
Taliban raids and suspends Afghanistan's only nationwide women's radio station
CNN — The Taliban suspended the operation of Afghanistan's only nationwide women's radio station after raiding its premises on Tuesday, February 4, deepening the exclusion of women from public life and society since the group took power in 2021.
Kabul-based Radio Begum – a station run by women with content aimed at women's education – said officers from the Taliban's information and culture ministry restrained the station's staff as it searched its premises in the nation's capital.
Officers 'seized computers, hard drives, files and phones from Begum staff, including Begum female journalists, and took into custody two male employees of the organization who do not hold any senior management position,' the station said in a statement on Tuesday.
The ministry later confirmed the station's suspension, citing several alleged violations of 'broadcasting policy and improper use of the station's license,' including 'the unauthorized provision of content and programming to a foreign-based television channel.'
It did not identify the foreign TV channel in question, but said it will determine the station's future 'in due course.'
Reporters Without Borders (RSF), an independent rights group, condemned the suspension and demanded its immediate reversal.
Before Tuesday's ban, Radio Begum broadcast six hours of lessons a day, along with health, psychology and spiritual programs to women across most of Afghanistan. The station said it provides education to Afghan girls and support to Afghan women, without being 'involved in any political activity whatsoever.'
Its sister channels also offer lessons online filmed in studios thousands of miles away in Paris. The televised classes cover a wider array of subjects, providing education in a country where girls are banned from school after sixth grade.
Tightening the grip
The Taliban, a radical Islamist group not recognized by most countries around the world, has been tightening its grip on the media landscape since its takeover more than three years ago.
Initially presenting itself as more moderate than during its previous rule of Afghanistan in the 1990s, it even promised that women would be allowed to continue their education up to university.
But it has since cracked down instead, closing secondary schools for girls; banning women from attending university, working in most sectors and at NGOs, including the United Nations; restricting their travel without a male chaperone; and banning them from public spaces such as parks and gyms.
Last year, the Taliban closed at least 12 media outlets, both public and private, according to RSF, which ranked Afghanistan 178 out of 180 countries in its latest press freedom index.
The Islamist regime also banned the sound of women's voices in public – including singing, reciting, or reading aloud – under a strict set of 'vice and virtue' laws that made it even harder for Radio Begum to reach its female audience.
This story has been updated.

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Egypt Independent
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2 days ago
- Al-Ahram Weekly
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Mada
5 days ago
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The Eritrean navy had also previously dispatched warships to the Sudanese military and trained thousands of fighters from Darfur's armed movements, many of whom have joined the joint force currently active in key battles across Kordofan and Darfur. As regional powers continue to vie for influence in the Horn of Africa, tensions between Ethiopia and Eritrea have entered a second week of public escalation. Ethiopia insists on what it calls its 'legitimate right' to maritime access, repeatedly pointing to the Eritrean port of Assab on the Red Sea — a port Asmara views as a symbol of national sovereignty and firmly off the negotiating table. A Sudanese Foreign Ministry official, speaking to Mada Masr, warned that the current crisis could mark a turning point in relations between Eritrea and Ethiopia, potentially reshaping regional alliances. While direct military confrontation appears unlikely for now, the official warned that the ongoing war of words could lead to unintended clashes. 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He emphasized that Washington 'does not believe the conflict is amenable to a military solution' and urged the three members of the meeting to push the warring parties toward a ceasefire and negotiated settlement. A humanitarian aid convoy en route to Fasher in North Darfur's Koma area was bombed on Monday night, triggering an exchange of blame between the warring parties. Meanwhile, UN agencies condemned the attack and called for a prompt investigation. According to a joint statement released the following day by the World Food Program (WFP) and UNICEF, the assault on their convoy killed five aid workers and injured several others. Multiple trucks were burned, damaging supplies. Darfur Regional Governor Minni Arko Minnawi accused the RSF of targeting the convoy after its crew refused to change course or unload supplies and insisted on continuing to Fasher. Minnawi said that several aid workers were killed and supplies looted, with trucks that survived the fire being emptied amid military strikes on the RSF, an act he said was intended to falsely implicate the military in the attack. He further accused the RSF of pursuing a genocidal campaign by various means, including deliberately targeting a convoy that had traveled thousands of kilometers to deliver aid to Fasher's residents. The UN agencies' joint statement said the convoy, consisting of 15 trucks, was carrying life-saving food and nutrition supplies intended for children and families in famine-stricken Fasher. Hundreds of thousands of residents face high risks of malnutrition and starvation without urgent aid, the statement read. As standard practice for humanitarian convoys, 'the route was shared in advance and parties on the ground were notified and aware of the location of the trucks.' The agencies called for an immediate end to attacks on humanitarian workers, facilities, and vehicles and urged a swift investigation and accountability for those responsible. The convoy had traveled more than 1,800 kilometers from Port Sudan and was in negotiations to complete its journey to Fasher when the attack occurred. 'It is devastating that the supplies have not reached the vulnerable children and families they were intended to,' the statement said. This latest incident, it added, follows a series of attacks on humanitarian operations over the past two years, including last week's bombing of WFP's premises in Fasher. The government and the RSF have traded accusations over responsibility for the attack. In a statement on Tuesday, the Sudanese Foreign Ministry strongly condemned what it called a criminal drone attack by the RSF on the UN humanitarian convoy in Koma. It called on the international community to condemn the RSF for this aggression and hold it fully responsible, along with its regional sponsor, implicitly referring to the United Arab Emirates. The ministry warned that obstructing aid delivery to those in need puts civilians at risk of starvation in areas besieged by the RSF, including Fasher. In response, the RSF issued a statement condemning what it described as a brutal attack by the military, adding that the convoy had been held up for more than 15 days in Dabba, Northern State.