Taliban orders girl high schools remain closed, leaving students in
tears
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[March 23, 2022]
KABUL (Reuters) - The Taliban on Wednesday backtracked on their
announcement that high schools would open for girls, saying they would
remain closed until a plan was drawn up in accordance with Islamic law
for them to reopen.
Teachers and students from three high schools around the capital Kabul
said girls had returned in excitement to campuses on Wednesday morning,
but were ordered to go home. They said many students left in tears.
"We all got disappointed and we all became totally hopeless when the
principal told us, she was also crying," said a student, not being named
for security reasons.
The last time the Taliban ruled Afghanistan, from 1996 to 2001, they
banned female education and most employment.
The international community has made the education of girls a key demand
for any future recognition of the Taliban administration, which took
over the country in August as foreign forces withdrew. The United
Nations and United States condemend the reported closures on Wednesday.
The Ministry of Education had announced last week that schools for all
students, including girls, would open around the country on Wednesday
after months of restrictions on education for high school-aged girls.
On Tuesday evening a Ministry of Education spokesman released a video
congratulating all students on their returning to class.
However on Wednesday a Ministry of Education notice said schools for
girls would be closed until a plan was drawn up in accordance with
Islamic law and Afghan culture, according to Bakhtar News, a government
news agency.
"We inform all girls high schools and those schools that are having
female students above class six that they are off until the next order,"
said the notice.
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A Taliban fighter gestures to a colleague as he stands by the
entrance to a school, in Kabul, Afghanistan, October 25, 2021. The
hardline Islamist Taliban movement, which stormed to power earlier
this year after ousting the Western-backed government, has allowed
all boys and younger girls back to class, but has not let girls
attend secondary school. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra
The country's ministry of education
spokesman did not respond to calls and messages seeking comment. A
Taliban administration source confirmed to Reuters that schools for
girls in Kabul would be closed for now, without elaborating.
The Taliban is seeking to run the country according to its
interpretation of Islamic law while at the same time accessing
billions of dollars in aid that it desperately needs to stave off
widespread poverty and hunger.
"The UN in Afghanistan deplores today's reported announcement by the
Taliban that they are further extending their indefinite ban on
female students above the 6th grade being permitted to return
school," the United Nations' Mission to Afghanistan (UNAMA) said in
a statement.
The U.S. Chargé d’Affaires for Afghanistan, Ian McCary, currently
based in Qatar, said in a tweet that he was deeply troubled by the
reports.
"This is very disappointing & contradicts many Taliban assurances &
statements," he said.
(Reporting by Kabul Newsroom; Writing by Charlotte Greenfield;
Editing by Michael Perry)
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