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Afghanistan: UN Reviews its Operations / Asks All Afghan Staff to Stay Home Until At Least May 5th : The Guardian / ABC News

UN tells Afghan staff to stay home after Taliban ban on female workers



From the Guardian

The United Nations has launched a review of its operations in Afghanistan and asked all Afghan staff not to come to work at least until May after the Taliban barred its female staff from working.

The UN said last week that the Taliban, who swept to power in 2021, had communicated that Afghan women would not be able to work for the global organisation. Taliban officials have not commented on the order.

“Through this ban, the Taliban de facto authorities seek to force the United Nations into having to make an appalling choice between staying and delivering in support of the Afghan people and standing by the norms and principles we are duty-bound to uphold,” the UN mission (Unama) said in a statement on Tuesday.

The UN has said that implementing the order would put it in breach of its charter. It has asked 3,000 staff – men and women – to stay home until 5 May while it made “necessary consultations”, any required adjustments to its operations and accelerated contingency planning.

The restriction on female UN workers, coming after a ban on most female NGO workers in December, has prompted heavy international criticism.

Some officials have flagged concerns donors may pull back on support to Afghanistan’s humanitarian aid programme, the largest in the world, and that implementing some programmes and reaching women in the conservative country without female workers would not be possible.

The Taliban have imposed a series of restrictions on women’s access to work, education and public life. Taliban officials have said they respect women’s rights in line with their strict interpretation of Islamic law.

 UN to review presence in Afghanistan following Taliban ban

From ABC 

The United Nations said Tuesday it is reviewing its presence in Afghanistan after the Taliban barred Afghan women from working for the world organization — a veiled suggestion the U.N. could move to suspend its mission and operations in the embattled country.

Last week, Afghanistan's Taliban rulers took a step further in restrictive measures they have imposed on women and said that Afghan women employed with the U.N. mission could no longer report for work. They did not further comment on the ban.

The U.N. said it cannot accept the decision, calling it an unparalleled violation of women’s rights. It was the latest in sweeping restrictions imposed by the Taliban since they seized power in Afghanistan in August 2021 as U.S. and NATO troops were withdrawing from the country after 20 years of war.

Tuesday's statement by the U.N. said its head of mission in Afghanistan, Roza Otunbayeva, has "initiated an operational review period" that would last until May 5.

Comments

  1. I am glad the UN is finally taking a tangible action. I hope Taliban do not harass and arrest the Afghan staff from their homes or from the streets when the staff go to the markets or any other errand. The could easily acuse them of being spies. That would be my fear and concern.
    Gulbadan

    ReplyDelete
  2. Pragmatic, honest assessments? I am still skeptical. We have made many mistakes in Afghanistan. How much have we learnt? How much wiser have we become?
    Amen!

    ReplyDelete
  3. "How much have we learned? How wiser have we beome? I am afraid, my answer is two words. Not much!

    Gulbadan

    ReplyDelete

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