliban's morality police have been actively rounding up women. A protest in a predominantly Hazara neighborhood, where about 70 men and women gathered in solidarity, was met with live gunfire from authorities, resulting in two deaths, including a child. Human Rights Watch reports at least 30 women detained on June 7. The Taliban's strategy of erasing women from public spaces and imposing strict controls continues, making it difficult for them to work or receive education. The protests signify growing resistance to the regime's policies.

This article reports on protests by Afghan women against the Taliban's restrictive dress codes and morality police, highlighting escalating repression and violent responses from authorities.

#space#medicine#euro#research#app

📌 Source

This summary is auto-compiled from XML. Visit the original article for the full text.

Read original article →
📱
News AI World — Mobile app
Get these headlines in 45 languages, with instant translation, on your phone. Drop your Gmail for early access.
← Back to all news