Taliban bars government employees without beards from work -sources
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[March 28, 2022]
By Charlotte Greenfield
KABUL (Reuters) - Afghanistan's Taliban has
instructed all government employees to wear a beard and adhere to a
dress code or risk being fired, three sources told Reuters, the latest
of several new restrictions imposed by the hardline Islamist
administration.
The sources said representatives from the Ministry for the Propagation
of Virtue and Prevention of Vice were patrolling the entrances to
government offices on Monday to check that employees were in compliance
with the new rules.
Employees were being instructed not to shave their beards and to wear
local clothing consisting of a long, loose top and trousers, and a hat
or turban. They were also told to ensure they prayed at the correct
times, two of the sources said.
Workers were told they would from now on be unable to enter offices and
would eventually be fired if they did not meet the dress codes, the
sources said.
A spokesman for the public morality ministry did not respond to a
request for comment.
Last week, the Taliban banned women from taking flights without a male
chaperone and failed to open girls' schools as promised.
On Sunday it ordered parks to be segregated by sex, with women allowed
to enter three days a week, and men the other four days, including the
weekend, meaning even married couples and families cannot visit
together.
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A Taliban fighter guards a street in Kabul, Afghanistan, December
16, 2021. REUTERS/Ali Khara/fFle Photo
The Taliban administration has drawn
criticism at home and from Western governments for forcing its
hardline interpretation of Islamic law onto all Afghans.
The Taliban say they will respect everyone's rights in line with
Islamic law and Afghan customs and that they have changed since
their 1996-2001 rule, when they barred women from leaving the house
without a male relative and forced men to grow beards.
Wednesday's u-turn on girls' schools led to protests from the
international community, including the United States, which pulled
out of planned meetings with Taliban officials in Qatar to discuss
key economic issues.
The Taliban needs Western countries to lift sanctions that are
crippling the Afghan economy.
(Reporting by Kabul Newsroom and Charlotte Greenfield; Editing by
John Stonestreet and Catherine Evans)
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