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Feminism in Afghanistan - AFGHAN WOMEN AND GIRLS CAMPAIGN (google.com)
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Kabul [Afghanistan], September 3 (ANI): A group of Afghan women activists staged a protest in Kabul on Friday, seeking equal rights and to ensure decision-making roles for them in political life in the country that has been taken over by the Taliban.
A group called the Women's Political Participation Network marched on the street in front of Afghanistan's Finance Ministry, chanting slogans and holding signs demanding involvement in the Afghan government and calling for constitutional law, CNN said.
Afghanistan's local Tolo News also reported: "A group of women's rights activists at a rally in Kabul asked the Taliban and the international community to ensure decision-making roles for women in the future government."
The protest, by a relatively small gathering of women activists, cited the US news broadcaster was held in spite of risk but represented an unusual public challenge to Taliban rule.
"Footage showed a brief confrontation between a Taliban guard and some of the women, and a man's voice could be heard saying, "Go away!" before chanting resumed," CNN said describing the protest.
Amid reports of the formation of a new government in Afghanistan to be headed by Taliban co-founder Mullah Baradar, a group of women's rights activists in Kabul asked the outfit to ensure decision-making roles for women in the future government.
A video of the protest was also live streamed by the group, which called for the recognition of women's political, economic, and social rights.
Earlier, dozens of Afghan women on Thursday held protests in the western Afghan city of Herat demanding rights and female representation in the government formation after the Taliban took control of the war-ravaged country.
Protestors were carrying banners with slogans against the exclusion of women from the country's political system under the regime of the Taliban, Tolo News reported.
Women rights defenders, university students and government employees took part in the movement. "No government is sustainable without women's support. Our demand: the right to education and the right to work in every aspect," a banner read.
As the Taliban took control of Afghanistan once again after 20 years, experts believe that Afghan women are most likely to face an uncertain future under the group's regime.
Meanwhile, a new government in Afghanistan is likely to be headed by Taliban co-founder Mullah Baradar. Baradar, who heads the Taliban's political office in Doha, will be joined by Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob, the son of late Taliban co-founder Mullah Omar, and Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanekzai, in senior positions in the government, Tolo News reported citing sources from the Islamic group. (ANI)
Afghan women stage rare protest to demand rights under Taliban: "We are not afraid, we are united."
Herat, Afghanistan — Defiant Afghan women held a rare protest on Thursday saying they were willing to accept the burqa if their daughters could still go to school under Taliban rule.
"It is our right to have education, work and security," the group of around 50 female demonstrators chanted, waving placards on the streets of Afghanistan's western city of Herat.
During the Taliban's first stint in power, before being ousted by a U.S.-led invasion in 2001, women and girls were mostly denied education and employment. Burqas became mandatory in public, women could not leave home without a male companion, and street protests were unthinkable.
"We are here to ask for our rights," Fereshta Taheri, one of the demonstrators, told AFP by phone.
"We are even ready to wear burqas if they tell us, but we want the women to go to school and work," the photographer and artist added.
Herat, an ancient Silk Road city close to the Iranian border, has long been a cosmopolitan exception to more conservative centers, though some women already wear the burqa.
The Taliban, who seized power last month after a lightning military campaign, are in discussions about the make-up of a new government.
They have pledged their leadership will be "inclusive", but many doubt women will find a place in Afghanistan's new administration, and a senior leader of the group has already said in an interview with BBC News that women won't get cabinet-level jobs.
"We follow the news, and we don't see any women in Taliban meetings and gatherings," said Herat protester Mariam Ebram.
The group have now promised a softer brand of rule, pledging that women will be allowed to work, but within the limits of Sharia law.
The rebranding is being treated with skepticism, with experts questioning whether it will be a short-term bid to seek international recognition and a continuation of vital aid.
"The talks are ongoing to form a government, but they are not talking about women's participation," Basira Taheri, one of the rally's organizers said. "We want to be part of the government — no government can be formed without women. We want the Taliban to hold consultations with us."
She described how "most of the working women in Herat are at home," out of fear and uncertainty.
Ebram said that those who had returned faced resistance from the new Taliban forces in control.
"Some women, like doctors and nurses who dared to go back to work, complain that the Taliban mock them," Ebram said. "The Taliban don't look at them, they don't talk to them. They only show their angry faces to them."
Primary school age children including girls have returned to school, but the Taliban says further education is on hold until after the formation of a government.
Protests against Taliban rule were inconceivable during their last reign.
Former government minister Nehan Nargis, speaking to the BBC late Wednesday from Norway where she fled to last month, said Afghanistan had changed from when the Taliban were last in power.
"People are much more aware, they have different aspirations for Afghanistan now, and expectations from government," she said, noting social media now helped bring like-minded activists together. "The Afghan people... have collectively raised their voice very strongly using the platform of social media for their issues and causes... and they will continue to use that."
Basira Taheri said they would continue to protest until their demands were met.
"The women of this land are informed and educated," she said. "We are not afraid, we are united."
Herat's demonstrators said they hoped their example would inspire others across the country.
"We will continue our protests," Basira Taheri said. "We started it in Herat, it will soon expand to other provinces."