London – In a stark condemnation, Amnesty International has declared that life for women and girls in Afghanistan has become “unbearable,” detailing a systematic campaign of oppression that has effectively erased them from public life since the Taliban’s return to power in 2021.
The warning was issued in a social media post on platform X on Thursday, amplifying a growing chorus of international human rights organizations. The group cited the de facto authorities’ relentless imposition of sweeping restrictions on women’s education, employment, and public participation, which collectively amount to “systemic discrimination” and the near-total revocation of their fundamental rights.
A Methodical Erasure from Public Life
The Taliban’s edicts have methodically dismantled two decades of progress for Afghan women. What began with the closure of secondary schools for girls has escalated into a comprehensive system of gender apartheid. Key areas of life affected include:
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Education: Universities and most secondary schools for girls remain shuttered, effectively ending formal education for an entire generation of women.
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Employment: Women are barred from working in most sectors, including NGOs, government offices, and even beauty salons, pushing countless female-headed households into destitution.
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Public Participation: Strict rules govern women’s movement, often requiring a male guardian (mahram) for travel or even routine activities. They are banned from parks, gyms, and public baths.
Deepening Crisis: Healthcare and the Burqa Mandate
The situation has escalated beyond restrictions on public life to direct threats to women’s health and safety. The UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) has reported alarming instances of women being denied critical medical treatment in provinces such as Kunar, Kandahar, and Khost for not being accompanied by a male guardian.
“These restrictions are not just discriminatory; they are lethal,” a UNAMA spokesperson stated. “Denying women healthcare is a violation of international law and has devastating consequences for maternal and child mortality.”
Further tightening control, recent reports from Herat province indicate that the wearing of the burqa—a full-body covering with a mesh screen over the eyes—has been made mandatory. Women without one are being barred from entering government offices and, most distressingly, hospitals, compounding the existing healthcare crisis.
International Condemnation and Calls for Action
Amnesty International, alongside other human rights organizations, is urgently calling on the international community to move beyond condemnation to concrete action. They are demanding:
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Global Accountability: The establishment of robust, international mechanisms to hold the Taliban accountable for what many label as gender-based persecution, a crime against humanity.
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Targeted Pressure: The implementation of stronger, coordinated global measures to pressure Afghanistan’s rulers to unconditionally lift all restrictions on women and girls.
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Solidarity and Support: A reaffirmed commitment to stand in solidarity with Afghan women and girls, ensuring their voices are centered in all international discussions regarding Afghanistan.
“The world cannot stand by as the rights and dignity of Afghan women are stripped away one by one,” Amnesty International’s statement concluded. “The systematic oppression they face is unbearable, and the international response must be proportionate to the severity of this crisis.”
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