Calls Grow to Reopen Schools for Girls

It has now been 1,756 days since girls above the sixth grade were barred from attending school.

Following the announcement of this year’s university entrance exam (Kankor) results, calls to reopen schools for girls who have been deprived of education have once again intensified.

It has now been 1,756 days since girls above the sixth grade were barred from attending school.

Seventeen-year-old Beheshta, although saddened by the loss of educational opportunities and being kept out of school, says that she and thousands of other girls remain hopeful that schools will reopen and they will be able to return to their classrooms.

“I am certain that if we had been allowed to participate, one of us would have ranked first, second, or third. But for the past five years, schools and universities have been closed to us, and none of us has been able to make progress,” Beheshta, a student, said.

Another student said: “I am also a citizen of Afghanistan, just like the boys. Why don’t I have the right to education while a boy does?”

Referring to the fifth consecutive year in which girls have been excluded from the Kankor exam, former U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan Reconciliation Zalmay Khalilzad said that preventing Afghan women and girls from taking the exam is sad and wrong and that the time has come to allow them to return to schools and universities.

“It is sad and wrong that girls and young women are not allowed to take the exam. The time has come for the Taliban leader to allow girls and young women to return to public middle and high schools, as well as public universities,” Khalilzad said.

Earlier, former Afghan President Hamid Karzai also expressed concern over the exclusion of women and girls from the Kankor exam and called for the reopening of schools and universities to them.

The Islamic Emirate has not yet commented on reopening schools for girls.

Calls Grow to Reopen Schools for Girls