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Afghanistan: Taliban warn women can't take entry exams at universities : AP


Officials of the Education Ministry

The Taliban on Saturday doubled down on their ban on women’s education, reinforcing in a message to private universities that Afghan women are barred from taking university entry exams, according to a spokesman.

The note comes despite weeks of condemnation and lobbying by the international community for a reversal on measures restricting women’s freedoms, including two back-to-back visits this month by several senior U.N. officials. It also bodes ill for hopes that the Taliban could take steps to reverse their edicts anytime soon.

The Taliban barred women from private and public universities last month. The higher education minister in the Taliban-run government, Nida Mohammed Nadim, has maintained that the ban is necessary to prevent the mixing of genders in universities — and because he believes some subjects being taught violate Islamic principles.

Work was underway to fix these issues and universities would reopen for women once they were resolved, he had said in a TV interview.
The Taliban have made similar promises about middle school and high school access for girls, saying classes would resume for them once “technical issues” around uniforms and transport were sorted out. But girls remain shut out of classrooms beyond sixth grade.

Higher Education Ministry spokesman Ziaullah Hashmi said Saturday that a letter reminding private universities not to allow women to take entrance exams was sent out. He gave no further details.

A copy of the letter, shared with The Associated Press, warned that women could not take the “entry test for bachelor, master and doctorate levels” and that if any university disobeys the edict, “legal action will be taken against the violator.”

The letter was signed by Mohammad Salim Afghan, the government official overseeing student affairs at private universities.

Entrance exams start on Sunday in some provinces while elsewhere in Afghanistan, they begin Feb. 27. Universities across Afghanistan follow a different term timetable, due to seasonal differences.

Mohammed Karim Nasari, spokesman for the private universities union, said the institutions were worried and sad about this latest development.

“The one hope we had was that there might be some progress. But unfortunately, after the letter, there is no sign of progress,” he told the AP. “The entire sector is suffering.”
He expressed fears that if education did not restart for girls, then nobody would take entrance exams because student numbers would be so low.

Also, Nasari said private universities want the authorities to waive land taxes for universities built on government property, and waive taxes on universities in general, because they are suffering huge financial losses.

Afghanistan has 140 private universities across 24 provinces, with around 200,000 students. Out of those, some 60,000 to 70,000 are women. The universities employ about 25,000 people.

Earlier this week, U.N. humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths and leaders of two major international aid organizations visited Afghanistan, following last week’s visit by a delegation led by the U.N.’s highest-ranking woman, U.N. Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed. The visits had the same aim — to try and reverse the Taliban’s crackdown on women and girls, including their ban on Afghan women working for national and global humanitarian organizations.

Comments

  1. And promisses were made to the high level UN team who visited Afghanistan and had talks with Taliban in Kabul and in Kandahar. Now we see those ptomisses broken into pieces! What next? Are they going to get away with it? Are they going to be invited to the UN HQ in NY for talk with the UN SG and heads of agencies? That is what they want, recognition and travel freedom. Taliban have no intentions of allowing Afghan girls and women to go to higher education and work out side their homes. Just to shut the international media and the UN they make empty promisses and they hope that the world will believe them.Taliban are the same part and parcel of those who shot Malala Yousufzai, that blow up girls schools in west of Kabul, and they just blow up the mosque in Peshawar, killing masses of innocent people. They are nothing but terrorists who are now in power. Gulbadan

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  2. Afghanistan is an interesting case study. Few countries if any in the world have ever received as much aid per head as Afghanistan did prior to the second Taliban takeover. Arguably, had the previous government been more competent and less corrupt Taliban may not have been in power today. According to USAID's audit, the corruption was staggering a fact that seems to have been forgotten. Many of these corrupt officials are now knocking on the doors of western countries looking for refugee status. Should they be given amnesty?

    Is the international community more responsible for the well-being of Afgan civilians than their own government?

    Should the international community do everything possible in the face of GOA's resistance to get access to the civilian population so that aid can again start to flow?

    If yes, what is the longer-term objective?

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  3. Those corrup blood sucker warlords should not be given asylum in the west. However, i am afraid they will live very comfortably in london, Madrid, The USA, lisbon, Turkey and the rest of Europe. They already have expensive properties in those places as well as in th Palm island of Dubai. Their families live there. Their families may already be either citizens or permanent residents. When the regime changes they will be back in the Afghan government stealing more of the aid money. This is the 45 years recycling business. They come and they go. And the poor and helpless who do not benefit from the billions of $$$$ remain poor and helpless and have nothing to say about it. This is why Afghanistan is an interesting case study! Gulbadan

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  4. Thank you Gulbadan, you have started an important discussion. Afghanistan is not unique. There are many countries where government officials steal the resources of the state and have the aid community make up the shortfall. The competitive aid industry, interested in growing, seems all too happy to oblige. There has been little written about that.

    The taxpayers around the world who pay for the aid may not be pleased to learn about toping up coffers that were depleted by corrupt government officials.

    It could be an interesting topic for the researchers of OXFAM to look into.

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  5. Interestingly I have just listened to an interview by BBC's Hard Talk of the OXFAM's CEO Dhananjayan Sriskandarojah who is obviously an intelligent and articulate man. While the interviewer had many good questions many more were left out. Hopefully, it is a start looking into the bloated aid industry and its many flaws.

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