Afghanistan: Taliban Have Begun To Show Their ‘true Colours’, Says Europe-based Think Tank
When the Taliban still did not separate on their decision to keep the girls away from secondary education, the Fundamentalist CAD group has begun to reveal “true colors,” the European Foundation told South Asian studies (EFSAS). Starting from robbing the basic Afghan human rights to damage women in the community, a list of violations have accelerated in seven months since the Taliban took over Afghanistan in mid-August, said Think Tank based in Europe published on April 1. By enforcing the “truly repressive regime,” The Taliban began to direct away from maintaining “high promises,” the report added.
In particular, the Taliban has promised to take a softer and more dignified version of their previous regime who ruled in the 1990s. However, with further violations of human rights and oppression by limiting independence media, women’s restrictions from work and school within seven months after the repetition has been revealed faster than then the core aspect of anticipated regression. Paying attention to the condition of Afghan’s life after a prolonged crisis, Efsas urged the international community to focus on the torn nation.
A list of terrible life conditions in this country, experts claim that Afghanistan was forced to sell their kidneys for “several thousand dollars” in an effort to feed their children who were hiring. On the other hand, women in the country have “really reduced to an incorrect adjuncts.” The EFSAS report came after the caregiver regime in Afghanistan forbade the education of girls outside the 6th grade and marched women from traveling with air that was not accompanied by a male relative. Furthermore, men and women have been ordered to visit public parks only on separate days of the week that have been intended for each.
The restrictions mentioned above came besides killing the steps slapping women before. They have been banned from many government work that they are fully eligible to do. Women have also been told what they can and cannot be used, in addition to being prevented from traveling alone by road to other cities. Meanwhile, some activists of women’s rights have been detained who try to bear protests against uncommitted prohibitions imposed on them. “… The Taliban really reverses two decades of profits made by Afghan women,” Efsas said.
The most destructive implications of the Taliban steps are when they ban teenage girls from utilizing secondary education. The hardline group on March 23 announced it would reopen the school for “all students” only to order later that girls would be homeschooled, Taliban spokesman Inamullah Samangani had confirmed. The Taliban decision has surprisingly and sadly women and girls in Afghanistan, and some have promised to protest it.
We did all the Taliban asked in terms of Islamic dresses and they promised that girls could go to school and now they have violated their promises. They haven’t been honest with us,” said Mahbuba Seraj’s female rights activist said in an interview Tolo News.