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TALIBAN BEGINS ENFORCING NEW DRACONIAN LAWS, AND AFGHAN WOMEN DESPAIR

Afghan religious police wield new power to enforce a ban on women raising their
voices in public and looking at men other than their husbands or relatives.

6 min
8335

Afghan women wearing burqas walk past jewelry shops at a market in Kandahar in
August. (Wakil Kohsar/AFP/Getty Images)
By Rick Noack
September 15, 2024 at 2:00 a.m. EDT

As the Taliban begins enforcing new draconian laws, Afghan women say that
whatever hopes they once harbored for an easing of the severe restrictions on
them have largely vanished.

The new religious code issued late last month bans women from raising their
voices, reciting the Quran in public and looking at men other than their
husbands or relatives. It requires women to cover the lower half of their faces
in addition to donning a head covering they were already expected to wear, among
other rules.


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Women’s lives were heavily regulated by the Taliban-run government before the
latest rules were promulgated, and some of the new laws codify restrictions that
were already imposed on women in practice. But Afghan women, speaking in phone
interviews over the past week, pointed to mounting signs of a crackdown in urban
areas, where rules had been less rigorously enforced.

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The Taliban’s morality police, which is an extension of the regime’s most
conservative elements, appears to have been handed an unprecedented amount of
power in the capital, Kabul, and elsewhere, women said. While the morality
police’s white robes were a rare sight in Kabul, they have become omnipresent
since late August, several women said.

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Officers are roaming bus stops and shopping centers searching for dress-code
violations or any women who might laugh or raise their voices. On Fridays, the
Muslim holy day, religious police officers disperse women in some parts of Kabul
and accuse them of preventing male shop owners from making it to the mosque in
time for prayers. Women are an increasingly rare sight on Afghan television
broadcasts.

While girls were banned from going to school above sixth grade and women barred
from universities soon after the Taliban took power three years ago, some still
attended English classes as recently as a few weeks ago. But after the Taliban’s
morality police issued warnings to male teachers, according to students, many
families now refuse to let their daughters participate. Other women have decided
to stay home out of fear.

“Three weeks ago, I was still hopeful that the Taliban may change and remove the
restrictions on girls’ education,” said Meena, a Kabul resident in her 20s who
runs secret classes for teenage girls. “But once they published their vice and
virtue law, I lost all hope,” she said. The women interviewed for this story
spoke on the condition that they remain anonymous or that only their first names
be published due to fear of drawing unwanted scrutiny from the Taliban regime.



Another women’s rights activist who also lives in Kabul said she had been banned
from studying when the Taliban held power in the 1990s. Now, she sees history
repeating itself. “The entire country has turned into a graveyard for women’s
dreams,” said the 48-year-old woman. She added that initial signs that Taliban
rule would be less extreme the second time around have not borne out.

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When the Taliban seized power in August 2021, the new government quickly imposed
far-ranging restrictions on women. But afterward, many of these changes —
particularly the bans on education — were portrayed by Taliban officials as
temporary. Those officials were often unable to specify what these rules
required, leaving some room for interpretation that translated into regional
variation in how the rules were followed. There remained a large difference, for
example, between urban Kabul and the conservative rural south of the country.

But now, some women said, hopes are waning that urban influences could moderate
the Taliban.

“There are two groups within the Taliban,” said Sajia, 24, a female former
university student. “One group seemed to be moderate and eager to bend the
rules. But now, with the restrictions approved as law, it seems that they have
failed and there is no hope left.”

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Others gave up hoping long ago that the Taliban leadership could be made more
tolerant. “When it comes to cruelty and restrictions, they are all on the same
page,” said a 20-year-old female Kabul resident, who was admitted by Kabul
University’s archaeology department just when the Taliban banned women from
studying.

The Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, which
oversees the morality police, could not be reached for comment. Two former
senior officials with the ministry said the position of spokesman is vacant.

In a video statement to RTA, a Taliban-run broadcaster, Justice Ministry
spokesman Barakatullah Rasouli said the new regulations emphasize “respect for
human dignity of individuals” and advise officials to preach “gently.” The
Taliban maintains that women’s lives have improved under its three-year rule and
frequently argues that restrictions on women are for their protection.

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Afghan women’s rights activists counter that the Quran does not ban women from
getting educated and imposes far fewer rules about proper dress than the ones
mandated by the Taliban.

Many of the Taliban’s beliefs are partly rooted in centuries-old Pashtun
culture, which remains entrenched in many rural areas of Afghanistan. In these
areas, it is not only men who share the Taliban’s views. In Kabul, some women
particularly fear female members of the morality police, who are often recruited
from conservative suburbs. “They behave even more aggressively than the male
officers do,” said a 20-year-old female Kabul resident.

Many women in Kabul say they doubt the Taliban’s religious justifications for
the rules, and there is widespread speculation that the regime is adding
restrictions on women’s rights so it can later bargain them away in negotiations
with international agencies and foreign capitals. The Taliban has been seeking
international recognition for its government — so far, no country has done so —
and trying to gain access to Afghan Central Bank reserves that remain frozen.
Afghan leaders hope such a breakthrough would give a boost to the economy,
helping to ease unemployment and hunger.

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Some Afghan women blame the outside world for their vanishing freedoms. “The
silence of the world over the last three years will go down as a dark chapter in
history,” said Meena, echoing a widespread sentiment in the country that global
attention has moved on from Afghanistan.

Many of the women she speaks to say they have unsuccessfully applied for
scholarships abroad, she said, and are running out of options.

“The Taliban will keep using religion as a weapon against women,” she said. “To
them, seeing the hair of a girl is a sin, but starving your country is not.”

Lutfullah Qasimyar and Haq Nawaz Khan contributed to this report.

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