Afghanistan school year starts without millions of teenage girls

Al Jazeera

Afghanistan’s schools have reopened for the new academic year, but hundreds of thousands of teenage girls remain barred from attending classes as Taliban authorities ban their attendance in secondary school.

Education Minister Habibullah Agha confirmed in a statement that schools up to grade six “will currently be open for girls”, effectively retaining a ban on high school for female students.

Madrassas, or Islamic schools, are the only education centres open for girls of all ages. Yalda, a ninth grader in Kabul, told Al Jazeera that the madrassa was good for enhancing her knowledge of religion.

But “the madrassa cannot help me become a doctor, because that’s done in school”, she said.

Tenth grader Sara said she daydreamed of schools reopening “all the time”.

“Maybe someday schools will reopen and my education will progress further. I will never lose hope,” she said.

Taliban authorities have imposed an austere interpretation of Islam since storming back to power in August 2021 after the withdrawal of United States-led foreign forces that backed the previous governments.

The ban on girls’ secondary education came into effect in March last year, just hours after the education ministry reopened schools for both girls and boys. No Muslim-majority country bans women’s education.

Taliban leaders, who also banned women from university education in December, have repeatedly claimed they will reopen secondary schools for girls once “conditions” have been met, including remodelling the syllabus along Islamic lines.

Taliban officials have justified the school ban and curbs on women’s freedom due to a lack of a “safe environment”. Some senior Taliban leaders, however, said that Islam granted women rights to education and work.

Similar assurances were made during the Taliban’s first stint in power between 1996 and 2001, but girls remained banned from high schools throughout their five-year rule.

Catherine Russell, executive director of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), told Al Jazeera that the situation was “absolutely crushing”.

The ban “takes away their ability to participate in their community in a way where they can ultimately have jobs, become doctors or teachers”, she said.

In turn, that has a negative impact on the country’s economy and on a number of sectors where women had been making a difference.

“The health system relies on women. Nurses, doctors, need to be educated so that they can take a prominent place in the country,” Russell said. “The practical impact is devastating, and it’s also so crushing for these girls who have dreams.”

Afghanistan is the only country in the world where girls are prohibited from going to secondary school.

Women have also been effectively squeezed out of public life, removed from most government jobs or paid a fraction of their former salaries to stay at home.

They are also barred from going to parks, fairs, gyms and public baths, and must cover up in public.

The United Nations said Afghanistan under the Taliban government is the “most repressive country in the world” for women’s rights.

The UN Assistance Mission to Afghanistan (UNAMA) urged the authorities on Tuesday to lift the ban on girls’ education.

“UNAMA reiterates its call to de facto authorities to reverse all discriminatory policies against women and girls,” the mission said on Twitter.

“They not only impede the aspirations of half of the population but are causing great damage to Afghanistan.”

The ban halts two decades of progress during which literacy rates among women almost doubled. The number of girls in school increased almost 20 times since 2001, from just 5,000 to more than 100,000 in 2021.

Haroun Rahimi, assistant professor of law at the American University of Afghanistan, wrote in an Al Jazeera op-ed that the ban was “causing incalculable harm to the Afghan youth and the future of the country”.

“However, the Taliban have been paying the salary of female schoolteachers for now. Remarkably, enrolment numbers in primary schools for both boys and girls have increased in some areas of the country as security has improved,” he said.

According to UNICEF’s Russell, the Taliban is “not a monolithic organisation”, and some among its ranks “understood that the country will never prosper and do well if half of the population is not able to participate”.

“They are essentially saying that for now they cannot go to school, and I would argue to them that these girls are human beings, that they have a right to healthcare, they have a right to an education and those rights need to be respected,” Russell said.

The international community has made the right to education for women a key condition in negotiations over aid and recognition of the current Taliban government.

No country has so far officially recognised the Taliban as Afghanistan’s legitimate rulers.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
Afghanistan school year starts without millions of teenage girls
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Blinken promises review of Afghan withdrawal to Congress by mid-April

Reuters

WASHINGTON, March 22 (Reuters) – U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told lawmakers on Wednesday that the State Department has been putting together a review of the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan and will share findings with Congress by mid-April.

“We’ve now been spending time putting all of this together to make sure that we look at some of the common lessons learned,” Blinken said in testimony to a Senate Appropriations Committee subcommittee hearing.

“I am committed and determined to make that information available to Congress, and we will do that. We will do that by mid-April. So I can tell you today, you’ll have the after-action review. We will share the findings and find the appropriate mechanism to do that within the next three weeks.”

Members of Congress have been demanding information about the August 2021 withdrawal from Afghanistan after 20 years in what was the U.S.’s longest war. The Republican chairman of the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee threatened this week to issue a subpoena if the State Department does not produce documents it has requested.

John Kirby, the top spokesperson for the White House National Security Council, told reporters the main takeaways from the review would be released to the public and shared with the House committee.

Republicans, who took control of the House in January, say there has never been a full accounting of the chaotic operation, in which 13 U.S. service members were killed at Kabul’s airport.

Hundreds of U.S. citizens and many thousands of Afghans who had worked with American forces were left behind as they were seeking to flee from the Taliban, the Islamist militant group that resumed control of Afghanistan.

Reporting by Patricia Zengerle, Simon Lewis, Humeyra Pamuk, Doina Chiacu and Nandita Bose; editing by Jonathan Oatis and Grant McCool
Blinken promises review of Afghan withdrawal to Congress by mid-April
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US review of Afghanistan withdrawal to be released in April

By AAMER MADHANI and ZEKE MILLER

Associated Press
22 March 2023

WASHINGTON (AP) — The results of the long-delayed government review of the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan will be released next month, the White House announced Wednesday, with Congress and the public set to see an assessment of what went wrong as America ended its longest war.

The August 2021 pullout of U.S. troops led to the swift collapse of the Afghan government and military, which the U.S. had supported for nearly two decades, and the return to power of the Taliban. In the aftermath, President Joe Biden directed that a broad review examine “every aspect of this from top to bottom.”

It was originally set to be released at the one-year anniversary of the withdrawal but was delayed while agencies continued their work.

National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said Wednesday that the work was nearly complete and that the administration was readying the release next month.

“We expect to be able to share those takeaways with the public by mid-April,” Kirby said. He said the administration would share classified sections of the report with congressional oversight committees.

House Republicans have been pushing the Biden administration since the withdrawal to release documents related to official communications and the review of how the chaotic fall of Kabul came to be.

There are currently two ongoing investigations into the withdrawal. One them is being led by Rep. Mike McCaul, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, who requested documents from Blinken in January. On Wednesday, the House Republican received the first batch of documents from the State Department.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken is set to appear Thursday before McCaul and the Foreign Affairs committee, where he is expected to be grilled on the withdrawal.

Associated Press writer Farnoush Amiri contributed from Washington.

US review of Afghanistan withdrawal to be released in April
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4 Afghans Killed, Around 80 Wounded in Earthquake on Tuesday

The earthquake also shocked Panjshir, Takhar, Kunduz, Panjshir, Laghman, Kabul and several other provinces as well as some regional countries.

At least four people have been killed and around 80 others were wounded in an earthquake that rocked the northeast on Tuesday night, officials said.

The United States Geological Survey (USGS) said that the earthquake had a 6.5 magnitude and its center was 40km south southeast of Jurm district of Badakhshan, Afghanistan.

The earthquake also shocked Panjshir, Takhar, Kunduz, Panjshir, Laghman, Kabul and several other provinces as well as some regional countries.

“Unfortunately, around 80 people have been wounded and four others have been martyred. The martyrs are in Takhar, Kabul and Laghman provinces,” said Sharafat Zaman Amerkhail, a spokesman for the Public Health Ministry.

“63 houses have been fully and partially destroyed and some livestock have also been lost,” said Shafiullah Rahimi, a spokesman for the State Ministry for Natural Disaster Management.

The residents in Badakhshan province said the earthquake caused heavy losses for them.

According to the residents, at least 50 houses were destroyed in Jurm district of Badakhshan.

“As you see this house, another 50 other houses have been destroyed,” said Atiqullah, a resident of Badakhshan.

“There should be a tent or something to shelter the children with it,” Sayed Muhaiddin, a resident of Badakhshan.

“When I came, I saw a 12-years old child. Half of his body was under dust. Another child was under the ruins,” said Shafiqullah, a resident of Laghman.

Meanwhile Pakistani media reported that at least nine people were killed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

More than 200 people were brought to hospitals in the Swat valley and elsewhere in the region of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, according to the reports.

4 Afghans Killed, Around 80 Wounded in Earthquake on Tuesday
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Magnitude 6.8 earthquake strikes Hindu Kush in Afghanistan – GFZ

March 21, 2023

March 21 (Reuters) – An earthquake of magnitude 6.8 struck the Hindu Kush region in Afghanistan, the German Research Center for Geosciences (GFZ) said on Tuesday.

The quake was at a depth of 184 km (114 miles), GFZ added.

India’s ANI news agency reported that tremors were felt in the country’s capital New Delhi.

Reporting by Shubham Kalia in Bengaluru, Editing by William Maclean
Magnitude 6.8 earthquake strikes Hindu Kush in Afghanistan – GFZ
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Interior Ministry: Nearly 200 People Arrested for Kidnapping in Past Year

According to figures from the ministry, 44 citizens were released from kidnappers, while six people who were abducted were murdered.

The Ministry of Interior said more than 100 abduction incidents were recorded in the nation in 1401 (the solar year), and close to 200 people were arrested in connection with these incidents.

The Interior Ministry’s spokeswoman, Abdul Nafi Takour, said during a press conference that nearly 12,000 criminal incidents were recorded in the country in the past one year.

Thirteen suspects have been killed as a result of clashes with Islamic Emirate forces.

According to figures from the ministry, 44 citizens were released from kidnappers, while six people who were abducted were murdered.

“During the year 1401 (the solar year), 106 incidents of kidnappings were reported to the police in the nation, and in relation to these cases, the police forces carried out 200 operations against the kidnappers,” Takour continued.

The Interior Ministry reported that there were nearly 12,000 crimes recorded nationwide in 1401.

More than 16,000 people are being detained in custody in relation with these incidents, and the forces of the Islamic Emirate are still looking for more than 1,000 persons, according to a spokesman for the Ministry of Interior.

“During the year 1401, there have been 11,890 criminal incidents in the nation, of which 9,444 were detected by the police and 2,446 are being investigated by police detectives,” said Abdul Nafi Takour.

Meanwhile, some military analysts believe that security forces should become more professional to provide better security in the country.

“Finding, prosecuting, and arresting offenders and violators of criminal cases can be useful in reducing different crimes in the country,” said Sadiq Shinwari, a military analyst.

According to figures from the Ministry of Interior, more than 4,000 operations in the anti-narcotics section were conducted in the last year, resulting in the arrest of more than 5,000 suspects and the destruction of more than 180 drug factories.

Interior Ministry: Nearly 200 People Arrested for Kidnapping in Past Year
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UN Experts: ‘No Justification’ for Denial of Girls’ Rights to Education

Female students have called on the Islamic Emirate to reopen their schools and universities.

The UN experts said in a statement said that the “Taliban de facto authorities” have no justification to deny the right to education, on any grounds, including religion or tradition for girls in Afghanistan.

The statement said that the ongoing “denial of girls and young women’s right to education in Afghanistan marks a global nadir in education, impacting an entire gender, a generation and the future of the country.”

“On 22 March 2023, schools should be reopening to girls across Afghanistan. Instead, it appears that for the second successive school year teenage girls will be banned from resuming their studies – making Afghanistan the only country in the world that forbids girls and young women from attending secondary school and places of higher education,” the statement said. “Education is an enabling right, which is crucial in and of itself and for realising other human rights such as the rights to work, to an adequate standard of living, to health, to participate in society and communities, to equality before the law and to fundamental freedoms. Denying this right to half the population effectively denies women and girls most other human rights.”

“If the Afghan women this year, as the year before, are deprived, we will see that the female generations of Afghanistan will be harmed seriously, including with a rise in forced marriage,” said Mariam Marouf Arveen, a women’s rights activist.

Qatar hosted talks on the future of education in Afghanistan and the challenges and obstacles facing it, the Qatar foreign ministry said in a statement.

The statement said that Assistant Foreign Minister Lolwah Al Khater, with the participation of the CEO of Education Above All Foundation, Fahad Al Sulaiti, represented Qatar in the talks held in Doha, where a delegation from the Afghan Ministry of Education, led by Education Minister Mawlawi Sayyid Habeeb Agha, a delegation of the UNICEF organization headed by UNICEF Regional Director for South Asia George Laria, and the Chief of Strategic Partnerships at Education Cannot Wait Organization Nasser Fakih also participated.

“The participants also agreed on the need to ensure the right to education for all, develop a common vision that deals with challenges, and provide high-quality education opportunities for all Afghan students in all regions,” the statement reads.

The US special envoy for Afghanistan, Rina Amiri, said on Twitter that a “stable and sustainable Afghanistan hinges on reversing extreme policies like the ones banning girls from schools above grade 6.”

Female students have called on the Islamic Emirate to reopen their schools and universities.

“The doors of the schools and universities should reopen for girls within Sharia law,” said Robina Poya, a student.

The Islamic Emirate’s spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid said that efforts are underway to facilitate the reopening of the schools and universities for female students.

“There are relevant organizations–it would be better if (you) contact them on how much progress they have made. But in general, the education for girls is currently halted. We are searching for some solutions,” he said.

Former president Hamid Karzai and the former chairman of the High Council for National Reconciliation, Abdullah Abdullah, also in separate tweets urged the Islamic Emirate to reopen schools for female students.

UN Experts: ‘No Justification’ for Denial of Girls’ Rights to Education
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MoD apologises for asking Afghans to get Taliban’s approval to come to UK

The Ministry of Defence has apologised after an investigation found Afghan applicants to a resettlement scheme were told they could only come to the UK if their documents were approved by the Taliban.

The Independent revealed that the mistake affected applicants to the Afghan relocations and assistance policy scheme (Arap), which aims to relocate Afghan citizens who worked with the UK government or helped its armed forces in Afghanistan. The MoD decides which applicants – who may apply with their families – are eligible for relocation to Britain.

Arap differs from the Afghan citizens resettlement scheme (ACRS), which works to relocate members of the public and vulnerable people to the UK.

Citing emails sent from MoD caseworkers to Arap applicants, the Independent found applicants were required to provide birth and marriage certificates in English and bearing stamps from Afghan government departments. The Taliban has ruled Afghanistan since the summer of 2021.

The MoD initially denied the practice but an MoD spokesperson eventually said the ministry has “swiftly corrected” the mistake and was “urgently reinforcing our internal guidance and processes to ensure this does not happen again”.

“We apologise unreservedly and continue to work tirelessly to move eligible people to safety,” the spokesperson said.

The Arap case team also sent an apology email to applicants, stating: “We understand that some of you may have received communications from Arap telling you to visit the local authorities or ministry of foreign affairs to obtain new documentation for your relocation to the UK.

“If you received one of these messages, this was incorrect and we apologise for any misunderstanding or distress caused by this message.”

One Afghan interpreter was told his marriage certificate and his children’s birth certificates had to be validated by Afghanistan’s ministry of foreign affairs. He attempted to get his marriage certificate verified at the Taliban’s ministry of justice.

The interpreter remains in Afghanistan, waiting for help to transfer to a third country before the UK. He is currently in hiding and unable to work.

The UK government promised to resettle up to 20,000 eligible Afghans – including 5,000 in the first year – but has been criticised for delays in the process.

While 11,212 people were resettled in Britain under Arap, the number of admittances fell in late 2021, after the Taliban took over Afghanistan.

According to Home Office data, more than 6,200 Afghans were relocated under Arap between July and September 2021. This dropped to 732 in the last quarter of 2021. One year on, only 743 were admitted in the last quarter of 2022.

As for ACRS, only 22 Afghans eligible under the scheme’s second pathway – designed for vulnerable fleeing refugees referred by the United Nations high commissioner for refugees – were resettled by the end of December.

MoD apologises for asking Afghans to get Taliban’s approval to come to UK
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Aid funding shortfall could push Afghans into famine – WFP

By

Reuters
March 20, 2023

KABUL, March 20 (Reuters) – A drop in donor funding could push parts of Afghanistan into famine this year, the World Food Programme said on Monday, adding that up to 9 million Afghans could be left without food aid after it had already had to slash rations.

A huge humanitarian aid package after the Taliban took over Afghanistan in 2021 – leading to foreign governments cutting development funding and imposing sanctions – helped avert a widespread famine then, but now those fears are rising again.

“Because of that, we’ve been able to stave off famine,” WFP Afghanistan Country Director Hsiao-Wei Lee told Reuters. “If we are not able to provide that (again), we could face the worst-case scenario.”

The WFP is currently short of $93 million for March and April, causing it to reduce rations to 4 million Afghans to 50% of what they need. Another 9 million people will lose access to food aid entirely next month if it does not receive funding commitments in coming weeks.

The WFP comments are one of the first concrete signs after international officials warned that growing global emergencies and challenging economic conditions, combined with Taliban restrictions on women, could lead donors to pull back.

The restrictions have drawn widespread international criticism. The Taliban administration says it respects women’s rights in line with their interpretation of Islamic law and are working on guidelines to clarify the rules on female NGO workers.

Lee also described the Taliban authorities’ decision to ban most Afghan women from working at NGOs in December as a “devastating blow”.

“Against the backdrop of the ban, partners are continuing to review their funding to operations in Afghanistan and there could be a decline in funding,” she said.

“It’s very much in the back of everybody’s minds and we just need to continuously remind ourselves that humanitarian funding … does need to remain apolitical,” she said, adding that many of WFP’s beneficiaries were women and children.

She also pointed to the parallel crises that have unfolded in Ukraine and around the earthquakes in Turkey and Syria.

Lee said the WFP was monitoring to ensure women were still reaching sites where it distributed cash and food and that authorities had granted exemptions in some areas to allow female NGO workers.

The WFP was turning beyond its traditional major donors, Lee said, to ask countries in the region and private organisations to help it raise the $800 million needed for the next six months.

According to U.N. finance records, the WFP received around $1.7 billion last year for Afghanistan from dozens of governments and institutions. Its major donors included the United States, Britain and Germany. The records did not indicate which donors had reduced funding this year.

Reporting by Charlotte Greenfield in Kabul; Editing by Alison Williams
Aid funding shortfall could push Afghans into famine – WFP
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Qatar Hosts Meeting on Challenges Facing Education in Afghanistan

Qatar hosted talks on the future of education in Afghanistan and the challenges and obstacles facing it, the Qatar foreign ministry said in a statement.

The statement said that Assistant Foreign Minister Lolwah Al Khater, with the participation of the CEO of Education Above All Foundation, Fahad Al Sulaiti, represented Qatar in the talks held in

Doha, where a delegation from the Afghan Ministry of Education, led by Education Minister Mawlawi Sayyid Habeeb Agha, a delegation of the UNICEF organization headed by UNICEF Regional

Director for South Asia George Laria, and the Chief of Strategic Partnerships at Education Cannot Wait Organization Nasser Fakih also participated.

The participants discussed the economic challenges, poor infrastructure, the limited human resources and qualifications in Afghanistan, in addition to ensuring equal access to education for all, especially girls,” the statement said.

“The participants also agreed on the need to ensure the right to education for all, develop a common vision that deals with challenges, and provide high-quality education opportunities for all Afghan students in all regions.”

The statement reads that the Qatar Assistant Foreign Minister “stressed the importance of continuing the talks to reach radical solutions to develop the sectors of education and health in Afghanistan.”

According to the statement, the Islamic Emirate delegation praised Qatar’s efforts in “organizing that event that would come up with solutions to help the Afghan people improve the quality of education and ensure its access to male and female students in all regions of Afghanistan.”

Qatar Hosts Meeting on Challenges Facing Education in Afghanistan
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