"We are not deleting them": Afghanistan's Taliban promise progress on
girls' schooling soon
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[November 02, 2021]
By Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam
KABUL (Reuters) - Afghanistan's Taliban
government said it would announce good news soon on older girls being
allowed to go back to school, but urged the international community to
help it fund the process as most external aid has been halted.
Ensuring rights for women and girls has been one of the most sensitive
issues facing the Taliban since they seized power in August, with
international bodies demanding proof they were being respected before
any discussion of formal recognition of the new government.
In September, the hardline Islamist movement drew global condemnation
when it allowed boys to return to the classroom but told older girls to
stay home until conditions permitted their return.
"Inshallah we will have a good announcement for the whole country, the
whole nation," Waheedullah Hashimi, Director of External Programmes and
Aid at the Ministry of Education, told Reuters in an interview.
In some northern areas, girls have already resumed their education but
others are forced to study in hiding and heavy scepticism remains with
countries from the United States to Russia demanding they match promises
with action.
"Our Ulema (religious scholars) are working on it, and soon inshallah,
we will announce it to the world," Hashimi said.
The effective ban on educating girls beyond primary school echoed
decisions by Taliban's previous government, between 1996-2001, when
women were largely shut out of paid employment and girls were not
allowed to go to school.
Hashimi said the movement was committed to educating girls and was
working on ways of getting them back to school. He said no women
teachers had been laid off, and that this was "a positive message to the
world that we are working on a mechanism. We are not working on deleting
them from our schools and universities."
However, Hashimi also said that education, like other areas of
government, had been hit hard by the abrupt withdrawal of foreign
support following the collapse of the Western-backed government in
August and he appealed for aid to be restored.
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Waheedullah Hashimi, Director of External Programmes and Aid at the
Ministry of Education, speaks during an interview in Kabul,
Afghanistan October 31, 2021. Picture taken on October 31, 2021.
REUTERS/Yosri Al Jamal
"If they truly want to see girls in schools, they
ought to help us now," Hashimi said.
While education spending had been increasing slowly under the last
government, a UNESCO report said that external aid represented
almost half the education budget in 2020.
As well as the issue of girls' education, Hashimi said the ministry
was working on a new curriculum for schools to bring them into line
with the principles of Islam, local culture, and international
standards.
"The changes will be according to international standards in physics
and chemistry and biology and all these science subjects," Hashimi
said, adding that no changes had been made yet to the curriculum.
He said ministry officials had been working closely with
international agencies, which he said had reacted positively to the
parts they had seen.
However, he cautioned that the system would be set up in a manner
that would be agreeable the Taliban leadership and scholars, and not
based on international pressure.
"We want to educate, and we will educate, our women and men – boys
and girls."
(Reporting by Gibran Peshimam; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
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