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Taliban Enforces New Restrictions on Afghan Women, Extending Ban on Public Visibility and Voice

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Kabul, Afghanistan – The Taliban government in Afghanistan has imposed severe new restrictions on women’s public presence, barring them from allowing their voices to be heard by other women.

Khalid Hanafi, the Taliban’s Minister for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, announced that adult women are now prohibited from publicly reciting prayers or reading from the Quran, among other limitations.

Taliban minister for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice Mohammad Khalid Hanafi (C) speaks during a ceremony to announce the decree for Afghan women's dress code in Kabul on May 7, 2022. - The Taliban on May 7 imposed some of the harshest restrictions on Afghanistan's women since they seized power, ordering them to cover fully in public, ideally with the traditional burqa. (Photo by Ahmad SAHEL ARMAN / AFP) (Photo by AHMAD SAHEL ARMAN/AFP via Getty Images)
Taliban Minister for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice Mohammad Khalid Hanafi Picture AFP

Further regulations bar female healthcare workers from interacting with the male companions of their patients, affecting medical care accessibility and raising concerns among health professionals.

“I’ve worked in remote clinics for eight years, but Taliban scrutiny has become relentless in the past two months,” said Samira, a midwife from Herat. “At checkpoints, we’re told not to speak, and inside clinics, we’re restricted from discussing cases with male relatives of patients.”

The Taliban’s broader set of policies, introduced in August, bans women from reading or singing in public, mandates that they veil their faces and bodies, and only wear loose-fitting clothing.

Women are also instructed to avoid direct eye contact with men with whom they are not related. Men, in turn, face a reciprocal rule forbidding them from looking at unrelated women.

A group of Afghan women clad in burqas walk towards a market in Ghazni, 04 August 2007. Afghanistan's Taliban are holding out for a neutral venue for talks with South Korea over the fate of 21 hostages they are threatening to kill.The Al-Qaeda-backed militants, who are demanding that some of their men are freed from jail in exchange for the captives, have agreed to talks with the South Koreans, but are refusing to meet them in government-controlled territory.The South Korean aid workers, most of whom are female, are said to be ill after being held for more than two weeks in sweltering southern Afghanistan. AFP PHOTO/SHAH Marai (Photo credit should read SHAH MARAI/AFP via Getty Images)
It was forbidden for adult women to allow their voices to be heard by other women Picture AFP

Afghan women’s rights activists argue these policies are stripping away basic freedoms, including the ability to move, work, and communicate openly.

“How are women who are the sole providers for their families supposed to buy food, seek medical care, or even just exist if their voices are forbidden?” asked one activist, highlighting the profound effect on women’s daily lives.

In a July report, the United Nations noted that such policies have fostered a climate of fear among women and girls across Afghanistan.

The Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, reinstated by the Taliban after they regained power in 2021, recently expanded its enforcement powers, now overseeing arrests and punishments for those seen violating these rules.

The ministry also recently banned visual depictions of living beings, extending even to official broadcasts, confirmed spokesman Saif ul Islam Khyber.

So far, Taliban-controlled media in the provinces of Takhar, Maidan Wardak, and Kandahar have complied with the directive, intensifying concerns over the future of Afghan media and press freedom under Taliban rule.

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